True, and Scalia isn't really that intelligent. I liked his honest take and justification for his views here, but those views are really simplistic and doesn't take the complexities of the issue into account. He merely framed it in terms of the constitution, which is a really comfortable and easy framework to use.
SK that was his job as a justice. SCOTUS is not there to parse out political issues or make law, it is to determine whether the laws made by Congress are constitutional. Scalia was the best writer in the history of the court, to call him anything but brilliant is just nonsense.
Keith Alexander - right on, bro. SK - Scalia is staying on topic, which is what you're missing. I assume when you say he's simplistic you're referring to his quizzical look he had when Piers was talking about the Founding Fathers not thinking about needing to cover abortion in the Constitution. What you're missing is that just like an actor that stays in character, Scalia stays on point regarding the judicial issue. Note how often he parses between his private views and his public view, or his ending statement about how "most issues in life are simply left up to the democratic process". He's saying: Roe v. Wade was a bad decision based on a dubious due process invention. And brian urquidez - right on, bro. Piers is a dope. Though I've been pleasantly surprised with him calling B.S. on the left regarding their hatred of everything Trump
As a British citizen, I would like to apologise for the few years America had to put up with Piers Morgan. As penance, we have to have him back on our screens again.
Piers’s biggest problem is that he thinks he has a more sophisticated view of the world than literally anybody else that he’s talking to when really he’s just parroting what others say
You're saying he's is out of his depth. I hate piers but there is a problem with that theory. The constitution is subjective. Unfortunately the founders didn't create cliff notes for the damn thing. Take freedom of religion. I grew up believing praise who you want to praise without harassment. Now it's mutated to discrimination against the LBGT community. So it's subjective. And they try to twist it on BOTH sides to fit their agenda.
I feel like Piers has changed over the years. Go read his work at the DailyMail today. Maybe you will feel a little better. Then again maybe you already have felt different over the time that's passed since your comment. I feel like Piers is by far a much more even handed journalist these days.
Piers falls apart pretty quickly, especially when he tries to pretend to know exactly what the framers of the Constitution were thinking and feeling 200 some years ago.
Why is Piers Morgan talking about America's judicial history and tradition? He clearly shows a lack of understanding, as he does with most matters of American politics.
The vast majority of the comments here are all results-oriented. Scalia's point is that the democratic foundation of the US leaves issues like abortion to the people, not 9 un-elected jurists.
David Fleming Thank you, I like seeing this iterated because he had that expression the whole time. Nobody is intellectually capable of seeing his remarks to mainstream Piers Morgan.
I agree. DC v. Heller was an insult to the democratic process. Same with McDonald v. Chicago. Both were decisions by unelected judges who went against the will of the people.
No. The will of the people can be unconstitutional, e.g. DC v. Heller. Do you not understand why the Constitution exists? It exists to prevent democratic rule from becoming tyranny, e.g. the French Revolution.
+Tony Boy The will of the people can be unconstitutional. The key word is "can" not "always" or "never." The Constitution is completely silent on abortion. It neither demands nor prohibits it. That means states are free to legislate on it as they wish which means anywhere from making it a right to absolute prohibition. The Heller and McDonald decisions are different. There state legislatures tried to override a part of the federal constitution, namely the 2nd Amendment, with legislation. States can't do that. It would be no different than if a state passed a law abolishing or severely restricting free speech or squelching the free exercise of religion. States can't override the federal Bill of Rights with legislation. However, states are free to pass laws that the federal constitution is silent about such as abortion. That's the difference.
Piers is playing for an audience, which he does for money. Scalia is speaking from a principled point of view. I didn’t agree with Scalia on much of anything, but he’s trying to discuss this subject in an intellectual manner, and Piers is trying to create sound bites. They should have picked a law professor to conduct this interview. Not a loudmouth media figure. 😒
Roe caused that infantile grasp. It confused in people's minds the role of courts in our system of government. For most people it comes down to this today " I like it, so it is constitutional or I dont like it, so it is unconstitutional"
“ If you argue correctly you’re never wrong” Scalia knows how to interpret and articulate the constitustions outdated and broad asseverations into specific arguments against things like abortion, which he obviously disagrees with. he doesn’t care about womens choice or their wants and views..he was a right wing religious and constitutionalist nut who had no interest in representing the people, only guided by his party allegiance and his religion. Such insanity!
Scalia may have got his wish. However, as I see it, changing Roe could be a step toward reverting back to states' rights and chaos. I think there are people who want no one from any other state to enter their state. How many people in the South tell me that Northerners have infected their culture.
@@arthurgrimes2463 It sure sounds like you are saying the US was in chaos for most of its existence: "reverting back to states' rights and chaos" States should hold fast to their sovereign rights and not give them up for federal money. It's sad how often you can see states kowtowing to the federal government as a master and not an mediator. The US was built from the of sovereign states, beholden to their citizens, uniting under a common flag for a common purpose. (For those who need to ask "what purpose," start with the Preamble!)
@@dwpetrak Same with Australia. the states formed the Commonwealth thru the consent of the people. Queen Victoria then gave her royal assent and so a nation was created. We rule ourselves but we are reigned over by King Charles 3.
The Constitution never mentioned "Women's Right" you piece of sh¡t, up until recently Women finally got Rights. Women should have their Right to decide...who are we to intrude in any Women's Body or Life! Twll me, who
The gap of intellectual depth between Scalia and Piers Morgan is so vast that it's impossible for the two to have a conversation. Piers is framing the issue du jour and using child-like arguments that have zero legal basis. It's literally how a 4th grader would interpret the Constitution.
Correct! This was a ridiculous mismatch..but we did find out why Justice Scalia opposed Roe vs. Wade..Many are ignorant of the intent of the framers..and Scalia was a rare exception! He pointed out here that Roe vs. Wade actually denied thr rights of states to restrict abortion..but that is not democracy! Each state should have the freedom to pass laws without imposition if the federal government..
@@carolr.556 You can see it sometimes and this can be with either Conservative or Liberal Journalists. Piers Morgan is just not qualified to do this interview and his egotistical interrupting and derailing just makes it worse. AND Scalia is even talking in layman terms and being down to Earth and trying to communicate.. I was not a fan Of Scalia but still one should listen to what he has to say and maybe even learn something ! Of course boorish , bias, sound bite driven Journalists just don't do that !
This is what happens when activists think they're lawyers. Asking Scalia whether he thinks abortion should be illegal is completely besides the point. That's a question for a legislator but Piers apparently doesn't know the difference.
It's clearly a question that should be asked supreme courts justices. Scalia was an intelligent man (all justices are, except kavanaugh) but being against abortion is so dumb. The goverment should not be able too interfere with a womans choise.
One of the more important purposes of SCOTUS is to eliminate the tyranny from the majority. It is their job to prevent legislators to deprive women's right to decide whether they want to have children or not. Justice Scalia just wanted to escape his responsibilities for his own political believes. And the founding father thought women had no rights to vote and were properties of men. There weren't even safe abortion procedures existed back then. How are you going to know what they wanted just by looking at the constitution? Originalist are bullshitting thinking they can predict the future just by looking at the piece of paper that was written more than 200 years ago. Do you think it would be proper to allow the state legislators to decide whether to allow black people kids to go to the same schools as white kids or right to marry across different races? Then why would there be cases like Brown v. Board of Education Loving v. Virginia? As I recall, there are nothing in the constitution that talks about people should be allowed to marry across races or go to the same school.
@@laocongge Utter horseshit. Judges simply interpret the laws, and should leave any political baggage out of it. If you want change, then look to the Senate and the House, NOT to the courts.
@@AllFascistsCanSuckIt nah he was stupid smart. So smart that people who hear his reasoning behind why this “right” isn’t a right and agree with him are labeled as a bigot by the unintelligent
@@AllFascistsCanSuckIt “you’re a bigot”pffft that’s such a straw man argument 🙄 where in the constitution gives woman the “right” to kill the baby in her womb? I’ll will Venmo you $100 if you can show me where the Constitution says that
@@dragonflarefrog1424 I would respond but in your attempt I believe to insult either me or Scalia you prove you have difficulty with the English language. Congrats, you played yourself. But I am definitely not Scalia smart.
I didn't really like Scalia and disagreed with him about a lot, but he seems like a great man to sit down and have a discussion with. Even if you disagreed, you'd learn a lot.
That's how most of them are. I met Chief Justice Roberts and I disagreed with him ideologically but he was so intelligent and so thorough in his explanation of his views that you just want to hear what he has to say
@@notthefather3919 #WeakJusticeRoberts is spineless, and he's crying right now because he knows that "his" Court will go down in history as one of the worst. I wonder if *he* leaked the draft opinion, because he knew that if this ruling came out as immediate law, the odds of civil war were quite high. This gave the ruling sort of a "soft landing".
"I don't have public views on what should be illegal" And that is what separates the people who _actually_ run things (Scalia) from the people who _wish_ that they were in charge (Morgan).
+inc11111 It's a turn of phrase, he wasn't suggesting Scalia was violent about it. Do you literally give a rat's ass sometimes? Are people really _mother_ fuckers? It's a phrase... move on.
HE knew exactly what he meant. His interview questions were obviously written and rewritten many times beforehand. He chose that word on purpose. Its not like you interview one of the most important justices in the country and come up with the questions randomly. LEftits always use deceitful words.
@@ravix9049 The problem is that it forwards a false history. It states something was true that wasn't in order to support a contemporary narrative. This is a major problem for Scalia because much of his work deals in history.
@@redredred1 No it didn't. It was an inconsequential remark in the scheme of what he was trying get across. Had he said that women of the period had *few rights* instead of none it would change nothing about his argument.
