I think their ideas are fairly lunatic. I don't want people with those ideas on the supreme court. Probably "extremist" is a better word. You can be an extremely nice person and still hold extremist ideas.
'Objects In Space'
Natter 37: Oddly Enough, We've Had This Conversation Before.
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
Personal Pan Pizza's are people!
That help?
That help?
Not really, because people taste really, really good.
bon bon, I was in law school when it was the up-and-coming "conservative" group. But only for certain "conservatives," at least at UNC. I knew at least one person who was decidedly unwelcome because his conservatism had a strong libertarian streak.
Now, this is just one law school 20 years ago, so take FWIW.
Yeah, given that my friends in the society are libertarian, I don't think it's necessarily that parochial anymore.
I think their ideas are fairly lunatic.
Which?
The Federalist Society took their name from The Federalist Papers, and the thing about them is that they believe they know founder's intent. You get the idea that because slavery's in the Constitution, they think it should never have been outlawed. They are conservatives' conservatives, opposed to anything that smacks of change.
I don't like secret societies, and The Federalist Society comes pretty damn close. I don't mind organizations that get together to discuss topics, but the FS appears to exist to crush opposition. And it's become an odd-boys' network. Membership in it seems to be de rigeur for an appointment.
Additionally, they are the folks who gave rise to the term "liberal orthodoxy."
Yes, at law school the conservative students migrated to the FS, but the moderate ones then migrated away.
The guy I know that knows Roberts, incidentally, said "No, we didn't overlap while working for Starr, but we knew each other from The Federalist Society." So at least one conservative thinks Roberts was a member. (Of course, he won't necessary stick to that story for public consumption.)
My kung-pao chicken has no peanuts. This makes me sad.
I'm very guilty of not researching here, but was Roberts in the FS while in law school or later in life?
I never went to a FS meeting while I was in law school, but the students who did seemed pretty normal to me. It sort of seemed like the conservative equivalent of the ACLU (and, yes, I know the ACLU isn't strictly "liberal" but I think it was perceived that was by the FS law students). Most of the students I know who were involved were just your average conservative types.
I know nothing about what non-student FS types believe.
And it's become an odd-boys' network.
ah, the freudian typo.
I am starving, and contemplating where to go for lunch. it must be somewhere that takes plastic, as the payroll people have screwed up and I have not been paid.
One of my coworkers must've got fried chicken for lunch, and I can smell it all the way in my office. This really isn't helping me with my resolve not to get a greasy, cheesy your-tummy-will-make-you-pay-later lunch.