Saturday, January 02, 2021

The Fundamental Rule

...is that courts cannot issue advisory opinions (Unless you are the U.S. Supreme Court ruling on matters involving religious "rights" and you want to be sure somebody's "rights" are held sacrosanct the way God and the 1st Amendment intended). In other words, Art. III courts can't decide a case on the merits (the legal questions raised) if the parties before the court shouldn't be before the court. I can't complain to the courts about something that happened to you, is what it means. Good friends yes, but, hah! Your injury is not mine, and the court can't remedy your injury based on my complaint about it. That's as simple a statement of standing as I can offer, and it's why the court threw out Gohmert's suit; and why the 5th Circuit will, too (and for mootness, probably, by the time they get to it).  This is what Gohmert calls "having no remedy."  He knows better (he was a judge, and undoubtedly wanted his judicial power respected), but he doesn't care or he's suffered some kind of brain injury.  I really can't explain it, except that stupid is as stupid does.

And we keep sending him to D.C. because we like to keep our crazies all in one place, so we can keep an eye on 'em.

1 comment:

  1. I don't think it's mental illness Gohmert's case, it's amorality that turns into a habit of depravity. I think there's a real point at which amorality can imitate a mental illness, especially when lying becomes habitual. A lack of intelligence can exacerbate that. There's a lot of that in the House Republican caucus and that in the Senate, too, Off hand other than Manchin in the Senate and Tulsi Gabbard in the House, I can't think of many Democratic examples.

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