The very fact that the Founders didn’t mention abortion as a specific right in the Constitution is exactly why Scalia feels this way. The Supreme Court is to decide what is Constitutional and if the Constitution does not address it then the 10th Amendment clearly states that it should be decided by the states or by the people. Those on the left are claiming the recent abortion decision by the conservative members of the court is politically motivated but the truth is the original Roe V Wade decision was politically motivated by the progressive members of the court.
Did Piers Morgan even prep for this interview? I may or may not agree with Justice Scalia on this, but come on Piers, do your dammed homework. Train wreck.
I come back to Scalia every now and then, it’s a shame that many people consider his interpretation of the constitution to be biased. Our democracy won yesterday, and hopefully it stays that way.
As a liberal, it is still impossible not to like and respect Justice Scalia despite vastly different opinions. If all conservative justices were like him, I would have no issue with it.
That’s disgusting. He was a horrible man who would see all rights for lgbtq people, women, and other vulnerable groups taken away in a heartbeat. I don’t care that he was “respectful” because he sure as hell wasn’t when he tried to harm people.
@@macprice777 Yeah and he is a hypocrite so he changed laws all the time, the only good thing Scalia did was die. The rest of his life was spent lying, stealing and destroying
What Scalia is outlining here is basically what every conservative justice is saying. It’s simple constitutional rationale that I have not seen any liberal judge argue soundly against. Roe v Wade was simply a political decision, nowhere near legal reasoning.
P. Morgan needed a few years of law school before even hoping to make sense when interviewing Justice Scalia. Justice Scalia was about to explain the nuts and bolts of Substantive Due Process in reference to Roe v Wade when this idiot interrupted him. God bless you always Justice Scalia, I read your opinions often.
The Supreme Court does not "rule our nation," they simply review the rules we live by. For the People, by the People. Never forget that, or imply otherwise, or you might get your wish.
I feel like Piers' interjections and statements still spurred a high quality representation of Scalia's thoughts from him. These interjections did take justice Scalia off what he was talking about previously, which is bad, he should have been left to finish his thoughts, but at the same time, what he moved onto with each interjection was a new set of thoughts that I wanted to hear about. In my opinion a truly bad interviewer gets dead responses with little value, this interview was just messy.
He had a major point that is overlooked by a stupid, periphery comment, that "women had no rights." The forefathers absolutely could not have the foresight to draft a document that would be entirely relevant to life in the modern age. For the same reason Christian mold current societal views around the bible, Americans, including Scalia, do the same with the constitution.
He also said the constitution was a living, breathing document that lived through public opinion of the educated classes, so he gives two opposing views, and projected whichever one he felt like at the time, whichever he thought served him the best. The only thing he was good at was mincing words and crafting them in ways that people less educated than himself would be in wonder of what he was talking about and believe whatever he had to say because he was a supreme court justice. That's called a logical fallacy by means of authority. There was no logic in what he said most of the time, if at all, and just about every educated lawyer knows it. Most people don't because most people do not have an educaiton on law theory and history, let alone personality theory and what this man was doing. He duped a lot of suckers, I'll tell you that.
I rather suppose that the maricon constitution is entirely silent on the slaughter of the unborn, for the same reason that a chap called something like Jesus was utterly silent on swerism: It never crossed either of their minds that men(human beings)could ever possibly be that vile; such things were*inconceivable* for them. The American constriction and American law were and are creatures of the English common law which criminalises both sewerite practices and the slaughter of the unborn-for screamingly obvious reasons.
Justice Scalia's job was to ensure laws follow the constitution. Morgan's argument that just because something is in the constitution doesnt mean its automatically correct us irrelevant
No it is not simple, if that was the case negate all Supreme Court decisions as well as the notion of Judicial Review in favor of the wild wild west of the 10th Amendment. There is a reason that both the Guarantee an Supremacy Clause exists, to negate the rampant Constitutional subjectivity of states based on majoritarianism.
The law guaranteeing the right to abortion is based on the Constitution as it is the document that gives the court the power to decide. In 2022, we have fanatic justices sitting the bench who are selected, bought, and paid for by fanatical dark money.
EXACTLY. In the past few decades Congress has become increasingly polarized and getting 3/4 of Congress (the amount required by the amendment process) to agree on whether the sky is blue or not is a daunting task. The SCOUTS has taken it upon themselves to legislate contentious issues that Congress can't resolve. That isn't their job. So what if Congress can't agree on a federal solution? Ok. It's left to the states. What's so bad about issues being left to the states?
Simple…it’s simple now that a bunch of religious zealots and GOP extremists are the majority! Oh how I despise today’s GOP, and that holier than thou SC, and I never felt that way until 2016. BOTH are populated with lunatics and hypocrites who use religion in ways that are shameful and evil. They could care LESS about unwanted babies nor the circumstances of how some of these women get impregnated. The sheer hypocrisy of these people is revolting!
@@josephbloggs4521 The entire point of the American revolution was that colonists had developed an identity independent of the British. I would not call him British by the time they founded the USA. They are about as British as Ghandi was when India gained independence.
@@Obi-Wan_Kenobi I don't know where you're getting your evidence for this considering there's 0 reference to any sort of unique American/colonial identity anywhere in the Declaration of Independence. Jefferson is much more focused on matters of government and justice than identity. When he does reference identity in the second-last paragraph, he emphasizes the bonds between British identity & that of the new Americans: he refers to Brits as "our British brethren," and emphasizes the "ties of our common kindred" before lamenting that the Brits did not listen to "the voice of justice and of consanguinity." ( www.ushistory.org/declaration/document/ ). Your reference to Gandhi and Indian Independence is also misleading for a couple of reasons. Firstly because Indians had non-British cultures and identities that predated British colonialism in the area, whereas American settlers did not. And Secondly because the Indian Independence movement also wasn't motivated by a homogeneous ethnic identity, but rather by the shared experience of injustice enacted by the British Crown (that's similar to the American context, but in the opposite way that you suggested). Most of those engaged in Indian Independence (and some Indian nationals today) would identify as Punjabi or Kashmiri or Bengali before they would identify as Indian.
"Changing times" is an appropriate argument in a political debate over what laws to pass on things like abortion, gay marriage or school segregation. It is not an appropriate argument in a legal debate over what the Constitution says.
I would go further and say that all of those are absolutely right or wrong, and it's the attitudes that broad swathes of people hold about them that change. Whether this is for the better is a case-by-case question.
Paul Bolin, M.D. The Constitution has been amended many times to fit the needs and whims of modernity. That is the only approprate way to chage its meaning. It just requres the Time Ghost (zeitgeist) to posess the actual public and its elected representatives, rather than an activist judiciary.
@@lol101lol101lol10199 Right you are. Problem is that the two sides hate each other so fucking much that there is seldom any deviation from the side's respective textbook values. Just once, I'd like to hear someone say something along the lines: I may like Trump but I loathed past Republican presidents or I may have liked Kennedy but recent Democrats have been everything I hate. With such a chasm between sides, how could the house ever pass a bill -let alone a constitutional amendment?
People on the left don't give a damn about the Constitution. They want to break the country and remake it to pander endlessly to some and destroy others.
Scalia literally argued that if you are facing the death penalty and found guilty, and then exculpatory evidence emerges that you are clearly factually innocent, the constitution does not protect you and the government can still execute you. What. The. Flying. Fuck.
+Al Costello: No mental gymnastics are needed. Just Scalia's own words: "This Court has never held that the Constitution forbids the execution of a convicted defendant who has had a full and fair trial but is later able to convince a habeas court that he is 'actually' innocent" - Justice Scalia www.businessinsider.com/antonin-scalia-says-executing-the-innocent-is-constitutional-2014-9 Its a perfect example of the kind of morally repugnant pedantry Originalism produces when its taken to its logical conclusion.
kenektik amazing, you denied my claim whilst proceeding to prove it more. This is an extraordinary moment where spectators can visualize the blatant yet unrecognized logical fallacies people with your trait of thought possess. Congratulations.
kenektik He claimed the constitution does not protect it, that does not mean laws enacted later don’t. Scalia made it very clear on the issue of Abortion and Gay marriage. The Constitution says nothing about it anywhere, nor was it secretly implied by the founders anywhere. That is why you can add laws, and add amendments to it. Using the court to decide such things like gay marriage is nonsensical as the courts job is to apply the constitution as its written to the case at hand. And liberal judges much too often like to interpret it in a very progressive attitude as if it’s a living document. Such issues should be left up for debate by congress and enacted by law from the very people elected to represent us, assuming you have faith in our republic.
Consistently, Justice Scalia left his own personal feelings out of the analysis. His only sticking point was the concept of "originalism" which is, in my view, pays most respect to the institution of language. The idea that a court can massage the meaning of words to fit the current times or an activist agenda contravenes the very nature of a neutral adjudicatory body. If you want to change laws, grassroots powers can petition their legislative representatives and push to amend the laws. Whether he was "conservative" or "liberal" is a distraction. Scalia was a defender of consistent analysis. And those sorts of judges can be found on either side. My aversion is to judges who would assume the position of activist.
@@NoQuestions4sked if you were white, and a man, yes you are correct. The 50’s was shitty if you were a member of any minority community, and to a lesser extent if you were a white woman. Don’t be fooled by nostalgia and rose-tinted glasses.
@@TheHexbugfan Imagine being so stupid. Every group was better off in some ways and worse in others back then. Who cares if people were "racist" if the majority of black kids grew up with a father.
