Based on one's beliefs, one could make the argument that, if you're pro-abortion, then you are guilty of the exact same thing. You would support being able to deny an unborn person their right to life, based on nothing under their control whatsoever.
The pro-choice argument rests on the belief that a foetus is not conscious or self-aware, and by extension that another's right supersedes it. Even someone who's pro-life must recognise that the entity under consideration-- whether we call it a person yet or not-- does not have the same level of consciousness.
On the other hand, those against same-sex rights recognise that gay people have just as much consciousness, awareness, sense of self, personhood etc. And yet regardless, believe they shouldn't be entitled to the same rights. Apples and oranges.
I understand where you’re coming from, or at least I think I do. However, I don’t find the fear mongering around the notion that the Supreme Court is somehow going to reverse LGBT protections to be particularly credible. Especially considering that just a few months ago they ruled the title VII applies to both gay and transgender employees, and that decision was 6 to 3.
More relevantly, in 2015, 4 Justices voted against equal marriage (all Republican), and 5 voted for (4 Democrat, 1 Republican). 3 of those "against" voters are still present, 2 of whom have spoken harshly against the ruling only
this year. So we're supposed to trust in the now heavily-Republican SCOTUS to return the same ruling if prompted? If the same party voting lines came up now, it would be overturned.
You quoted me but tagged someone else, btw
Right you are, I'll edit.
Never did that. Just didn't give such bills undeserved credit.
Nonsense. You were implying that they only put bills through the House in the knowledge they wouldn't get signed. It was a clear criticism.
Fill the docket with impeachments. Those cannot simply be ignored. Do all of these things that they thought about doing prior:
A new memo spells out the myriad options available to Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer to delay confirmation of a new Supreme Court justice.
theintercept.com
The big problem here is that actions don't match rhetoric.
OK, so they could repeatedly vote to impeach, over and over, preventing any work getting done. I suppose that's practically feasible. It would destroy the Democratic campaign for November, of course, meaning the SCOTUS could just be packed by Trump after November 3rd.
If it's really an illegitimate process, on the table is physically disrupting any process that proceeds from that illegitimacy. Yell, scream, block the doors into the chamber, anything.
So, for this to work, they'd have had to be doing this since announcement (else the Republicans could just have altered the timetable). I'm sure several straight weeks of that on tape would have played really well with people.
I thought we were against them tanking the election? Had they done any of this, the view of the party would plummet through the floor, and this forum would be ablaze about how the Dems don't even want to win, they're sabotaging themselves with these gestural antics, etc.
I never thought this Democratic Party would call for a general strike in the first place, so much of this is immaterial. However, if they wanted to do such a thing, they could easily broaden the list of demands beyond just the Supreme Court. There is plenty for labor to be agitated about right now. The thing is, the Democratic Party doesn't actually want a militant labor movement. They'd rather lose than have a militant labor movement behind them.
So, manipulate the workers into acting as leverage in a party political dispute.
All that they did was the epitome of gesture politics.
The thing is, this conversation would have gone much the same way regardless of what they did.