Jose Fly
New member
Except, I fully agree with this.
Good.
Brown v. Board of Education, Roe v. Wade and the homosexual "marriage" ruling were not instantiations of this faculty. They were something else entirely.
You disagree with me?
Then please, cite the constitutional amendment which specifically mentions segregation.
As I described previously, a specific word does not need to be in the Constitution in order for one of the legal concepts that are in the Constitution to apply to it. To demonstrate this we can cite all sorts of recent Supreme Court rulings that apply constitutional legal concepts to modern issues.
In the Brown v. Board of Education case, the court ruled that segregation laws violated the Constitutional rights of black citizens, namely their constitutional right to equal protection under the law.
Under your reasoning, a state could pass a law banning red heads from holding public office and since the words "red head" isn't in the Constitution, there would be no legal recourse for red heads to argue that their constitutional rights have been violated.