Upchurch
Papa Funkosophy
From where I sit, all I see is "nonsense". A little help for us legally illiterate? What exactly are we looking at here?Brown said:Shame on the lawmakers who introduced or sponsored this pompous nonsense.
From where I sit, all I see is "nonsense". A little help for us legally illiterate? What exactly are we looking at here?Brown said:Shame on the lawmakers who introduced or sponsored this pompous nonsense.
Basically, the Act seeks to change the Constitution by preventing enforcement of the Constitution in the Courts. In particular, the Act seeks to repeal the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment by making the Clause unenforceable in the courts.Upchurch said:From where I sit, all I see is "nonsense". A little help for us legally illiterate? What exactly are we looking at here?
Quick background: the Constitution created only the Supreme Court and gave it limited jurisdiction, but gave Congress the power to create lower federal courts. One of the "checks and balances" in this scheme is that the subject-matter jurisdiction of federal courts is generally controlled by Acts of Congress (that is, Congress dictates what types of disputes can be heard by federal courts).Upchurch said:From where I sit, all I see is "nonsense". A little help for us legally illiterate? What exactly are we looking at here?
Agammamon said:Commandments 1-4 deal with solely with religious matters.
7 prohibits adultery which, while a huge concern in the past, is generally left up to the concsience of the parties involved.
10 seems to be a general prohibition against envy or jealousy, something that has never to my (admittedly limited) knowledge been illegal.
So that leave roughly 4 out of 10 (and #5's iffy) as the "basis" of western law, significatly less than 50%. 'Course we won't mention precedents from earlier sources since that just muddies this issue. Or the fact that there are at least 2 different versions of the decalogue in any particular version of the bible. Or that the decalogue is different depending upon which version of Christianity you subscribe to.
Let's not reinvent the wheel here:Agammamon said:The 10 commandments
As to why these aren't the basis for western law
Commandments 1-4 deal with solely with religious matters.
7 prohibits adultery which, while a huge concern in the past, is generally left up to the concsience of the parties involved.
10 seems to be a general prohibition against envy or jealousy, something that has never to my (admittedly limited) knowledge been illegal.
So that leave roughly 4 out of 10 (and #5's iffy) as the "basis" of western law, significatly less than 50%. 'Course we won't mention precedents from earlier sources since that just muddies this issue. Or the fact that there are at least 2 different versions of the decalogue in any particular version of the bible. Or that the decalogue is different depending upon which version of Christianity you subscribe to.
I'm glad you commented on this section. The section struck me as unreasonably vague and I wasn't sure of its specific purpose. Perhaps it was part of an overall theme: to stop judges from being "activist" judges, whatever that means. Or perhaps it was meant as an insult to the judicial branch, by suggesting that the judicial branch didn't know how properly to interpret the Constitution.ceo_esq said:The proposed law ... also ... stops federal courts from invoking laws or judicial decisions of foreign countries or international organizations except for English common law (which is already incorporated into the Constitution). Sometimes, American judges facing a difficult or novel legal issue will take into consideration how foreign courts have handled a similar issue. This really bugs people like Moore, because foreign legal institutions are often more hostile to religion than American legal institutions.
I think what Moore and his ilk are worried about is some scenario in which a U.S. federal court one day cites a decision of, say, the godless European Court of Human Rights to support a conclusion that something (e.g. gay marriage) is an internationally recognized human right.Brown said:I'm glad you commented on this section. The section struck me as unreasonably vague and I wasn't sure of its specific purpose. Perhaps it was part of an overall theme: to stop judges from being "activist" judges, whatever that means. Or perhaps it was meant as an insult to the judicial branch, by suggesting that the judicial branch didn't know how properly to interpret the Constitution.
Judges rarely mention foreign laws these days, and they never treat foreign laws as binding. The proposed legislation nevertheless says that a court of the United States may not "rely" on such foreign laws in interpreting and applying the Constitution of the United States. "Rely" is an undefined and vague term in this context.
So a judge can put a statue of a horned figure in his court with the enscription "Hail all-mighty Satan!" and there is nothing that could be done to stop him (except being voted out of office the next election)? Cool.Brown said:Basically, the Act seeks to change the Constitution by preventing enforcement of the Constitution in the Courts. In particular, the Act seeks to repeal the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment by making the Clause unenforceable in the courts.
Well, under the proposed law, official acknowledgment of God would be okay, but it doesn't extend the same protection to Satan.spejic said:So a judge can put a statue of a horned figure in his court with the enscription "Hail all-mighty Satan!" and there is nothing that could be done to stop him (except being voted out of office the next election)? Cool.
First of all, consider the form of Roman Law that survived to be transmitted to successive traditions. By the mid-fourth century, the Roman Empire had become Christian. The sixth-century Codex Justinianeus that supplanted prior sources of Roman law reflected significant influence by and absorption of biblical legal precepts. The glosses to the Codex contain specific references to Mosaic law. Thus, the Roman vestiges you find in later Western legal traditions (including – importantly - canon law, which I’ll discuss a little further on) derive from this heavily Christianized form of law.
Cleo,Cleopatra said:I am interested in reading more about the influence of the Ten Commandments on the Codex Justinianeus.Do you have any readings to suggest? Also, although you seem to consider the influence of TC on the Byzantine Law you don't discuss the matter analytically.
Thanks.
Anytime, Cleopatra.Cleopatra said:Thank you very much. I traced the book this afternoon and it discusses the matter indeed. I still wonder though why scholars do not refer to that influence and people believe that the Roman Law is the only legal tradition on which the Justinian Code was based. Do you think that it has anything to do with the fact that the Ten Commandments are of Jewish origin?I don't wish to believe such things but I have learned to be suspicious I wasn't born suspicious.
The reason I am asking is because as I have told you before, some months ago I gave a copy of your post to some students in the Law School. One colleague ( but not so famous about his education, if I am allowed to say that) saw it and he almost accused me ( not in a direct manner of course) that I spread jewish-protestant propaganda at the University composed " by jewish-american lawyers".
This episode saddened me very much and I wish to explore the matter further.
Thanks for your help anyway.