Supreme Court to Decide on Texas Sodomy Law
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Supreme Court to Decide on Texas Sodomy Law
http://www.msnbc.com/news/891114_asp.htm?0cv=CB20
Essentially the story is about the court case BUT the one detail that just freaks me out is that the homosexual couple were arrested IN THEIR BEDROOM. So much for the argument that "So what? The law's outdated no one in their right mind would arrest someone in theior home for this."
Here's to hoping that the Court finally declares this outdated and ridiculous. However it should be noted that the Court heard a similair argument 12 years ago and upheld the law.
However as many legal scholars know, if the court decides to hear a case that was already decided by a previous Supreme Court the odds are it's because they intend to overturn. The Supreme Court rarely hears cases to simply affirm a ruling they made earlier.
Essentially the story is about the court case BUT the one detail that just freaks me out is that the homosexual couple were arrested IN THEIR BEDROOM. So much for the argument that "So what? The law's outdated no one in their right mind would arrest someone in theior home for this."
Here's to hoping that the Court finally declares this outdated and ridiculous. However it should be noted that the Court heard a similair argument 12 years ago and upheld the law.
However as many legal scholars know, if the court decides to hear a case that was already decided by a previous Supreme Court the odds are it's because they intend to overturn. The Supreme Court rarely hears cases to simply affirm a ruling they made earlier.
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Re: Supreme Court to Decide on Texas Sodomy Law
Well, that was a shocker... No sarcasm intended... I really AM shocked they got arrested for it!Stravo wrote:Essentially the story is about the court case BUT the one detail that just freaks me out is that the homosexual couple were arrested IN THEIR BEDROOM. So much for the argument that "So what? The law's outdated no one in their right mind would arrest someone in theior home for this."
Hear hear! Why should they get to ditact what two consenting adults do in the privacy of their bedroom?Stravo wrote:Here's to hoping that the Court finally declares this outdated and ridiculous. However it should be noted that the Court heard a similair argument 12 years ago and upheld the law.
However as many legal scholars know, if the court decides to hear a case that was already decided by a previous Supreme Court the odds are it's because they intend to overturn. The Supreme Court rarely hears cases to simply affirm a ruling they made earlier.
And if it is still a law, "More Tales From the City" (has some person's name in front of it, can't remember off hand) is illegal in Texas.
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Since I didn't see it in there.. how did the police get in the house? And what about this little thing we call the Privacy Act?
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America, home of the free ... as long as you're not gay, in which case we'll lock you up and kick the shit out of you.
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Not so, everywhere, thankfully... But Texas is... Texas.. Yet another reason to hate the state, though.Darth Wong wrote:America, home of the free ... as long as you're not gay, in which case we'll lock you up and kick the shit out of you.
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If they are going to try and enforce it like that, it needs to go. But otherwise I'd like to see it stay because it could be used in the same way cohabitation laws have been used: To nail someone who wiggled free on some other charge. I remember reading once about some deadbeat dad who managed to get off scott free by some loophole despite being guilty as sin, until the prosecutor used the states archaeic "no single men and women living together" law to toss his ass in jail for living with his new girlfriend.
Arresting people for homosexual acts I don't hold with. But using it to nail some sleazeball to the wall I can see.
Arresting people for homosexual acts I don't hold with. But using it to nail some sleazeball to the wall I can see.
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Okay, hold on. Then in other words, for cohabitation laws... I don't understand this completely, but really, with that logic, if I am correct in my thinking, you're basically forcing gays to live separately.. Cohabitation means living together before marriage, etc., etc... but since gays can't marry, you're basically saying that gays can't live together and have sex. They can have sex, but not live in the same household........ hmm... yeah, seems justifiable to me..Ender wrote:If they are going to try and enforce it like that, it needs to go. But otherwise I'd like to see it stay because it could be used in the same way cohabitation laws have been used: To nail someone who wiggled free on some other charge. I remember reading once about some deadbeat dad who managed to get off scott free by some loophole despite being guilty as sin, until the prosecutor used the states archaeic "no single men and women living together" law to toss his ass in jail for living with his new girlfriend.
Arresting people for homosexual acts I don't hold with. But using it to nail some sleazeball to the wall I can see.
