10 Questions For Rule-of-Law Critics Of Kim Davis
By Joe Rigney
Read MorePlease disable your Ad Blocker to better interact with this website.
By Joe Rigney
Read MoreBy Ramesh Ponnuru: When the Court substitutes its own desires for the text, original understanding, and structure of the Constitution, the Court is not really engaged in interpreting the Constitution at all.
Read MoreBy Dr. Alan Keyes: The battle is between people appealing to a higher law whose substance they reject, and people refusing to appeal to the higher law in whose substance they accept.
Read MoreBy Steve Deace
Read MoreBy Bobby Eberle
Read MoreBy Laurie Higgins
Read MoreBy Jack Cashill: A salient question is one that Davis herself has raised: “Under what law am I authorized to issue homosexual couples a marriage license?”
Read MoreBy Robert Knight
Read MoreBy Joel Alicea: The opinions of the Supreme Court’s most recent term indicate that the court’s conservative justices are rethinking the scope and power of the administrative state.
Read MoreBarbWire.com contributor Jason Salamone and American Thinker’s Silvio Canto, Jr. have posts up that nicely walk readers through the current legal reality regarding Kim Davis and so-called “same-sex marriage” licenses. Salamone’s article is titled “Kim Davis:…
Read MoreHere’s David French writing at National Review: I always enjoy reading Charlie Cooke, even when he’s disagreeing with me. However, I must dissent from my friend and colleague’s disapproval of Kim Davis’s refusal to…
Read MoreBy Matt Barber: “Judicial activism occurs when judges write subjective policy preferences into the law rather than apply the law impartially according to its original meaning.” – The Heritage Foundation To vocal opponents of…
Read MoreThis is an excellent post by Maggie Gallagher — if more articles were written like this, it’d be so much easier to get information disseminated to GOP primary voters: On June 26, a narrow majority…
Read MoreBy Rob Natelson: More rotation on the Court would reboot the system toward the balance set by the Founders, rendering mistaken decisions more amenable to correction.
Read MoreBy Leon H. Wolf
Read More