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Article 6 of the United States constitution says the following:
"[...] but no religious test shall ever be required as a qualification
to any office or public trust under the United States."
Article 6 of the North Carolina constitution states the following:
"The following persons shall be disqualified for office:
First, any person who shall deny the being of Almighty God. [...]"
The contradiction could not be clearer.
Could someone explain to me how this is *possible*? Does nobody in the
United States actually enforce the constitution and make sure that the
member states follow it?
--
- Warp
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On 12/12/2012 7:45 AM, Warp wrote:
>
> Could someone explain to me how this is *possible*? Does nobody in the
> United States actually enforce the constitution and make sure that the
> member states follow it?
>
My understanding is that enforcing this would be a matter of
constitutional interpretation, and would thus fall under the judicial
branch. Thus for the judicial branch to rule the clause in the North
Carolina constitution invalid, a case would actually need to be brought
to the court. So long as North Caroline doesn't bother to enforce that
clause, that's unlikely to happen, so the clause remains. It's an
artifact of the way that the US system has more in place to enforce a
consistent execution of the law via reactive mechanisms, rather than a
consistent letter of the law via proactive mechanisms.
When similar clauses have been challenged in recent times, they've been
declared unconstitutional (often on grounds of the first and 14th
amendments instead of the 6th).
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On Wed, 12 Dec 2012 10:45:28 -0500, Warp wrote:
> Could someone explain to me how this is *possible*? Does nobody in the
> United States actually enforce the constitution and make sure that the
> member states follow it?
Any law can be passed, it's up to someone who wouldn't meet the criteria
to challenge it in court.
And yes, there are people who challenge laws like this as a matter of
course - FFRF has a track record of doing so - but in order to bring an
action, they have to have standing to do so (or be representing someone
who does). They can't just say "this violates the constitution so we'll
challenge it" if they're not a resident of the state in question with the
intention of running for an office that has this requirement.
Jim
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Jim Henderson <nos### [at] nospamcom> wrote:
> Any law can be passed, it's up to someone who wouldn't meet the criteria
> to challenge it in court.
But I thought the whole idea of a constitution is that anticonstitutional
laws can *not* be passed.
--
- Warp
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On 12/12/2012 9:36 AM, Jim Henderson wrote:
> On Wed, 12 Dec 2012 10:45:28 -0500, Warp wrote:
>
>> Could someone explain to me how this is *possible*? Does nobody in the
>> United States actually enforce the constitution and make sure that the
>> member states follow it?
>
> Any law can be passed, it's up to someone who wouldn't meet the criteria
> to challenge it in court.
>
> And yes, there are people who challenge laws like this as a matter of
> course - FFRF has a track record of doing so - but in order to bring an
> action, they have to have standing to do so (or be representing someone
> who does). They can't just say "this violates the constitution so we'll
> challenge it" if they're not a resident of the state in question with the
> intention of running for an office that has this requirement.
>
> Jim
>
Because, being a citizen and/or resident of the state, for some damn
reason, doesn't qualify you as "having standing". Its this sort of BS
that allows them to get by with a lot of shitty stuff, including the
recent decision in one state to vote in a "right to work" law, in such a
way that, supposedly, it can't be just shot down via a referendum (i.e.,
private citizens are not allowed to present a bill, which targets the
removal of the law). And, of course, this was in direct retaliation
against unions, who had tried, and failed, to put through a law which
would have protected their rights, and, in the process, killed a list of
other laws already on the books, which already undermined their ability
to negotiate. Now.. no one gets to, basically, negotiate, and any thing
the unions do get, and, as in the case of health insurance here in my
state, with a similar law, have to pay for, ends up coming out of the
pocket of the union, even if only one person in the entire store is in
it, and there are 150 employees, all of them getting the "same" union
paid insurance. (Well, I think the store puts in some money, since they
recently shafted us $5 a week, then gave us a pitiful 10 cent raise to
compensate, over, "We imagine the cost will go up, so, you need to pay
some of it out of your pocket!" Because, you know, the $25 co-pay for
just seeing a damn doctor wasn't screwing us enough...)
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On 12/12/2012 9:45 AM, Warp wrote:
> Jim Henderson <nos### [at] nospamcom> wrote:
>> Any law can be passed, it's up to someone who wouldn't meet the criteria
>> to challenge it in court.
>
> But I thought the whole idea of a constitution is that anticonstitutional
> laws can *not* be passed.