@@TheHexbugfan activism is essential, and laws must change. The Supreme Court doesn’t get to do that however, if you believe the law should be changed amend the law don’t just pretend it means something different than when it was written. Opposing judicial activism has nothing to do with opposing activism, our system of government relies on separation of power, and instead people want to put the political future of the country in the hands of 9 people. Opposing judicial activism is supporting freedom and avoiding tyranny. We must preserve the balance of power that has allowed activists to do so much.
@@sidali2590 Yeah, so radical because his jurisprudence leaves questions to the American people rather than having 9 justices tyrannically decide those questions for them.
Mr. Scalia is absolutely correct in what he says here on the subject of abortion. It was a dark day in this country in 1973, and it is a dark day in this country in 2022. Go figure.
He was a great Justice I wouldn’t say he’s the greatest Justice though, Earl Warren, Byron white, John Marshall Harlan, and William J Brennan are some of my favorites.
Joden Ericson Bandiling so you're basically saying trump is on the list also. It also took over 25 years to have Scalia killed ? Why not kill Thomas considering he's even more conservative. You have one hell of a brain I'll tel you that.
“Everybody believed it was the right thing to do”, if that was the case, then why didn’t people just pass laws to protect it, or even a constitutional amendment. Obviously “everyone” didn’t believe it was the right thing, not even a majority of people thought it was the right thing to do. That’s why they needed a Supreme Court ruling to bypass the legislative process.
@@amgirl4286 Fuck the states rights, and fuck anyone who cares about them if they're saying a state can have a say in whether you can get married or not. Also your cute little comment on "give some people power" shows where you're coming from. No. You or anyone else didn't give anyone power they stood up for themselves, and got their rights that were owed to them.
"right" meaning what?-Likeable or desirable? Do you suppose there to be a democracy of truth or is it all down to who has the biggest army and/or most guns? Xi is true because I can injure you or torture you-or just intimidate you, if you don't agree that X is true, or X is true because my gang is bigger than yours.As those weak, effete degenerate creatures that call themselves Americans say, Way to go sunshine, way to go.
If it’s a fundamental liberty interest that falls within the unenumerated rights of privacy and liberty, then it is a protected right that does not require legislative protection.
@@AnthonyWrightEsq I appreciate that you cannot even begin to answer this question, but, what exactly is a “right”? Can you define “a right” *without* resort to cognates and synonyms or simply substituting one undefined term with another or several undefined terms? Not only can you not even begin to define “a right”, no more will you find a single human being that can set out clearly and exactly what he means by “a right” which is to say cannot even begin to define, a “right”, or tell you exactly what he seeks to convey when he uses that word, and the reason that neither of you can do that is that it is the completely meaningless word wholly incapable of definition - it is as if it were a photograph of something, and when you look at that photograph you discover that whoever took it, took it when the lens was not focused so all you get is a blur, and no matter how much you look at it you will never be able to discover of what it is a photograph.
@@vhawk1951kl it’s funny you should say this since I have grappled for an understanding on this for decades. I’d say that the word “right” is like any other human invention, we give it meaning, generally by majority consensus. We say it means we have special abilities or attributes that should be regarded by everyone else as such and therefor protected by all of us. We can list such rights under the columns “freedom to” and “freedoms from” which are often at odds with one another. When these freedoms come in conflict, we try to use some balancing mechanism often symbolized as the scales of justice to try and arrive at some middle ground between extremes. We want to maximize the “freedoms to” and the “freedoms from” and may put “time, place, and manner” restrictions on these liberties which of course often constrain the “freedom to” in order to provide for the “freedom from.” An example could be noise ordinances that restrict loudness to certain times to permit other folks the right to sleep. We say that the right to make noise is important but so is the right to sleep and not be in assailed by noise. To be in a civilization, we find ways to cooperate, which means we trade, negotiate, and compromise these freedoms constantly. Some of our rights (ie freedoms from or freedoms to) we, by some majority vote, place higher than others in priority because we feel they belong higher in that priority and we more severely punish those who may upset the majority view. Indeed, the priorities may change by population or over time and scientific understanding can affect beliefs in what should be priorities and what shouldn’t. Individually, our level of empathy can affect what we prioritize too and may go against the group and end us up extremely rich and powerful or in a small cell or electric chair depending on many factors, including ruthlessness, intelligence, popularity. In other words, some people think they have more rights than others and sometimes, as a society, we reward the resulting behavior and sometimes we punish it.
That doesn’t make sense. The constitution doesn’t explicitly mention many rights, such as the right to privacy, but Scalia only seems to be targeting abortion. Most rights that we have today are implied, and are not explicitly mentioned in the constitution.
I don't know what his opinion was on privacy (e.g., internet usage) but, to be fair to him, he wasn't asked about those issues. He was only asked about abortion (at least in this clip).
I know this is old but its hilarious to see how out of touch Piers was and still is. Trying to tell the best Supreme Court Judge ever about the history of America and the constitution. Thats rich.
At least Piers Morgan was smart enough to have him on his show so the rest of us can witness the intellectual brilliant mind of the wonderful Justice Scalia. Rest in peace Justice Scalia. Thumbs up for Piers.
@froggie animation - instead of ad hominem, why not an actual argument or some evidence? Piers’ claim is not that “women didn’t have equal rights to men at the founding”, it was “women had no rights at the founding“, which is a patently, verifiably false claim. Here’s a citation for you (Blackstone, 1983) - a common law definition of rape, carnal knowledge of a women forcibly and against her will, was punishable by death in the America colonies in the 1600s.
@@joepisacreta3822 He is not going to be able to source it because it falls on two very presumptive arguments 1) That women were wildly abused prior to RoevWade and 2) That the abuse has improved since then. There is one simple argument as to why abortion is not addressed in the US Constitution and that is because children were considered a blessing and a heritage at that time. In fact, women faced the real possibility of death to have them. All of this changed with the industrial revolution, American wealth, and the advancement of medicine where the life of a child became expendable.
Joe Pisacreta Women weren't allowed to vote until 1920 (19th Amendment). The Declaration of Independence even specified denial of Married Women to hold ownership of wages, money, and property (all of which had to be turned over to their husbands). I love Antonin Scalia and All Supreme Court Justices' Law Reviews and Philosophy but he is bending over backwards to deny it in this segment. (10.12.20 00:06)
@Gray Elite - yes women did not have equal rights with men at the founding, including and especially the right to vote, but again, that Piers‘ claim, he said “no rights”, which is false. That’s the point I’m pushing back on, per my other comments in this thread.
How is he a hero? He supports the enslavement of women. Any time the government or an outside party controls someone else's body that's slavery. And that is what this country did to black people.
The problem is, people are so much without any basic principles, that they simply can't get their head around the idea that you as a Supreme Court justice could make decisions not based on your political view, but on the ground of a legal document.
Really wanted to hear the end of Scalia’s remarks on substantive due process. It really seems like he was opposed to roe v. Wade on a serious legal question basis and would consider abortion under a different context, provided the opportunity arose.
Yeah, like if the US added a constitutional amendment protecting the abortion right, then it would be clear what the law is. A federal statute might also work although it could be challenged on various grants, basically that such a statute would exceed federal power. Basically Scalia thinks substantive due process is BS, since there is no support for the concept in the constitution. Some liberal judges just made it up to get a result they wanted.
as an "originalist", Scalia felt that the Constitution left many things to the states ("democratic process")...as it should be...love the man...wish he was still with us!!
Scalia is not the genius you think he is. What about interracial marriage? Constitution says nothing about it and southern states banned it. The Supreme Court had to rule in favor of it so southern states couldn’t ban interracial marriage any more. He is wrong: some rights are so important that no state should be able to take it away.
The way he started to explain substantive due process in the most simple, comprehensive way was astounding. It’s unfortunate the interviewer cut him off because he was cooking
Basically the argument that founders couldnt see the future is void, they wrote in how to pass a constitutional amendment. Do that and thats how u change it
But interpretation is important, which is why we have the court. We don’t need to amend if the interrogation suits the reality of our present day. Fundamental liberty interests do not need to be legislated, they need to be protected by justices ensuring that the constitution sets forth such protections.
@@judgeparker4236 I can also discern your come backs need a bit of polish, in fact your whole persona needs a bit of polish.. good luck in life, you'll probably need it
Judge Antonin Scalia, the gold standard of American Law & Order. He is still passionately missed by me. Now Justice Clarence Thomas has stepped up to that mantle of upholding the Constitution, the Law, Liberty, Justice, and the maintenance of Order for the USA.
@@sprockkets Its common sense that the 14th refers to PROCEDURE ... only a self aggrandizing, power hungry justice who thinks of himself a a king could bastardize simple text to create rights which otherwise don't exist.
@@sprockkets Take a look at Thomas's concurring opinion released today in Dobbs where he excoriates the entire notion of "Substantive Due Process" ... essentially what I said last month
@@wernerfoerster3666 Like I give a fck about what bull sht thomas and the losers on the SC think - they just justified killing a 100+ year old concealed gun law because of a bull sht interpretation of the second amendment.
@@TheHexbugfan No it isnt because there is no case that has ever become before the supreme court with that simple a question. People try to dumb down the actual judicial questions posed to a few words but the fact is Roe v Wade wasnt as simple as "should abortion be legal" it was a case about the 10th ammendment and whether or not abortion legality was covered under the constitution or if its a states issue. The true crux of Roe v Wade is states v federal rights w/r/t topics not listed in the constitution. Thats what Scalia was stating in hios response... Since the constitution takes no stance on the matter then the federal govt must pass a law legalizing abortion if they want it legal. Its not the courts position to legislate and legalize abortion from the bench. Hence why many people say Roe v Wade is improperly decided is because its a classic example of the courts acting in a legislation manner. If you want abortion to be legal congress must pass a bill otherwise its a states rights issue that each state gets to decide.
