• @halcyoncmdr
      link
      English
      481 year ago

      the only one making a semantical argument, is Trump and his lawyers.

      The problem is that the current Supreme Court clearly would support throwing that out, and they LOVE semantics like that to justify clearly bullshit decisions.

      • IninewCrow
        link
        fedilink
        English
        101 year ago

        If interpreting laws is going to just turn into how much money a wealthy individual (or anyone wealthy enough to foot the bill) can argue the semantics of anything … what good and what use is any law?

        • @agent_flounder
          link
          English
          121 year ago

          We are long past the point where power and wealth buys better legal outcomes as evidenced by how few rich and powerful people over the last half century have spent any time in prison for their crimes compared to people with neither wealth nor power.

        • @Wilibus
          link
          31 year ago

          Imprisoning poor people.

      • vortic
        link
        7
        edit-2
        1 year ago

        They also like using history to support their decisions. If it can be shown that the presidential oath is intended to go beyond “support” I would see the court being persuaded that “support” is implied by “protect, preserve, and defend”. It depends on whether the textualists or the pseudo-historians win the day.

        • @Burn_The_Right
          link
          51 year ago

          The five conservative “justices” are conservatives first and “justices” second. They will always rule however the standard, bigoted, Fox-News-loving white nationalist will rule. They do this by using wordplay and bad-faith semantics.

          Every word uttered by a conservative is either deception or manipulation. Every word.