scubadoo
Active Member
Originally Posted by Rylan1
http:///forum/post/2590760
Obama is a Constitutional Law professor at a prestigious school... but I guess you will say you know more than him, right?
Please enlighten me regarding NObama's view of the Constitution. Here's but one wacked out take cut and paste below and a link ...and I have read others. have you?
http://www.weeklystandard.com/Conten...oyckg.asp?pg=1
Obama's View of the Constitution Hinted in Article
By GARY SHAPIRO
Staff Reporter of the Sun
March 26, 2007
A D V E R T I S E M E N T
A D V E R T I S E M E N T
Is Barack Obama a space cadet? The man who would become senator of Illinois and a top Democratic presidential contender was credited for editorial or research assistance in a page-one footnote of what may be the zaniest-titled article ever published by the Harvard Law Review: "The Curvature of Constitutional Space: What Lawyers Can Learn From Modern Physics," authored by noted legal scholar Laurence Tribe.
The 39-page densely argued treatise — think "The Paper Chase" meets "Star Trek" — argues that constitutional jurisprudence should be updated in a similar way that Einstein's theory of relativity replaced Newtonian mechanics, a view that would release judges from the original intent of the Founders of America. Published in 1989, with help of the much younger and politically greener Mr. Obama (a few others are also thanked in that footnote), the article is sprawling with references to cultural anthropologist Clifford Geertz and physicists Stephen Hawking and Werner Heisenberg.
http:///forum/post/2590760
Obama is a Constitutional Law professor at a prestigious school... but I guess you will say you know more than him, right?
Please enlighten me regarding NObama's view of the Constitution. Here's but one wacked out take cut and paste below and a link ...and I have read others. have you?
http://www.weeklystandard.com/Conten...oyckg.asp?pg=1
Obama's View of the Constitution Hinted in Article
By GARY SHAPIRO
Staff Reporter of the Sun
March 26, 2007
A D V E R T I S E M E N T
A D V E R T I S E M E N T
Is Barack Obama a space cadet? The man who would become senator of Illinois and a top Democratic presidential contender was credited for editorial or research assistance in a page-one footnote of what may be the zaniest-titled article ever published by the Harvard Law Review: "The Curvature of Constitutional Space: What Lawyers Can Learn From Modern Physics," authored by noted legal scholar Laurence Tribe.
The 39-page densely argued treatise — think "The Paper Chase" meets "Star Trek" — argues that constitutional jurisprudence should be updated in a similar way that Einstein's theory of relativity replaced Newtonian mechanics, a view that would release judges from the original intent of the Founders of America. Published in 1989, with help of the much younger and politically greener Mr. Obama (a few others are also thanked in that footnote), the article is sprawling with references to cultural anthropologist Clifford Geertz and physicists Stephen Hawking and Werner Heisenberg.