@@onebuffalo5402 But why should the constitution be so heavily relied upon as if it's a worthy moral compass for any modern nation? Law should be rooted in the constitution to a certain degree, but should that degree subvert morality?
@@TheHexbugfan b/c its the founding principle of our country that set the base standards and rule for governance... Its the rules our country was founded on... that being said the concept of the constitution as a "living document" is that if society takes such a massive change the document can be amended and changed Via ratification of a new amendment. Your argument of morality is subjective and if it were universal the constitution would/could be amended to reflect that universality (ie the 13th amendment and the abolition of slavery). Just because you regard abortion as a moral right doesnt equate it to a universal belief. If it ever did reach that standard it could be legally incorporated into the constitution via ratification. however as of now not only is it not covered in the constitution but its not even covered by any federal laws. Further exemplifying its polarizing nature morality wise indicating it should be relegated to the states to decide its legality based on what their individual constituents believe is morally correct.
@@TheHexbugfan No. Listen to Scalia and Amy Coney Barrett. They don't have a damn litmus test vis a vis liberal justices. This is why it's so preposterously difficult for liberal senators etc. to grasp that there isn't an agenda per se. They (liberal justices, senators etc.) *tend* to have such black and white views and bend law to embrace their position. During Amy Coney Barrett's testimony, I was struck, thunderously, with that point. I actually believe she could uphold Roe, even if she disagreed with it, if she felt the process, law etc. were in it's favor. In other words, she could uphold it if a technicality was out of place, even if it broke her heart to do so. A liberal justice? Wayyyyy more likely to simply legislate from the bench.
The problem with the US legal system, and the SC in particular, is that it's stagnated and well, stalled. It's ossified. They're both more concerned with procedure and legal theory rather than justice- and that's sad when the founding principles of both, not just in the US but anywhere in the world, was the latter, not the former. No one day down and thought they needed a system of courts that could sit down and debate arcane pieces of constitutional trivia- it was to make sure that people couldn't just trample willy nilly on other people's lives and their livelihoods. What's happened in the US is you have an outdated constitution to which everything is (in theory. We've seen this last administration showing clearly how in practice the constitution is only as strong as who's willing to enforce it) so strongly tied to that it makes any sort of progress impossible. The legislature won't reform the constitution, and the judiciary is more concerned with enforcing the State v. Federal issue than with people's lives. It comes down to a pretty basic question then: does a nation exist to protect its constitution at all costs, or does it exist for the betterment of its people? Most nations seem to agree it's the latter. In the US, most people seem to agree with the former, which, to a sane person, is truly, deeply batshit insane.
Here's the problem---your idea of "progress" is stupid, inane, divisive, dangerous, and, ultimately Marxist garbage. When Americans---finally---wake up, your ideas get sucked up in the trash bin of total nonsense.
You nailed it. The right has smartly opted for constitution protection because that is rather black and white and is not subject to as many debates as human betterment. They do that with gun control and are doing it with abortion too. Citizen betterment is a vast, unquantifiable, amorphous objective, one unlikely to keep people divided which is fuel for vote bank politics.
this guy completely misses the point, like everyone in favor of roe. Just because it's in your favor, doesn't mean you can ignore the fact that it was an unconstitutional ruling
@@sidali2590 I mean that’s really an impossible job. You’re trying to be impartial but your also trying to interpret the constitution which a lot of people don’t understand how much of it is left to interpretation.
Agree with Scalia or not on legal terms, go for it- but Piers literally says “hey don’t make this based on your political beliefs” and then goes on to discuss his own political beliefs. Like Scalia or not, Piers is just a hack. This is not an “interview.”
It is one thing to be for or against abortion. And it is another to state that the Constitution narrows down your choice. Mr. Scalia made that clear in a very convincing way.
Piers Morgan is just not intelligent enough to have a conversation with Justic Scalia
brian urquidez - Amen
It's not about being intelligent, it's about earning his paycheck.
True, and Scalia isn't really that intelligent. I liked his honest take and justification for his views here, but those views are really simplistic and doesn't take the complexities of the issue into account. He merely framed it in terms of the constitution, which is a really comfortable and easy framework to use.
SK that was his job as a justice. SCOTUS is not there to parse out political issues or make law, it is to determine whether the laws made by Congress are constitutional. Scalia was the best writer in the history of the court, to call him anything but brilliant is just nonsense.
Keith Alexander - right on, bro.
SK - Scalia is staying on topic, which is what you're missing. I assume when you say he's simplistic you're referring to his quizzical look he had when Piers was talking about the Founding Fathers not thinking about needing to cover abortion in the Constitution. What you're missing is that just like an actor that stays in character, Scalia stays on point regarding the judicial issue. Note how often he parses between his private views and his public view, or his ending statement about how "most issues in life are simply left up to the democratic process". He's saying: Roe v. Wade was a bad decision based on a dubious due process invention.
And brian urquidez - right on, bro. Piers is a dope. Though I've been pleasantly surprised with him calling B.S. on the left regarding their hatred of everything Trump
As a British citizen, I would like to apologise for the few years America had to put up with Piers Morgan. As penance, we have to have him back on our screens again.
I don’t think i can forgive you..... I appreciate the apology though. Please keep this moron over there....
I hope never to see that doosh back in the U.S.
Piers is in love w himself
W o grounds
PM clearly has zero understanding of the constitution or faith in the incredible wisdom of our founding fathers.
LOL!
Like Antonin Scalia or not, but Piers Morgan is way, way out of his depth against him. Its painful to watch this for that reason alone.
The vast majority of politicans are out of their leauge when trying to talk to these judges
Piers’s biggest problem is that he thinks he has a more sophisticated view of the world than literally anybody else that he’s talking to when really he’s just parroting what others say
You're saying he's is out of his depth. I hate piers but there is a problem with that theory. The constitution is subjective. Unfortunately the founders didn't create cliff notes for the damn thing. Take freedom of religion. I grew up believing praise who you want to praise without harassment. Now it's mutated to discrimination against the LBGT community. So it's subjective. And they try to twist it on BOTH sides to fit their agenda.
Yep. Scalia's originalism philosophy is patent nonsense but hes about 1000000x smarter than Piers.
Piers Morgan is out of his depth with almost anyone
The way Piers Morgan talks down to Justice Scalia as if he's more knowledgable than Scalia on the topic is disgusting
Morgan is just a typical TV talking head with more ego than brains.
When Clarkson punched him in the face in a way we all did
Piers Morgan is disgusting in everything he says and does.
I feel like Piers has changed over the years. Go read his work at the DailyMail today. Maybe you will feel a little better. Then again maybe you already have felt different over the time that's passed since your comment.
I feel like Piers is by far a much more even handed journalist these days.
Piers falls apart pretty quickly, especially when he tries to pretend to know exactly what the framers of the Constitution were thinking and feeling 200 some years ago.
Scalia was right all along. And I’m not even a conservative
That's ok.. everyone has some faults..urs is not being politically mature
No he was not he was an evil radical extremist
He was wrong on everything.
@@alex30425 Tell me you're an imbecile without using so many words.
@mitchelll3879 I bet thats coming from a libtard
Why is Piers Morgan talking about America's judicial history and tradition? He clearly shows a lack of understanding, as he does with most matters of American politics.
ye hes just the worst thing to come out of england, and ye im including all history.
America has a long history of admiring British people analyzing their politics.
See: John Oliver on the Left. Piers Morgan on the Right.
that is how justified for the public yes
Piers Morgan on the right?
Realpolitik Yes, because the nuances of American politics are so hard to grasp.
The vast majority of the comments here are all results-oriented. Scalia's point is that the democratic foundation of the US leaves issues like abortion to the people, not 9 un-elected jurists.
David Fleming Thank you, I like seeing this iterated because he had that expression the whole time. Nobody is intellectually capable of seeing his remarks to mainstream Piers Morgan.
I agree. DC v. Heller was an insult to the democratic process. Same with McDonald v. Chicago. Both were decisions by unelected judges who went against the will of the people.
No. The will of the people can be unconstitutional, e.g. DC v. Heller. Do you not understand why the Constitution exists? It exists to prevent democratic rule from becoming tyranny, e.g. the French Revolution.
So you disagree with the original post?
+Tony Boy The will of the people can be unconstitutional. The key word is "can" not "always" or "never." The Constitution is completely silent on abortion. It neither demands nor prohibits it. That means states are free to legislate on it as they wish which means anywhere from making it a right to absolute prohibition. The Heller and McDonald decisions are different. There state legislatures tried to override a part of the federal constitution, namely the 2nd Amendment, with legislation. States can't do that. It would be no different than if a state passed a law abolishing or severely restricting free speech or squelching the free exercise of religion. States can't override the federal Bill of Rights with legislation. However, states are free to pass laws that the federal constitution is silent about such as abortion. That's the difference.
Scalia is stunned at Piers Morgan's infantile grasp of the subject.
Piers is playing for an audience, which he does for money. Scalia is speaking from a principled point of view. I didn’t agree with Scalia on much of anything, but he’s trying to discuss this subject in an intellectual manner, and Piers is trying to create sound bites. They should have picked a law professor to conduct this interview. Not a loudmouth media figure. 😒
In Fairness Piers Morgan was neither American nor a Lawyer. He doesn't understand legal reasoning nor the specifics of the US legal system.
Roe caused that infantile grasp. It confused in people's minds the role of courts in our system of government. For most people it comes down to this today " I like it, so it is constitutional or I dont like it, so it is unconstitutional"
Hahaha it is just silly how much Scalia intellectually outclasses Morgan!
it's called "lying"
It’s even funnier with your grift that you pretend to hold a valid opinion.
