If they're not, then what makes you so much more qualified than he is?
Point to where I ever said that I'm more qualified than Obama. Don't spend too long looking, because I didn't. Nor was it insinuated or implied.
I'm not saying completely discount it, I'm saying you read the damned opinions instead of treating the statistic as authoritative.
Why are you arguing this point with me? Unless you're only reading my responses to you and not the entire topic, I said this earlier to NotMiki:
"Obsessing over her record and voicing concern over it are completely different. Sotomayor has a weak record and it will be her biggest stumbling block, if any (unless Obama's team fails at shutting down those pointless concerns over her comments made in a non-formal school panel). You simply can't argue against this.
If Sotomayor offers a solid enough reason why her opinions don't fare well when reviewed by the Supreme Court, or alternatively makes a persuasive argument that her poor record should be overlooked for various reasons, then fine, she passes muster and we get a justice who isn't as loony near as Souter.So, no, I'm not saying the statistic is absolute and I never did. What I did say is that having a bad track record raises questions, and those questions need to be answered. Since Obama and Sotomayor are the ones pushing for her appointment, the burden is on them to eliminate any misgivings raised by her track record, since a bad track record *is* considered a negative trait in the legal world.
Yes, and if he wants to change the prevailing legal reasoning of the court, so that the legal reasoning he agrees with will be applied in the judiciary, that's a valid reason to pick a judicial nominee.
Not necessarily. If Obama agrees with her method of jurisprudence, and her method being different from the Supreme court is what causes her to be reversed most of the time, then its a valid reason. Judges are allowed to have some flexibility in their own methods of jurisprudence.
However, if its her application and knowledge of relevant law that Obama agrees with, and the Supreme Court often reverses her because she is misapplying the law and/or does not understand the relevant law, then things are not so peachy. Judges are supposed to have competence and knowledge of the relevant law, thus making judicial incompetence a solid reason why a nominee should not be permitted to be on the Supreme Court.
You're saying (or seeming to say) that there's a right way and a wrong way to interpret laws, and the right way is whatever the Supreme Court holds. But what the Supreme Court holds changes all the damn time, and it changes because new people with different interpretations of the law get appointed.
That would be exactly the same methodology as "the only way I'd want to evaluate a candidate for the highest court in the country is to actually read her opinions, and those of higher courts hearing appeals of her cases."
Regardless, as I already mentioned, there is far more to being a judge than method of jurisprudence. Competency, knowledge, impartiality...all of these (and more) are traits needed in a judge. Now then, going back to Obama supporting Sotomayor's reasoning. Again, the Supreme Court has disagreed with her more often than not, meaning her reasoning is legally incorrect for one reason or another. This could be a simple gap in methodology, it could be because she is bad at applying statutes relevant to the cases at hand, or it could be some other reason.
Of all the reasons Sotomayor could be wrong, only one of them could have the possibility of becoming valid if the case were to come up again (under the same laws and circumstances, obviously): a difference in interpretation. Mind, even if it was even a difference in interpretation, the burden would still fall on Sotomayor to convince the Court why her reasoning should be adopted. This is why you should be wary of a judge with a poor track record.
If you pick new SC justices based on how much they agree with the current Supreme Court....well, first of all, you'd have to gauge Sotomayor on how close her thinking is to Souter's, and I don't think you want that. But also you'd get intellectual stagnation.
Ah, but what if someone were to nominate a Justice based on excellent ability to use formal reasoning, apply statutes, and had an ironclad knowledge of the law and therefore the Court upheld the vast majority of that judge's decisions?
That's exactly what I was arguing. Being a lawyer does not necessarily make you the most competent person to comment on evaluating a Supreme Court Nominee.
Then may I ask why you never responded to this:
"It was not meant as a statement of qualification; it was a blunt way of saying to do more research before calling someone's idea or method stupid when they have vastly more experience in that field than you."instead of trying to say the same exact damn thing a second time with the addition of inequality symbols?