>
Sadly, no. It just, in theory, unless someone appointed idiots and
assholes to SCOTUS (but that would never happen...) means that they can
do so, but it will be shot down. Usually the cases are borderline, so
some careful consideration needs to be taken. All too often, and
especially recently, with the, "You won't let us impose
theocracy/oligarchy/dictatorships!", wackos panicking over how small
their movement has gotten, and the appearance of the "wrong color"
president, its gotten far more common, and way more blatant.
Mostly though, some of those laws have been around for a bloody long
time, an they just never got enforced. State constitutions, city
ordinances, etc., are all a bit like some people's basements/attics. A
lot of stuff gets shoved into a corner, and since no one ever bothers to
go in and clean them out (or, more to the point, the people allowed to
are too busy cluttering it with more junk to crawl through what is
already there), it all just sort of stays in there until some idiot
notices it, tries to apply it to some situation, and gets sued over
doing so.
Personally, I think every state, and even the fed, should have a group
specifically designated to rummage through these basements and figure
out what shouldn't be in there, or propose legislation to replace things
that are currently covered by like 50 overlapping bits of incomplete
gibberish, if for no other reason that to bloody simplify the whole
thing. But.. you just know, if someone proposed this, all the nuts would
crawl out of the woodwork, and object that either, "We should keep
that!", or, "Why isn't that being enforced." It would be like watching
an episode of 'Hoarders'.
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On Wed, 12 Dec 2012 12:45:12 -0500, Warp wrote:
> Jim Henderson <nos### [at] nospamcom> wrote:
>> Any law can be passed, it's up to someone who wouldn't meet the
>> criteria to challenge it in court.
>
> But I thought the whole idea of a constitution is that
> anticonstitutional laws can *not* be passed.
No - at least not in the US - laws are passed and then are challenged as
to whether or not they are constitutional. Lawmakers don't judge the
constitutionality of laws they write (though ideally they should create
laws with an awareness of the constitution) - the judicial branch is
responsible for making that evaluation, and they only do so on laws that
have been passed.
Jim
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On Wed, 12 Dec 2012 09:45:58 -0800, Patrick Elliott wrote:
> Because, being a citizen and/or resident of the state, for some damn
> reason, doesn't qualify you as "having standing".
Well, no, it depends on whether or not you can demonstrate that you are
harmed by that law. That's one of the questions before SCOTUS with the
Prop 8 case out of California - do those who appealed even have standing
to appeal? General wisdom is no, they don't, because they're not harmed
by Judge Walker's ruling.
Jim
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Am 12.12.2012 18:45, schrieb Warp:
> Jim Henderson <nos### [at] nospamcom> wrote:
>> Any law can be passed, it's up to someone who wouldn't meet the criteria
>> to challenge it in court.
>
> But I thought the whole idea of a constitution is that anticonstitutional
> laws can *not* be passed.
Well, I guess it's a matter of taste, whether a constitution should
prevent *passing* an anticonstitutional law, or whether it should
prevent *enforcing* such a law.
It seems that Europe favors the former flavor, whether America favors
the latter.
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Kevin Wampler <nob### [at] nowherenet> wrote:
>
> My understanding is that enforcing this would be a matter of
> constitutional interpretation, and would thus fall under the judicial
> branch. Thus for the judicial branch to rule the clause in the North
> Carolina constitution invalid, a case would actually need to be brought
> to the court. So long as North Caroline doesn't bother to enforce that
> clause, that's unlikely to happen, so the clause remains.
Yes, it's a very odd system IMO. Funny thing is, we kids brought up in the US
are led to believe, early on in school, that 'bad laws don't get passed' (to put
it simply.) Only *much* later does the reality of the situation sink in, that an
individual state can pass just about any law, bad or good--AND put it into
practice. Then, only if it's *challenged" by someone or some group afterward,
does it go up the legal-chain-of-command (possibly all the way to the Supreme
Court--*if* it decides to hear the case) to decide on the law's actual
constitutionality. The subtlety here is whether it's 'constitutional' or not. If
the law happens to be really bad--but still constitutional, per the Supreme
Court's thinking--then chances are it will remain on the books. The SC decides
these cases based ONLY on whether or not the law violates the constitution in
some way. In essence, a technical argument. And the SC members are certainly
fallible--that's how slavery in the US remained 'legal' for a long time. The
'interpretation' of the constitution is what it's all about, and seems to
'change with the wind' over time.
BTW, the new California law that was just passed--legalizing or de-criminalizing
the possession of marijuana--goes flatly against a seemingly-overarching Federal
law. It's a current example of this State-vs-Federal system that we have. If no
one in California challenges it, then I'm *guessing* it will remain valid. I'm
not sure if the Federal government itself can summarily strike it down simply
because it differs from the 'higher' law.
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