Especially being where you are from.
Yes, I pray our SUPREME COURT JUSTICES are smarter then a journalist... 🤡
“ If you argue correctly you’re never wrong”
Scalia knows how to interpret and articulate the constitustions outdated and broad asseverations into specific arguments against things like abortion, which he obviously disagrees with. he doesn’t care about womens choice or their wants and views..he was a right wing religious and constitutionalist nut who had no interest in representing the people, only guided by his party allegiance and his religion. Such insanity!
It's June 24 2022, and Justice Scalia got his wish.
If only he were here to see it…
Scalia may have got his wish. However, as I see it, changing Roe could be a step toward reverting back to states' rights and chaos. I think there are people who want no one from any other state to enter their state. How many people in the South tell me that Northerners have infected their culture.
@@arthurgrimes2463 It sure sounds like you are saying the US was in chaos for most of its existence: "reverting back to states' rights and chaos"
States should hold fast to their sovereign rights and not give them up for federal money. It's sad how often you can see states kowtowing to the federal government as a master and not an mediator. The US was built from the of sovereign states, beholden to their citizens, uniting under a common flag for a common purpose. (For those who need to ask "what purpose," start with the Preamble!)
@@dwpetrak Same with Australia. the states formed the Commonwealth thru the consent of the people. Queen Victoria then gave her royal assent and so a nation was created. We rule ourselves but we are reigned over by King Charles 3.
Poor Piers, so outclassed he didn't even realize it.
Yep, and if you watch him much you will see this happens a lot to Morgan.
The Constitution never mentioned "Women's Right" you piece of sh¡t, up until recently Women finally got Rights. Women should have their Right to decide...who are we to intrude in any Women's Body or Life! Twll me, who
The gap of intellectual depth between Scalia and Piers Morgan is so vast that it's impossible for the two to have a conversation. Piers is framing the issue du jour and using child-like arguments that have zero legal basis. It's literally how a 4th grader would interpret the Constitution.
You're right, of course, but he scores virtue points when he says dumb shit like, "women had no rightz!!!"
Correct! This was a ridiculous mismatch..but we did find out why Justice Scalia opposed Roe vs. Wade..Many are ignorant of the intent of the framers..and Scalia was a rare exception! He pointed out here that Roe vs. Wade actually denied thr rights of states to restrict abortion..but that is not democracy! Each state should have the freedom to pass laws without imposition if the federal government..
@@carolr.556 You can see it sometimes and this can be with either Conservative or Liberal Journalists. Piers Morgan is just not qualified to do this interview and his egotistical interrupting and derailing just makes it worse. AND Scalia is even talking in layman terms and being down to Earth and trying to communicate.. I was not a fan Of Scalia but still one should listen to what he has to say and maybe even learn something ! Of course boorish , bias, sound bite driven Journalists just don't do that !
Absolutely accurate observation.
And how democrats that have the minds of children interpret the constitution. Democrats have childish ideas and thoughts.
Scalia: "I wouldn't say violently opposed, I'm a peaceful man. I would say adamantly opposed". This says a lot.
Wish Scalia was still here. Favorite justice of the past few decades.
This is what happens when activists think they're lawyers. Asking Scalia whether he thinks abortion should be illegal is completely besides the point. That's a question for a legislator but Piers apparently doesn't know the difference.
It's clearly a question that should be asked supreme courts justices. Scalia was an intelligent man (all justices are, except kavanaugh) but being against abortion is so dumb. The goverment should not be able too interfere with a womans choise.
One of the more important purposes of SCOTUS is to eliminate the tyranny from the majority. It is their job to prevent legislators to deprive women's right to decide whether they want to have children or not. Justice Scalia just wanted to escape his responsibilities for his own political believes. And the founding father thought women had no rights to vote and were properties of men. There weren't even safe abortion procedures existed back then. How are you going to know what they wanted just by looking at the constitution? Originalist are bullshitting thinking they can predict the future just by looking at the piece of paper that was written more than 200 years ago. Do you think it would be proper to allow the state legislators to decide whether to allow black people kids to go to the same schools as white kids or right to marry across different races? Then why would there be cases like Brown v. Board of Education Loving v. Virginia? As I recall, there are nothing in the constitution that talks about people should be allowed to marry across races or go to the same school.
@@laocongge Utter horseshit. Judges simply interpret the laws, and should leave any political baggage out of it. If you want change, then look to the Senate and the House, NOT to the courts.
Well that is the main problem with the Left. They can’t tell the difference between justices and legislators.
@@holden6104 That's such a naive or purposefully dishonest way to represent the situation.
Love a British TV personality lecturing one of the most intelligent constitutionalists about the American constitution
He wasn’t intelligent. He was a bigot. And so are you.
@@AllFascistsCanSuckIt nah he was stupid smart. So smart that people who hear his reasoning behind why this “right” isn’t a right and agree with him are labeled as a bigot by the unintelligent
@@AllFascistsCanSuckIt “you’re a bigot”pffft that’s such a straw man argument 🙄 where in the constitution gives woman the “right” to kill the baby in her womb? I’ll will Venmo you $100 if you can show me where the Constitution says that
@@zacharygraham5266 lol you delude yourself, you not Scalia are smart.
@@dragonflarefrog1424 I would respond but in your attempt I believe to insult either me or Scalia you prove you have difficulty with the English language. Congrats, you played yourself. But I am definitely not Scalia smart.
I didn't really like Scalia and disagreed with him about a lot, but he seems like a great man to sit down and have a discussion with. Even if you disagreed, you'd learn a lot.
he was very good friends with RBG too. The world needs more people who disagree politically but can agree to still be friends
You didn’t like him because you like the vast majority of the CNN audience are idiots.
That's how most of them are. I met Chief Justice Roberts and I disagreed with him ideologically but he was so intelligent and so thorough in his explanation of his views that you just want to hear what he has to say
You would learn how weak an intellect he had.
@@notthefather3919 #WeakJusticeRoberts is spineless, and he's crying right now because he knows that "his" Court will go down in history as one of the worst. I wonder if *he* leaked the draft opinion, because he knew that if this ruling came out as immediate law, the odds of civil war were quite high. This gave the ruling sort of a "soft landing".
He is so brilliant yet has such a down to earth way of communicating. Its amazing.
Justice Scalia 👍👍👍👍. Not the rude dude with accent!
He was an evil extremist judge now in hell fire
One the greatest constituinalists & legal minds in our lifetime. R.I.P. Justice Scalia
No, he wasn't Thurgood Marshal was.
@@Ryooken "I believe you do what you think is right and hope the law catches up." - Marshall.
That's judicial activism by definition.
"I don't have public views on what should be illegal"
And that is what separates the people who _actually_ run things (Scalia) from the people who _wish_ that they were in charge (Morgan).
did he ask VIOLENTLY OPPOSED TO IT? Why are trolls like Morgan even allowed in front of people like Scalia? I mean seriously WTF. VIOLENTLY?
+inc11111
It's a turn of phrase, he wasn't suggesting Scalia was violent about it. Do you literally give a rat's ass sometimes? Are people really _mother_ fuckers? It's a phrase... move on.
leftist hatred
probably meant to say vehemently. the two words get conflated a lot
Not if you're competent.
HE knew exactly what he meant. His interview questions were obviously written and rewritten many times beforehand. He chose that word on purpose. Its not like you interview one of the most important justices in the country and come up with the questions randomly. LEftits always use deceitful words.
Morgan is such a lightweight.. Not even his British accent can make him sound smart
Well said 😂😂
Piers: When they made the constitution, women had no rights.
Scalia: That's not true at all.
Piers: Yeah, but still.
@Dewy Wannamaker Still wrong. "Fewer" would work.
@prubin8 Do you know what the word 'fewer' means?
I don't see what the problem is, he was wrong about that but with that being said it was beside his point and didn't change what he was getting at.
@@ravix9049 The problem is that it forwards a false history. It states something was true that wasn't in order to support a contemporary narrative. This is a major problem for Scalia because much of his work deals in history.
@@redredred1 No it didn't. It was an inconsequential remark in the scheme of what he was trying get across. Had he said that women of the period had *few rights* instead of none it would change nothing about his argument.
I might have disagreed with Scalia on a lot of things, but I respect what an intellectual giant he was. There is no disputing that.
lmfao!!!
@@doloreschansey9556 You're such an intellectual 👏
Scalia is possibly the greatest SCOTUS justice in history.
Nah, I don't think so. I think he is a misogynist.
The very fact that the Founders didn’t mention abortion as a specific right in the Constitution is exactly why Scalia feels this way. The Supreme Court is to decide what is Constitutional and if the Constitution does not address it then the 10th Amendment clearly states that it should be decided by the states or by the people. Those on the left are claiming the recent abortion decision by the conservative members of the court is politically motivated but the truth is the original Roe V Wade decision was politically motivated by the progressive members of the court.
Who else is viewing this in 2020 because of the new SCOTUS nominee Judge Amy Coney Barrett ?
Yuuuup thats me
Did Piers Morgan even prep for this interview? I may or may not agree with Justice Scalia on this, but come on Piers, do your dammed homework. Train wreck.
I come back to Scalia every now and then, it’s a shame that many people consider his interpretation of the constitution to be biased. Our democracy won yesterday, and hopefully it stays that way.
As a liberal, it is still impossible not to like and respect Justice Scalia despite vastly different opinions. If all conservative justices were like him, I would have no issue with it.
That’s disgusting. He was a horrible man who would see all rights for lgbtq people, women, and other vulnerable groups taken away in a heartbeat. I don’t care that he was “respectful” because he sure as hell wasn’t when he tried to harm people.
