- Joined
- Jun 11, 2009
- Messages
- 19,657
- Reaction score
- 8,454
- Gender
- Male
- Political Leaning
- Libertarian
The appellate court may not grant a stay but they will certainly grant an appeal.
Once again, anything that blows your idea out of the water is a strawman.
Nice try but he has nothing here but an opinion stated to promote gay marriage. He is trying to influence th 9th circuit to deny an appeal
Nice try but he has nothing here but an opinion stated to promote gay marriage. He is trying to influence th 9th circuit to deny an appeal
I think it's safe to say that the 9th Circuit doesn't care what he thinks about the standing issue.
Like I said in the other thread I am willing to accept the decision of the SCOTUS but there should not be any gay marriages until that decision is rendered because there is a real chance the Gay judges decision will be overturned then you will have utter chaos...Allowing gay marriage to take place is just another example of activism.....Its really to bad..........
By the way I did not hear any of you "Feel Good Liberals" take me up on my offer to accept the decision of the SCOTUS...Why am I not surprised??????
Why should liberals take you up on your offer when even YOU won't accept the SCOTUS ruling on allowing abortions.
Put up or shut up.
I think it's safe to say that the 9th Circuit doesn't care what he thinks about the standing issue.
Honestly I don't think you understand what "biased" even means.
I think it's safe to say that the 9th Circuit doesn't care what he thinks about the standing issue.
What makes you think that?
Because the ego of a judge tends to increase with his position. If a Circuit judge disagrees with a district judge on an issue where there's no deference owed, he's not going to be shy about pointing that out.
Because the ego of a judge tends to increase with his position. If a Circuit judge disagrees with a district judge on an issue where there's no deference owed, he's not going to be shy about pointing that out.
Because the ego of a judge tends to increase with his position. If a Circuit judge disagrees with a district judge on an issue where there's no deference owed, he's not going to be shy about pointing that out.