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Keep an unprincipled law which has no basis in human rights or the constitution, just because that way, the police have a blank cheque to hurt people if they can't get them through the legitimate courts? Trust the authorities never to misuse the limitless power granted to them with a blank-cheque law? Are you out of your fucking mind?Ender wrote:If they are going to try and enforce it like that, it needs to go. But otherwise I'd like to see it stay because it could be used in the same way cohabitation laws have been used: To nail someone who wiggled free on some other charge.
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No, you don't understand me at all. I brought up cohabitation as totally seperate in an example.verilon wrote:Okay, hold on. Then in other words, for cohabitation laws... I don't understand this completely, but really, with that logic, if I am correct in my thinking, you're basically forcing gays to live separately.. Cohabitation means living together before marriage, etc., etc... but since gays can't marry, you're basically saying that gays can't live together and have sex. They can have sex, but not live in the same household........ hmm... yeah, seems justifiable to me..Ender wrote:If they are going to try and enforce it like that, it needs to go. But otherwise I'd like to see it stay because it could be used in the same way cohabitation laws have been used: To nail someone who wiggled free on some other charge. I remember reading once about some deadbeat dad who managed to get off scott free by some loophole despite being guilty as sin, until the prosecutor used the states archaeic "no single men and women living together" law to toss his ass in jail for living with his new girlfriend.
Arresting people for homosexual acts I don't hold with. But using it to nail some sleazeball to the wall I can see.
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Okay, then I misunderstood. My apologies.Ender wrote:No, you don't understand me at all. I brought up cohabitation as totally seperate in an example.
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It has worked for the UCMJ for however long.Darth Wong wrote:Keep an unprincipled law which has no basis in human rights or the constitution, just because that way, the police have a blank cheque to hurt people if they can't get them through the legitimate courts? Trust the authorities never to misuse the limitless power granted to them with a blank-cheque law? Are you out of your fucking mind?
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Actually the Constitution does not give privacy to individuals. However several states have given it. In Montana Heterosexuals have a right to privacy, though Homosexuals do not.verilon wrote:Since I didn't see it in there.. how did the police get in the house? And what about this little thing we call the Privacy Act?
Now this Texas case is VERY interesting. The Police got a top on a crime going down and they went to the WRONG address. They bust down the door and find two men having anal sex. Lets forget the fact anal sex is legal for heterosexual couples. In Texas you need a warrent to search peoples residence for crimes. They broke down the wrong door. Yet they could charge them on a crime because technically homosexuals do not have privacy in Texas either. That means any crimes Homosexuals comit and are caught accidently without use of a warrent, they can be charged and the evidence can not be tossed out.
So not only is Texas being stupid and charging them for something that is legal for hetero couples, but they are denying privacy based on sexual preference. Well the Constitution does have a little something known as Equal Protection Under the Law. The Supreme Court has no choice but to toss out the conviction of these men. In turn that will invalidate the Texas law and enforcement of the law in the future will be impossible.
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That's more of a temptation for the unscrupulous than I'd like to see.Ender wrote:It has worked for the UCMJ for however long.Darth Wong wrote:Keep an unprincipled law which has no basis in human rights or the constitution, just because that way, the police have a blank cheque to hurt people if they can't get them through the legitimate courts? Trust the authorities never to misuse the limitless power granted to them with a blank-cheque law? Are you out of your fucking mind?
And could you provide a hypothetical situation as to how an anti-sodomy law could be useful in prosecuting those who use loopholes?
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I provided on using cohabitation above, I suppose you could just substitute the antisodemy law there.Frank Hipper wrote:And could you provide a hypothetical situation as to how an anti-sodomy law could be useful in prosecuting those who use loopholes?
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Another posibility is using it to really hammer people you already have going down. IE Pedophile Priests, you've got them on the pedophile charges, might as well make sure those fuckers don't get out of the slammer anytime soon.
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Smells of Slippery Slope, it does. Where would you draw the line? I sure as fuck would not trust the athorities to "simply" stay their hand in using this to generate stiffer sentencing. Convictions=success to DAs, and having that sword hanging over my head is not something conducive to a good night's sleep.Ender wrote:Another posibility is using it to really hammer people you already have going down. IE Pedophile Priests, you've got them on the pedophile charges, might as well make sure those fuckers don't get out of the slammer anytime soon.