@@davidrojas426 what are you talking about? His whole point is that it’s not his place as a judge to change laws. It’s the role of congress.
@@macprice777 Yeah and he is a hypocrite so he changed laws all the time, the only good thing Scalia did was die. The rest of his life was spent lying, stealing and destroying
@@macprice777 Totally agree!
What Scalia is outlining here is basically what every conservative justice is saying. It’s simple constitutional rationale that I have not seen any liberal judge argue soundly against.
Roe v Wade was simply a political decision, nowhere near legal reasoning.
P. Morgan needed a few years of law school before even hoping to make sense when interviewing Justice Scalia. Justice Scalia was about to explain the nuts and bolts of Substantive Due Process in reference to Roe v Wade when this idiot interrupted him.
God bless you always Justice Scalia, I read your opinions often.
Justice has finally been served. Thank you Lord for sending us such wise men and women to rule our nation.
The Supreme Court does not "rule our nation," they simply review the rules we live by.
For the People, by the People. Never forget that, or imply otherwise, or you might get your wish.
Im pro choice but damn Piers Morgan is such a terrible interviewer
I feel like Piers' interjections and statements still spurred a high quality representation of Scalia's thoughts from him. These interjections did take justice Scalia off what he was talking about previously, which is bad, he should have been left to finish his thoughts, but at the same time, what he moved onto with each interjection was a new set of thoughts that I wanted to hear about. In my opinion a truly bad interviewer gets dead responses with little value, this interview was just messy.
You are for killing the most innocent.
@ oh shut up fool
He had a major point that is overlooked by a stupid, periphery comment, that "women had no rights." The forefathers absolutely could not have the foresight to draft a document that would be entirely relevant to life in the modern age. For the same reason Christian mold current societal views around the bible, Americans, including Scalia, do the same with the constitution.
@Diane Ghazaryan tHe OnLy fOoL iS tHe lEfTy
I love his reaction to Piers. Just how we all react to him.
It is refreshing to hear a Justice distinguish between "public view" and what the Constitution says.
why refreshing? are there any current examples of justice's doing otherwise? help me learn please
He also said the constitution was a living, breathing document that lived through public opinion of the educated classes, so he gives two opposing views, and projected whichever one he felt like at the time, whichever he thought served him the best. The only thing he was good at was mincing words and crafting them in ways that people less educated than himself would be in wonder of what he was talking about and believe whatever he had to say because he was a supreme court justice. That's called a logical fallacy by means of authority. There was no logic in what he said most of the time, if at all, and just about every educated lawyer knows it. Most people don't because most people do not have an educaiton on law theory and history, let alone personality theory and what this man was doing. He duped a lot of suckers, I'll tell you that.
Gotta love the founding, ⅗'s allowing, framers on the Constitition.
Yea godforbid peoples,specifically women’s views on choice, vast majority being pro, line up with current laws.
I rather suppose that the maricon constitution is entirely silent on the slaughter of the unborn, for the same reason that a chap called something like Jesus was utterly silent on swerism:
It never crossed either of their minds that men(human beings)could ever possibly be that vile; such things were*inconceivable* for them. The American constriction and American law were and are creatures of the English common law which criminalises both sewerite practices and the slaughter of the unborn-for screamingly obvious reasons.
Piers was outclassed here. Of course anyone would be opposite Scalia in a legal discussion.
Justice Scalia's job was to ensure laws follow the constitution. Morgan's argument that just because something is in the constitution doesnt mean its automatically correct us irrelevant
Scalia’s positions were not based on emotion, they were based on the law. If the law needs to be revised, there is an amendment process. Simple.
No it is not simple, if that was the case negate all Supreme Court decisions as well as the notion of Judicial Review in favor of the wild wild west of the 10th Amendment. There is a reason that both the Guarantee an Supremacy Clause exists, to negate the rampant Constitutional subjectivity of states based on majoritarianism.
The law guaranteeing the right to abortion is based on the Constitution as it is the document that gives the court the power to decide.
In 2022, we have fanatic justices sitting the bench who are selected, bought, and paid for by fanatical dark money.
EXACTLY. In the past few decades Congress has become increasingly polarized and getting 3/4 of Congress (the amount required by the amendment process) to agree on whether the sky is blue or not is a daunting task. The SCOUTS has taken it upon themselves to legislate contentious issues that Congress can't resolve. That isn't their job. So what if Congress can't agree on a federal solution? Ok. It's left to the states. What's so bad about issues being left to the states?
Simple…it’s simple now that a bunch of religious zealots and GOP extremists are the majority! Oh how I despise today’s GOP, and that holier than thou SC, and I never felt that way until 2016. BOTH are populated with lunatics and hypocrites who use religion in ways that are shameful and evil. They could care LESS about unwanted babies nor the circumstances of how some of these women get impregnated. The sheer hypocrisy of these people is revolting!
_"Scalia’s positions were not based on emotion, they were based on the law."_ Ultimately, Scalia's opinions were based on his Catholic indoctrination.
A Brit trying to tell us about our founding fathers. Hilarious.
Your founding fathers were Brits
@@josephbloggs4521 Exactly.
@@josephbloggs4521 The entire point of the American revolution was that colonists had developed an identity independent of the British. I would not call him British by the time they founded the USA. They are about as British as Ghandi was when India gained independence.
@@Obi-Wan_Kenobi I don't know where you're getting your evidence for this considering there's 0 reference to any sort of unique American/colonial identity anywhere in the Declaration of Independence. Jefferson is much more focused on matters of government and justice than identity. When he does reference identity in the second-last paragraph, he emphasizes the bonds between British identity & that of the new Americans: he refers to Brits as "our British brethren," and emphasizes the "ties of our common kindred" before lamenting that the Brits did not listen to "the voice of justice and of consanguinity." ( www.ushistory.org/declaration/document/ ).
Your reference to Gandhi and Indian Independence is also misleading for a couple of reasons. Firstly because Indians had non-British cultures and identities that predated British colonialism in the area, whereas American settlers did not. And Secondly because the Indian Independence movement also wasn't motivated by a homogeneous ethnic identity, but rather by the shared experience of injustice enacted by the British Crown (that's similar to the American context, but in the opposite way that you suggested). Most of those engaged in Indian Independence (and some Indian nationals today) would identify as Punjabi or Kashmiri or Bengali before they would identify as Indian.
"Changing times" is an appropriate argument in a political debate over what laws to pass on things like abortion, gay marriage or school segregation.
It is not an appropriate argument in a legal debate over what the Constitution says.
I would go further and say that all of those are absolutely right or wrong, and it's the attitudes that broad swathes of people hold about them that change. Whether this is for the better is a case-by-case question.
Yup. We should all live in the 18th century forever.
You people are insane. Worshipping a piece of paper.
Paul Bolin, M.D. The Constitution has been amended many times to fit the needs and whims of modernity. That is the only approprate way to chage its meaning.
It just requres the Time Ghost (zeitgeist) to posess the actual public and its elected representatives, rather than an activist judiciary.
@@lol101lol101lol10199 Right you are. Problem is that the two sides hate each other so fucking much that there is seldom any deviation from the side's respective textbook values. Just once, I'd like to hear someone say something along the lines: I may like Trump but I loathed past Republican presidents or I may have liked Kennedy but recent Democrats have been everything I hate. With such a chasm between sides, how could the house ever pass a bill -let alone a constitutional amendment?
@@pwbmd i don't think you are in any position to tell anyone what they should or should not worship or hold in high esteem.
Justice scalia was a truly great American I hope his legacy lives on
This guy Morgan really needs to read the US constitution.
Asian Country Fan Ben Shapiro gave him a copy once and Piers called it a "little book"
Lam hes too stupid
People on the left don't give a damn about the Constitution. They want to break the country and remake it to pander endlessly to some and destroy others.
@@jshepard152 Morgan isn't left- wing.
RIP Scalia
Scalia literally argued that if you are facing the death penalty and found guilty, and then exculpatory evidence emerges that you are clearly factually innocent, the constitution does not protect you and the government can still execute you.
What. The. Flying. Fuck.
kenektik what gold medal mental gymnastics did you do to come to that conclusion?
+Al Costello: No mental gymnastics are needed. Just Scalia's own words:
"This Court has never held that the Constitution forbids the execution of a convicted defendant who has had a full and fair trial but is later able to convince a habeas court that he is 'actually' innocent"
- Justice Scalia www.businessinsider.com/antonin-scalia-says-executing-the-innocent-is-constitutional-2014-9
Its a perfect example of the kind of morally repugnant pedantry Originalism produces when its taken to its logical conclusion.
kenektik amazing, you denied my claim whilst proceeding to prove it more. This is an extraordinary moment where spectators can visualize the blatant yet unrecognized logical fallacies people with your trait of thought possess. Congratulations.
kenektik He claimed the constitution does not protect it, that does not mean laws enacted later don’t. Scalia made it very clear on the issue of Abortion and Gay marriage. The Constitution says nothing about it anywhere, nor was it secretly implied by the founders anywhere. That is why you can add laws, and add amendments to it. Using the court to decide such things like gay marriage is nonsensical as the courts job is to apply the constitution as its written to the case at hand. And liberal judges much too often like to interpret it in a very progressive attitude as if it’s a living document. Such issues should be left up for debate by congress and enacted by law from the very people elected to represent us, assuming you have faith in our republic.
I am Portuguese background. I love Scaliamania. What a human of intelligence he was. RIP
Consistently, Justice Scalia left his own personal feelings out of the analysis. His only sticking point was the concept of "originalism" which is, in my view, pays most respect to the institution of language. The idea that a court can massage the meaning of words to fit the current times or an activist agenda contravenes the very nature of a neutral adjudicatory body. If you want to change laws, grassroots powers can petition their legislative representatives and push to amend the laws.
