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Society & Culture

Not in Our Stars, but in Ourselves: How The Supreme Court Undermined Its Own Reputation

podcast May 10, 2023


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Image Credit: Collection of the Supreme Court of the United States

In this episode, the hosts discuss the Roberts Court’s failure to adhere to precedent and the effect this is having on the public’s confidence in the Supreme Court.  Respect for precedents and the application of the principle of stare desisis provide constancy and comfort and avoids the appearance that the Court is swayed by political consideration.  Simple assertions that a prior decision was wrongly decided are inadequate to justify undermining the expectations of parties before the Court and the public at large. 

 

LINKS IN THIS EPISODE

Follow Ellis Conversations on Twitter

Follow Judge Ronald Ellis on Twitter

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Check out Unified Ground

Check out BlackHistoryChatGPT

 

https://www.nytimes.com/2023/04/28/us/alito-supreme-court-abortion-leak.html 

https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2023/04/28/alito-leaker-dobbs-wsj/

 

 

 

OTHER EPISODES OF INTEREST

From Loving vs Virginia to Roe vs Wade: Who gets to decide which rights get protected for Americans

The Hands That Rock The Cradle: Donald Trump, the Supreme Court, and the Federalist Society.

Whose Constitution is it, Anyway?: Originalism vs. The Living Constitution

 

 

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