DoubtingThomas wrote:honorentheos wrote:Arguing partisanship is a sign of their lacking intelligence seems like a bad way to refute my belief you want to see authoritarian leaders who cut Gordon knots with ease whose rightness is recognized by how closely their rulings align with your assumed view of what is right and wrong.
My views? My views aren't my gospel, I change my mind frequently. I am always open to new evidence that contradicts my assumptions. I don't disagree with conservatives on everything and I don't agree with liberals on everything. The Supreme Court Justices are suppose to be open minded. Gymnastics doesn't make the Justices intelligent. Please share why you think the Justices are intelligent.
A comment I saw said, "And this is what is wrong with America. Judges should judge on the facts, not beliefs or opinions. That their political or religious BELIEFS affect their judgements is so messed up"
That comment is so breathtakingly simplistic and naïve, it's hard to know where to even start. Okay, here goes. For a significant period of time, the prevailing model of jurisprudence looked something like this: it is possible to look at past judicial decisions and develop from them some general rules of applicability. Once those rules have been established, a judge can apply those rules to a given set of facts, which, if done properly, will lead to a single, correct outcome. In other words, the combination of specific facts and general rules will come together to lead to one and only one result. This model of jurisprudence is commonly referred to as legal positivism or legal formalism.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Legal_positivism The case law method, prevalent in law schools, was structured along this model: students read cases, were led through Socratic dialog to extract the general principles, and then taught to apply the general principles to new fact patterns.
In the 1920s, a new school of legal thought arose that has been labeled "legal realism."
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Legal_realism Legal realism blew legal positivism to pieces, demonstrating that the combination of general rules and specific facts cannot dictate a single outcome. They, like you, proposed using objective scientific methods to study what it is that judges do and then predict the outcomes of cases based on that study.
In the '70s, law's version of postmodernism came along and both extended and demolished legal realism. It's known as Critical Legal Studies. Like legal realism, it employed critique to break down legal positivism. But it also applied postmodern critique to show that applying the scientific method to study what judges do and predict results was also an impossible and misguided approach. It denies the distinction between law and politics, approaching the decisions of judges as just another political decision. It's very much a critique from the political left.
My takeaway from all of this is that the notion that judges can decide cases without employing their beliefs and opinions is nonsensical. I'm thoroughly convinced, through the critique of the legal realists and CLS folks that the combination of facts and law do not dictate a single, correct result in most, if not all, cases. That means that judges must use "something else" to decide cases. And that something else is beliefs and opinions -- sometimes described in a fancy fashion as judicial philosophy or political philosophy That being the case, it's no surprise at all that Supreme Court Justices decide cases in a matter consistent with political beliefs. After all, the very reason they are nominated in the first place is that their political beliefs, as evidenced by their writings and judicial opinions, align with those of the President.
“The ideal subject of totalitarian rule is not the convinced Nazi or the dedicated communist, but people for whom the distinction between fact and fiction, true and false, no longer exists.”
― Hannah Arendt, The Origins of Totalitarianism, 1951