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Ender, by the logic you're using (an unjust law which violates human rights is OK if it can be used judiciously in order to punish people the police really don't like), one could just as easily support a law making it illegal to shave your beard. After all, they can use it to really punish criminals that they don't like, right?
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"Viagra commercials appear to save lives" - tharkûn on US health care.
http://www.stardestroyer.net/Mike/RantMode/Blurbs.html
I suppose it comes down to personel opinion then. Personelly, I do have enough faith in the system still to be comfortable, especially since using such a charge inappropriately would bring the ACLU and others down on the DA like a ton of bricks.Frank Hipper wrote:Smells of Slippery Slope, it does. Where would you draw the line? I sure as fuck would not trust the athorities to "simply" stay their hand in using this to generate stiffer sentencing. Convictions=success to DAs, and having that sword hanging over my head is not something conducive to a good night's sleep.Ender wrote:Another posibility is using it to really hammer people you already have going down. IE Pedophile Priests, you've got them on the pedophile charges, might as well make sure those fuckers don't get out of the slammer anytime soon.
Convictions are good, but one big controversy is far worse the 100 convictions.
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So its OK to subject an innocent person to the stress and hardship (both emotional AND financial) of defending themsleves at trial in order to have access to that unjust law? The ACLU MIGHT get involved, then again they might not and the ACLU COULD lose the case thus putting the innocent person in jail. But that's OK by your view so we can find some way to get deadbeats. Come on....Ender wrote:I suppose it comes down to personel opinion then. Personelly, I do have enough faith in the system still to be comfortable, especially since using such a charge inappropriately would bring the ACLU and others down on the DA like a ton of bricks.Frank Hipper wrote:Smells of Slippery Slope, it does. Where would you draw the line? I sure as fuck would not trust the athorities to "simply" stay their hand in using this to generate stiffer sentencing. Convictions=success to DAs, and having that sword hanging over my head is not something conducive to a good night's sleep.Ender wrote:Another posibility is using it to really hammer people you already have going down. IE Pedophile Priests, you've got them on the pedophile charges, might as well make sure those fuckers don't get out of the slammer anytime soon.
Convictions are good, but one big controversy is far worse the 100 convictions.
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I thought Exaggeration to extremes was a logical fallacy of some kind.Darth Wong wrote:Ender, by the logic you're using (an unjust law which violates human rights is OK if it can be used judiciously in order to punish people the police really don't like), one could just as easily support a law making it illegal to shave your beard. After all, they can use it to really punish criminals that they don't like, right?
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I'm sorry, but where did I say that? I said I trust the DA to do the right thing and not abuse it. I never once said that innocent people should be put through trial and have to hope that a civil rights group defends them.Stravo wrote:So its OK to subject an innocent person to the stress and hardship (both emotional AND financial) of defending themsleves at trial in order to have access to that unjust law?
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Ender, you can't possibly be serious. Keeping an unjust and unconstitutional (in spirit in not in letter) on the books in order to nail people who've escaped judgement for other crimes spits in the face of the rule of law. If you can't get somebody on a just law, conduct a better investigation next time.
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Explain how that's an extreme. Your reasoning that keeping an unjust law around because we could use it to prosecute criminals who got off of another charge defies any sort of derogatory adjective or superlative I can come up with.Ender wrote:I thought Exaggeration to extremes was a logical fallacy of some kind.Darth Wong wrote:Ender, by the logic you're using (an unjust law which violates human rights is OK if it can be used judiciously in order to punish people the police really don't like), one could just as easily support a law making it illegal to shave your beard. After all, they can use it to really punish criminals that they don't like, right?
It discriminates against homosexuals, because they're the only criminals who would be eligible for being charged with this. If a straight guy gets off, he's scott-free, and your idiotic idea of keeping a stupid law around does nothing to keep him off the streets.
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NO. You said that the threat of the ACLU would keep the DA honest. I worked a suimmer in the Criminal courts. DA's are usually either political appointees that have freinds in the higher ups and are using it as a stepping stone to something else thus could care less except for their "conviction rate" and those true believer crusaders. NOW would you REALLY want your fate in the hands of civil servants or would you rather not have to make that decsioin at all JUST for having access to a law that makes no fucking sense??do have enough faith in the system still to be comfortable, especially since using such a charge inappropriately would bring the ACLU and others down on the DA like a ton of bricks.
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