acesfull86
Well-known member
Why are the sheep OK with this?
[tw]1449768417309958153[/tw]
How many lies in one tweet? I count 4…
Why are the sheep OK with this?
[tw]1449768417309958153[/tw]
I define law a little differently.
The laws are in direct conflict so which one controls?
I gotta admit I've never heard of the USPHS Commissioned Corps and had no idea they had admirals. Do they have ships?
Disclose.tv
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JUST IN - Senator Joe Manchin is reportedly considering leaving the Democratic Party - reports.
This was obvious. Sinema is next.
The new MAGA party has a wide tent.
Come on on in.
Hmm... real tough one there... lemme just type that into WestLaw:
"Where state and federal law “directly conflict,” state law must give way. PLIVA, Inc. v. Mensing, 564 U.S. 604 (2011).
"tate law is nullified to the extent that it actually conflicts with federal law." Fid. Fed. Sav. & Loan Ass'n v. de la Cuesta, 458 U.S. 141, 153 (1982).
"Congressional enactments that do not exclude all state legislation in same field nevertheless override state laws with which they conflict." Jones v. Rath Packing Co., 430 U.S. 519, 525–26 (1977)
It's almost like in the situation you described there isn't actually a "direct conflict" because your personal definition isn't how the system actually works. But I dunno, maybe SCOTUS is just confused.
I had a buddy in that; worked medical in a prison. Didn't end up being as glamorous as he was hoping.
Where power overlaps and there are conflicting laws, the federal law wins. But if the feds lack the power to do something and the states have that power, the state law is supreme.
Yes. But above you said this second situation was a “direct conflict.” It’s not, because as you say, if there was a conflict the state law would lose. And there is no conflict because… there is no federal law to conflict with beyond the limits set on federal power. Voila, we did it.
I also went to law school. Reciting basic principles of federal law directly stated in the constitution and regularly repeated by rote in SCOTUS opinions does not set off alarm bells for me.
We are just going around and around on this striker.
If they were “laws in direct conflict” the answer would be federal law wins, see direct cites above. If federal law isn’t winning, there is no direct conflict. QED. Full stop. “The court rules” explicitly that there is no conflict because there is no longer federal law in the scenario you are describing.
And yes, they would be in conflict before the fed statute was thrown out. But in that a priori situation, state law loses and the federal law is supreme. If you go to court and don’t challenge the constitutionality of the federal law, but only ask the court to enforce the state law because this is a “state domain,” you will lose.
But I will eagerly await your criticism of every other anodyne “blanket statement of law” said by a public official. You will be very tired. Here’s a scary one, also straight from the constitution, so I’m sure you will find all the numerous exceptions:
Me, definitely a public official: “you have to be 35 to be president, sorry bro.”