[U] In Which We Learn That Mr. Hinderaker… Cannot Read. Not For Comprehension, At Least.

UNTITLEDUPDATED 05.26.2017 PM — Mr. Hinderaker has once again doubled down on a dishonest pretense — pretending that he doesn’t understand what all other serious lawyers do understand: First Amendment “time, place and manner” restrictions, are a bedrock line of cases. Supreme Court cases. And, that the argument that a “different” President would get a different result is true because this President essentially yelled “FIRE!” — in a crowded theater. A President who sits quietly — and watches the show Hamilton, will not be ejected from the theater, precisely because that other President didn’t violate First Amendment law. Facts matter John… But no, Mr. Hinderaker pretends he never read those cases. Shameful — and with this, he undermines respect for the law with his dishonest and illogical “arguments”.  [End — updated portion.]

YAWN. Just as I said, months ago — and repeated under that link, supra. John’s “bullet proof” is in fact, to any capable Constitutional lawyer — so much swiss cheese.

The Fourth Circuit — 10-3 just declared Muslim Ban 2.0 a dead letter. On to the Supremes where it will fail, at least 6-3 — and maybe 9-0. Even with the much Hinderaker- vaunted Gorsuch in his robes, and listening.

whopperline-trump-immiration-2017[Silly me. I thought the Ninth’s three judge opinion would appear, and be published,  first.] The line-up is 10-3 AGAINST Mr. Trump’s Muslim Ban 2.0. It would not surprise me to see the 3-0 opinion AGAINST it, tomorrow, out of the Ninth Circuit.

I had guessed a minimum of seven were going to lean that way — in the Fourth — and eight did, in full. The language Chief Judge Gregory (writing for the majority in the Fourth Circuit) uses is. . . towering, as the threats presented — by the 45th President himself, were. . . unprecedented, in their audacity — in at least the last three-quarters of a century:

. . . .The  question  for  this  Court,  distilled  to  its  essential  form,  is  whether  the Constitution,  as  the  Supreme  Court  declared  in Ex  parte  Milligan, 71  U.S.  (4  Wall.) 2, 120 (1866), remains “a law for rulers and people, equally in war and in peace.”  And if so, whether it protects Plaintiffs’ right to challenge an Executive Order that in text speaks with  vague  words  of  national  security,  but  in  context  drips  with  religious  intolerance, animus, and discrimination.  Surely the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment yet stands  as  an  untiring  sentinel  for  the  protection  of  one  of  our  most  cherished  founding principles — that  government  shall  not  establish  any  religious  orthodoxy,  or  favor  or  disfavor one religion over another. . . .

President  Trump,  in  a  speech  at  a  rally  [on March 15, 2017] in  Nashville,  Tennessee, described  EO-2  as  “a  watered down  version  of  the  first  order. . . .”

To the extent that our review chills campaign promises to condemn and exclude entire religious groups, we think that a welcome restraint. . . .

THACKER, Circuit Judge, concurring: I  concur  in  the  majority’s opinion  but write  separately  for  three  reasons:  (1)  I would  not  consider  remarks  made  by  candidate  Trump  before  he  took  his  presidential  oath of office; (2) I would nonetheless find that Appellees have demonstrated a likelihood of  success  on  the  merits  of  their  argument  that  Section  2(c)  of  the  Second  Executive Order  (“EO-2”)  violates  the  Establishment  Clause,  based  solely  on  remarks  made  or sentiments  expressed  after  January  20,  2017;  and  (3)  I  would  conclude  Appellees  have demonstrated a likelihood of success on the merits of their argument that Section 2(c), as it  applies  to  immigrant  visas,  violates  8  U.S.C.  §  1152(a)(1)(A)  of  the  Immigration  and Nationality Act (“INA”) [Ed. Note: that is the LBJ-era amendment I’ve written about at length here]. . . .

whopperlie-hinderaker-2017On to the Supremes. I read an advance sheet of this at [redacted] PM CDT today — and wasn’t taking or making any work calls, since I was on one of the briefs (on the prevailing side, of course). Now it will be a GREAT Memorial Day Weekend, for those of us who still believe in ordered liberty, under the law. . . . Woot! Yep — onward, to the Supremes — where (“Condor predicts”) 45 loses 6-3. As it is, he is 0-for-6, in the courts, if memory serves thus far.

नमस्ते

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