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I pushed back to see if you pushed back... (Score:2)
The courts only make such rulings because the people who bring such cases to court are pushing back themselves: against being told they can't marry if they are gay, or that their children must be taught creationism even if they regard creationism as mythological claptrap, or, presumably somethin
Re:I pushed back to see if you pushed back... (Score:2)
Sure. The courts is where grievances are aired, and the courts attempt to resolve them one way or another. That's a given.
Courts never create situations. They don't decide on th
Re:I pushed back to see if you pushed back... (Score:2)
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Re:I pushed back to see if you pushed back... (Score:2)
The Supreme Court has some limited original jurisdiction, explicitly noted in the Constitution. Most cases it hears on appeal, but not all. And the court can refuse to hear those cases, if it chooses.
Regardless, most any court can refuse to hear a case if it thinks it lacks merit. Filing a lawsuit does not grant you the right to have your case heard.
Re:I pushed back to see if you pushed back... (Score:2)
Re:I pushed back to see if you pushed back... (Score:2)
That is usually what happens, but it is not entirely true. Sometimes the court will throw it out if an appelant has a history of abuse of the system, without so much as a hearing. Of course, that's rare.
that in itself can be called "hearing" the case
A pretrial hearing, yes. But such a hearing is usually distinct from "hearing" the case.
Anyway, this is way off the topic from the original post.