Whether he was "conservative" or "liberal" is a distraction. Scalia was a defender of consistent analysis. And those sorts of judges can be found on either side. My aversion is to judges who would assume the position of activist.
Activism is necessary to further a society. Without activism, we would be stuck in the 50’s.
ArchonPriest the 1950s were perhaps one of the best times for one to live in America. What's your point?
@@NoQuestions4sked if you were white, and a man, yes you are correct. The 50’s was shitty if you were a member of any minority community, and to a lesser extent if you were a white woman. Don’t be fooled by nostalgia and rose-tinted glasses.
@@TheHexbugfan Imagine being so stupid. Every group was better off in some ways and worse in others back then. Who cares if people were "racist" if the majority of black kids grew up with a father.
@@TheHexbugfan activism is essential, and laws must change. The Supreme Court doesn’t get to do that however, if you believe the law should be changed amend the law don’t just pretend it means something different than when it was written. Opposing judicial activism has nothing to do with opposing activism, our system of government relies on separation of power, and instead people want to put the political future of the country in the hands of 9 people. Opposing judicial activism is supporting freedom and avoiding tyranny. We must preserve the balance of power that has allowed activists to do so much.
Scalia was an amazing justice for the American people. Truly missed
He was a radical extremist glad he's gone
He's burning in hell right now, if there is a just God in heaven.
@@sidali2590 Yeah, so radical because his jurisprudence leaves questions to the American people rather than having 9 justices tyrannically decide those questions for them.
Mr. Scalia is absolutely correct in what he says here on the subject of abortion. It was a dark day in this country in 1973, and it is a dark day in this country in 2022. Go figure.
rest in peace
We did it sir. GOD BLESS
Justice Antonin Scalia, the greatest Justice to ever sit on the Supreme Court. He is greatly missed!
too soon to tell...
He was a great Justice I wouldn’t say he’s the greatest Justice though, Earl Warren, Byron white, John Marshall Harlan, and William J Brennan are some of my favorites.
@@pleaseenteraname1103 I guess it's one of those things that's subjective.
What a outstanding personality! So charasmatic
Yes, a beautiful, authentic soul. So sad he was murdered by the left.
Jennifer C RN proof please ? You sound stupid as hell
Joden Ericson Bandiling so you're basically saying trump is on the list also. It also took over 25 years to have Scalia killed ? Why not kill Thomas considering he's even more conservative. You have one hell of a brain I'll tel you that.
Jennifer C RN What? 😂😂😂
_FUGAZI Omg what the fuck are you even talking about?
Scalia is just a brilliant mind that this country misses oh so much since his passing. What an intellect yet so very humble and human.
“Everybody believed it was the right thing to do”, if that was the case, then why didn’t people just pass laws to protect it, or even a constitutional amendment. Obviously “everyone” didn’t believe it was the right thing, not even a majority of people thought it was the right thing to do. That’s why they needed a Supreme Court ruling to bypass the legislative process.
@@amgirl4286 Fuck the states rights, and fuck anyone who cares about them if they're saying a state can have a say in whether you can get married or not. Also your cute little comment on "give some people power" shows where you're coming from.
No. You or anyone else didn't give anyone power they stood up for themselves, and got their rights that were owed to them.
"right" meaning what?-Likeable or desirable? Do you suppose there to be a democracy of truth or is it all down to who has the biggest army and/or most guns?
Xi is true because I can injure you or torture you-or just intimidate you, if you don't agree that X is true, or X is true because my gang is bigger than yours.As those weak, effete degenerate creatures that call themselves Americans say, Way to go sunshine, way to go.
If it’s a fundamental liberty interest that falls within the unenumerated rights of privacy and liberty, then it is a protected right that does not require legislative protection.
@@AnthonyWrightEsq I appreciate that you cannot even begin to answer this question, but, what exactly is a “right”?
Can you define “a right” *without* resort to cognates and synonyms or simply substituting one undefined term with another or several undefined terms?
Not only can you not even begin to define “a right”, no more will you find a single human being that can set out clearly and exactly what he means by “a right” which is to say cannot even begin to define, a “right”, or tell you exactly what he seeks to convey when he uses that word, and the reason that neither of you can do that is that it is the completely meaningless word wholly incapable of definition - it is as if it were a photograph of something, and when you look at that photograph you discover that whoever took it, took it when the lens was not focused so all you get is a blur, and no matter how much you look at it you will never be able to discover of what it is a photograph.
@@vhawk1951kl it’s funny you should say this since I have grappled for an understanding on this for decades. I’d say that the word “right” is like any other human invention, we give it meaning, generally by majority consensus. We say it means we have special abilities or attributes that should be regarded by everyone else as such and therefor protected by all of us. We can list such rights under the columns “freedom to” and “freedoms from” which are often at odds with one another. When these freedoms come in conflict, we try to use some balancing mechanism often symbolized as the scales of justice to try and arrive at some middle ground between extremes. We want to maximize the “freedoms to” and the “freedoms from” and may put “time, place, and manner” restrictions on these liberties which of course often constrain the “freedom to” in order to provide for the “freedom from.” An example could be noise ordinances that restrict loudness to certain times to permit other folks the right to sleep. We say that the right to make noise is important but so is the right to sleep and not be in assailed by noise. To be in a civilization, we find ways to cooperate, which means we trade, negotiate, and compromise these freedoms constantly. Some of our rights (ie freedoms from or freedoms to) we, by some majority vote, place higher than others in priority because we feel they belong higher in that priority and we more severely punish those who may upset the majority view. Indeed, the priorities may change by population or over time and scientific understanding can affect beliefs in what should be priorities and what shouldn’t. Individually, our level of empathy can affect what we prioritize too and may go against the group and end us up extremely rich and powerful or in a small cell or electric chair depending on many factors, including ruthlessness, intelligence, popularity. In other words, some people think they have more rights than others and sometimes, as a society, we reward the resulting behavior and sometimes we punish it.
Amend the Constitution if America wants abortion.
That’s the problem. It’s 50/50. Which brings back to Scalia’s point that it shouldn’t be federally mandated.
@@thestifmyster1 The constitution was amended to put in place presidential term limits after FDR died. Anything is possible including the ERA.
A Brit trying to educate Americans on their own country, history, and legal system is the most European thing a European can do
Roe was wrong from the start.
Yes it was wrong.
1:21 thanks for interrupting a brilliant point with that uncouth question
Great use of uncouth
He didn’t let him finish. Piers thinks he is smart but he is just mid street level. No idea why he is there.
RIP Justice Antonin Scalia. You are not forgotten.
Never rip Ruth Nader Ginsburg
Piers Morgan shouldn’t be able to interview smart people.
That doesn’t make sense. The constitution doesn’t explicitly mention many rights, such as the right to privacy, but Scalia only seems to be targeting abortion. Most rights that we have today are implied, and are not explicitly mentioned in the constitution.
I don't know what his opinion was on privacy (e.g., internet usage) but, to be fair to him, he wasn't asked about those issues. He was only asked about abortion (at least in this clip).
are you familiar with the bill of rights?... what's number 4 again?
I disagree with Scalia, but I've got to admit, he's one of the coolest justices in American history!
Nothing to disagree with..he is right, ur wrong..and he can back it up..u nor anyone else can
I know this is old but its hilarious to see how out of touch Piers was and still is. Trying to tell the best Supreme Court Judge ever about the history of America and the constitution. Thats rich.
At least Piers Morgan was smart enough to have him on his show so the rest of us can witness the intellectual brilliant mind of the wonderful Justice Scalia. Rest in peace Justice Scalia. Thumbs up for Piers.
Scalia has incredible patience being able to put up with moronic proclaim "journalists" all the time.
Piers: “they gave women no rights ... did they?”
The historical ignorance is astonishing.
@froggie animation *citation needed* ... got some sourcing for that?
@froggie animation - instead of ad hominem, why not an actual argument or some evidence?
Piers’ claim is not that “women didn’t have equal rights to men at the founding”, it was “women had no rights at the founding“, which is a patently, verifiably false claim.
Here’s a citation for you (Blackstone, 1983) - a common law definition of rape, carnal knowledge of a women forcibly and against her will, was punishable by death in the America colonies in the 1600s.
@@joepisacreta3822 He is not going to be able to source it because it falls on two very presumptive arguments 1) That women were wildly abused prior to RoevWade and 2) That the abuse has improved since then. There is one simple argument as to why abortion is not addressed in the US Constitution and that is because children were considered a blessing and a heritage at that time. In fact, women faced the real possibility of death to have them. All of this changed with the industrial revolution, American wealth, and the advancement of medicine where the life of a child became expendable.
Joe Pisacreta Women weren't allowed to vote until 1920 (19th Amendment). The Declaration of Independence even specified denial of Married Women to hold ownership of wages, money, and property (all of which had to be turned over to their husbands).
I love Antonin Scalia and All Supreme Court Justices' Law Reviews and Philosophy but he is bending over backwards to deny it in this segment.
(10.12.20 00:06)
@Gray Elite - yes women did not have equal rights with men at the founding, including and especially the right to vote, but again, that Piers‘ claim, he said “no rights”, which is false. That’s the point I’m pushing back on, per my other comments in this thread.
Scalia was so masterful and brilliant. Hope President Trump nominates someone like him after Kennedy retires. Would do wonders for the country.
@nw 45 Not even close to being accurate. Don't believe everything you read.
I thank God for the few heroes in my life and for Justice Scalia. What a master.
