Try and stop me!
One of the problems with the Supreme Court is that we really don't know what to do when Presidents ignore it.
~ Aristotle Sabouni
Created: 2019-09-18 |
Presidents ignoring the Supreme Court has been done a few times:
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Andrew Jackson[edit | edit source]
- In 1828, the first Democrat President was Andrew Jackson, and he almost immediately signed the Indian Removal Act into law[1], which basically said all Native American tribes living east of the Mississippi were rounded up and marched to camps farther west.
- The US Supreme court ruled in favor of Cherokee Indians in a suit against Georgia: Cherokee Nation v. Georgia[2] which said the Cherokee Nation could not be forcibly removed from their homes. So Andrew Jackson was the first President to completely ignore the Constitution, Oath of Office, and rule-of-law, and just ignored the decision. (Very much like Democrats to this day). The Cherokee people were rounded up at gunpoint and forced to Oklahoma: one in four Cherokee people died during the inhumane journey which became known as the Trail of Tears[3]
🗒️ Note: |
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Some ignorant people call the Trail of Tears an Indian genocide. But a genocide comes from Greek geno- (γένος), meaning 'race' or 'people'... and Latin caedere, the word for "to kill". Thus genocide is intentional, systematic killings to destroy a race, nation or people.
While many Native Americans were exploited or killed through callous disregard and irresponsible relocations, there was no systemic effort to intentionally kill wipe them out. The intent was to relocate them away. So while this was an atrocity, it was more like the Bataan Death March, than the Nazi final solution, Pol Pot, Casto, Mao, or Turkish-Armenian genocides. If Democrats had values, that would have been the last Democrat elected President, instead of just the first, but the party lived on, because Democrats were literally founded on not learning from their mistakes or holding Democrats accountable for bad behavior. |
Abraham Lincoln[edit | edit source]
With the War of Northern Aggression, Lincoln just arrested the press, and suspended Habeus Corpus. The Supremes said stop it, and he just ignored them.
FDR[edit | edit source]
In 1937, in an effort to create a court more friendly to his New Deal programs, President Franklin Roosevelt attempted to convince Congress to pass legislation that would allow a new justice to be added to the court—for a total of up to 15 members—for every justice over 70 who opted not to retire. Congress didn’t go for FDR’s plan.
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Tags: Supreme Court