How is he a hero? He supports the enslavement of women. Any time the government or an outside party controls someone else's body that's slavery. And that is what this country did to black people.
@@a.k.7341 “enslavement of women” oh please shut up that’s a logical fallacy and you know it.
i wish he was still on the court!
We all do.
Morgan is so far outmatched here that he doesn't even realize the degree to which he is outmatched.
I agree. I could have done a better job of mopping the floor with Scalia.
The problem is, people are so much without any basic principles, that they simply can't get their head around the idea that you as a Supreme Court justice could make decisions not based on your political view, but on the ground of a legal document.
Imagine thinking that judges are so perfectly impartial that no biases enter into their legal interpretations. How grotesquely naive.
@@cloudbusting_ everyone has biases. Judges are typically better at understanding their bias and trying their best to not let it influence them
Roe is gone! Thank you, Justice Scalia! Hope you're enjoying this in Heaven!
Really wanted to hear the end of Scalia’s remarks on substantive due process. It really seems like he was opposed to roe v. Wade on a serious legal question basis and would consider abortion under a different context, provided the opportunity arose.
Yeah, like if the US added a constitutional amendment protecting the abortion right, then it would be clear what the law is. A federal statute might also work although it could be challenged on various grants, basically that such a statute would exceed federal power. Basically Scalia thinks substantive due process is BS, since there is no support for the concept in the constitution. Some liberal judges just made it up to get a result they wanted.
as an "originalist", Scalia felt that the Constitution left many things to the states ("democratic process")...as it should be...love the man...wish he was still with us!!
Scalia is not the genius you think he is. What about interracial marriage? Constitution says nothing about it and southern states banned it. The Supreme Court had to rule in favor of it so southern states couldn’t ban interracial marriage any more. He is wrong: some rights are so important that no state should be able to take it away.
The way he started to explain substantive due process in the most simple, comprehensive way was astounding. It’s unfortunate the interviewer cut him off because he was cooking
Basically the argument that founders couldnt see the future is void, they wrote in how to pass a constitutional amendment. Do that and thats how u change it
But interpretation is important, which is why we have the court. We don’t need to amend if the interrogation suits the reality of our present day. Fundamental liberty interests do not need to be legislated, they need to be protected by justices ensuring that the constitution sets forth such protections.
Antonin Scalia, a brilliant mind.
And an utter asshole
@@st3ppenwolf Now that's sure an "intelligent" comment. In case you can't discern my meaning, I am being sarcastic.
@@judgeparker4236 I can discern your sarcasm need a bit of polish
@@st3ppenwolf And, your mind and language would be better off out of the gutter.
@@judgeparker4236 I can also discern your come backs need a bit of polish, in fact your whole persona needs a bit of polish.. good luck in life, you'll probably need it
too bad Morgan is always trying to shout over other people to remind them how ignorant he is
Judge Antonin Scalia, the gold standard of American Law & Order. He is still passionately missed by me. Now Justice Clarence Thomas has stepped up to that mantle of upholding the Constitution, the Law, Liberty, Justice, and the maintenance of Order for the USA.
Here, Here! Well said Justice Scalia!
Piers Morgan shows legal ignorance
“Do you know Pythagorean’s theorem to the nearest 5 decimal places?” - some idiot
Justice Scalia perfectly embodies the rationale for term limits on Supreme Court judge appointments
Absolutely. Ten years max then you’re out on your ass.
Great and correct response from the Justice!! Thank God we have people like him on the Supreme Court.
Unless you want to ignore the 14th amendment and right to privacy, then sure.
@@sprockkets
Its common sense that the 14th refers to PROCEDURE ... only a self aggrandizing, power hungry justice who thinks of himself a a king could bastardize simple text to create rights which otherwise don't exist.
@@wernerfoerster3666 take your bull sht federalist society trash and shove it up your ass.
@@sprockkets
Take a look at Thomas's concurring opinion released today in Dobbs where he excoriates the entire notion of "Substantive Due Process" ... essentially what I said last month
@@wernerfoerster3666 Like I give a fck about what bull sht thomas and the losers on the SC think - they just justified killing a 100+ year old concealed gun law because of a bull sht interpretation of the second amendment.
It's 2022, Roe was overruled, and I wish Justice Scalia could live to this day and write the majority opinion for Dobbs.
LMFAO you could tell this interview was over when Scalia gave an intelligent and nuanced answer and piers just responds "should abortion be illegal"
It’s called putting him on the spot. Scalia was beating around the bush, and the interviewer went straight for the trunk.
@@TheHexbugfan No it isnt because there is no case that has ever become before the supreme court with that simple a question. People try to dumb down the actual judicial questions posed to a few words but the fact is Roe v Wade wasnt as simple as "should abortion be legal" it was a case about the 10th ammendment and whether or not abortion legality was covered under the constitution or if its a states issue.
The true crux of Roe v Wade is states v federal rights w/r/t topics not listed in the constitution. Thats what Scalia was stating in hios response... Since the constitution takes no stance on the matter then the federal govt must pass a law legalizing abortion if they want it legal. Its not the courts position to legislate and legalize abortion from the bench.
Hence why many people say Roe v Wade is improperly decided is because its a classic example of the courts acting in a legislation manner. If you want abortion to be legal congress must pass a bill otherwise its a states rights issue that each state gets to decide.
@@onebuffalo5402 But why should the constitution be so heavily relied upon as if it's a worthy moral compass for any modern nation? Law should be rooted in the constitution to a certain degree, but should that degree subvert morality?
@@TheHexbugfan b/c its the founding principle of our country that set the base standards and rule for governance... Its the rules our country was founded on... that being said the concept of the constitution as a "living document" is that if society takes such a massive change the document can be amended and changed Via ratification of a new amendment.
Your argument of morality is subjective and if it were universal the constitution would/could be amended to reflect that universality (ie the 13th amendment and the abolition of slavery). Just because you regard abortion as a moral right doesnt equate it to a universal belief. If it ever did reach that standard it could be legally incorporated into the constitution via ratification.
however as of now not only is it not covered in the constitution but its not even covered by any federal laws. Further exemplifying its polarizing nature morality wise indicating it should be relegated to the states to decide its legality based on what their individual constituents believe is morally correct.
@@TheHexbugfan No. Listen to Scalia and Amy Coney Barrett. They don't have a damn litmus test vis a vis liberal justices. This is why it's so preposterously difficult for liberal senators etc. to grasp that there isn't an agenda per se. They (liberal justices, senators etc.) *tend* to have such black and white views and bend law to embrace their position. During Amy Coney Barrett's testimony, I was struck, thunderously, with that point. I actually believe she could uphold Roe, even if she disagreed with it, if she felt the process, law etc. were in it's favor. In other words, she could uphold it if a technicality was out of place, even if it broke her heart to do so. A liberal justice? Wayyyyy more likely to simply legislate from the bench.
The problem with the US legal system, and the SC in particular, is that it's stagnated and well, stalled. It's ossified. They're both more concerned with procedure and legal theory rather than justice- and that's sad when the founding principles of both, not just in the US but anywhere in the world, was the latter, not the former. No one day down and thought they needed a system of courts that could sit down and debate arcane pieces of constitutional trivia- it was to make sure that people couldn't just trample willy nilly on other people's lives and their livelihoods.
What's happened in the US is you have an outdated constitution to which everything is (in theory. We've seen this last administration showing clearly how in practice the constitution is only as strong as who's willing to enforce it) so strongly tied to that it makes any sort of progress impossible. The legislature won't reform the constitution, and the judiciary is more concerned with enforcing the State v. Federal issue than with people's lives.
It comes down to a pretty basic question then: does a nation exist to protect its constitution at all costs, or does it exist for the betterment of its people? Most nations seem to agree it's the latter. In the US, most people seem to agree with the former, which, to a sane person, is truly, deeply batshit insane.
Here's the problem---your idea of "progress" is stupid, inane, divisive, dangerous, and, ultimately Marxist garbage. When Americans---finally---wake up, your ideas get sucked up in the trash bin of total nonsense.
well said
You nailed it. The right has smartly opted for constitution protection because that is rather black and white and is not subject to as many debates as human betterment. They do that with gun control and are doing it with abortion too. Citizen betterment is a vast, unquantifiable, amorphous objective, one unlikely to keep people divided which is fuel for vote bank politics.
this guy completely misses the point, like everyone in favor of roe. Just because it's in your favor, doesn't mean you can ignore the fact that it was an unconstitutional ruling
I miss this man. Piers was way out of his league here. Scalia was brilliant and, of course, 100% correct on Roe v Wade.
Comment sections simping for Scalia so hard 🤢
Pierce starts out with the most loaded question in history! LMAO
He’s got a point. That is his job.
He's an awful judge glad he's gone
@@sidali2590 I mean that’s really an impossible job. You’re trying to be impartial but your also trying to interpret the constitution which a lot of people don’t understand how much of it is left to interpretation.
I watched TyT a few years ago and from their coverage you'd think he was the devil.
Abortion law should be made in parliament not by judges.
That’s why Roe was a very bad decision
Brightest mind
Scalia was a once in a lifetime American Justice. A justice that actually understood the constitution.
You really want to imply that the other Supreme Court justices do not understand the constitution?
Agree with Scalia or not on legal terms, go for it- but Piers literally says “hey don’t make this based on your political beliefs” and then goes on to discuss his own political beliefs. Like Scalia or not, Piers is just a hack. This is not an “interview.”
It is one thing to be for or against abortion.
And it is another to state that the Constitution narrows down your choice.
Mr. Scalia made that clear in a very convincing way.
Scalia was the best there is in judges.
This is y u shall never argue with an expert let alone a great lawyer/judge.