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Democracy and Elections

As Election Nears, Supreme Court Upholds Repressive Voter ID Law

By Brennan Center for Justice, AlterNet. Posted April 28, 2008.


It is more important now than ever for lawmakers across the country to pass laws protecting the right to vote.
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Today the Brennan Center for Justice criticized the U.S. Supreme Court's decision to uphold Indiana's voter identification law -- the strictest in the country -- but noted that the decision did not give other states a blank check to block eligible voters. The Brennan Center called on lawmakers across the country to reject similar laws and to pass affirmative legislation protecting the right to vote.

"This year, millions of new voters are surging into the political process. Lawmakers should be encouraging full participation by eligible citizens, not erecting new barriers to voting. This is precisely the wrong message for the Supreme Court to send in this critical year. We shouldn't give partisans an excuse to find ways to keep people from voting," said Michael Waldman, the Brennan Center's Executive Director.

The Court's 6–3 opinion in Crawford v. Marion County Election Board, widely considered the most important voting rights case since Bush v. Gore, recognized that ID laws may have negative impact, even when there is not sufficient evidence to find them unconstitutional. As six Justices agreed, Indiana's law places a heavier burden on some eligible citizens, particularly elderly and low-income persons who could be blocked from voting without the proper documentation. The Brennan Center urged lawmakers to heed the disenfranchising impacts of ID laws acknowledged in today's decision.

"Today's decision is not the end of the story on voter ID. Although the Court upheld Indiana's voter ID law, it did not say that states must or even should pass restrictive ID laws. Now it's up to legislators and courts in states like Texas, Missouri, and Florida to decide if they are going to follow Indiana's lead and disenfranchise American citizens, or if they're going to protect the right to vote for all Americans as we head into a critical national election," stated Wendy Weiser, Deputy Director of the Democracy Program at the Brennan Center for Justice. "In doing so, they should keep in mind that the Court left open the possibility of future lawsuits against restrictive ID laws that prevent people from voting.

Under Indiana's law, voters must present a government-issued photo ID with an expiration date that has not elapsed. The law does not accept Veterans' IDs, Congressional IDs, student IDs, or work IDs.

Many citizens -- disproportionately low-income, minorities, students and seniors -- do not have the identification required by Indiana's law.

"In the three years since this case was brought, reliable studies have shown that 10-12% of eligible voting-age Americans do not have voter government-issued photo identification, particularly low-income, minority, senior, and student voters. Unfortunately, some will ignore these facts, and seek to use this ruling to manipulate the rules of the game and block these eligible voters from the ballot box," stated Justin Levitt, counsel at the Brennan Center.

In rejecting the challenge to the law on facial grounds, the Court today ruled that future challenges to voter laws must be filed with respect to the application of a specific law -- after its controversial mandates are already applied in an election.


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ACLU seeks to overthrow disadvantaged Americans and all Americans
Posted by: No Globalization without Representation on Apr 28, 2008 4:45 PM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
How typical for open borders, no nations, corporate oligarchists to label a voter id requirement as "repressive". Obviously those that seek to overthrow Americans want the whole world to be able to vote in U.S. elections which is enabled by requiring no identification. Many states, such as Indiana offer FREE state ids for those in need. If the ACLU really cared about people who have trouble getting an id to vote, they would be fighting to mandate free ids nationwide instead of trying to thwart any need for photo ids when voting. Obviously people who have trouble getting a photo id are being held back in many other areas of society especially from access to financial institutions, so ask yourself what is the ACLU really up to. They are trying to usurp Americans' right to self-governance by opening the country to all 7 billion people of the world. If you need no id, no one knows what country you are really a citizen of.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» yer just not too bright Posted by: KaptainSpiffy
» RE: "Reason"able voter I.D. Posted by: editnetwork
» RE: yer just not too bright Posted by: wmb1957
» Thank you Posted by: robbie.seal
Free ID's?
Posted by: SufiLizard on Apr 29, 2008 4:38 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Yeah, Indiana offers free ID's to anyone who can get to a local license branch to get it -- oh, Governor Daniels closed a bunch of local license branches at about the same time he got his Republican legislators to pass this disenfranchisement law.

Republicans know they do better the lower the voter participation. There was absolutely NO evidence of any voter fraud here in Indiana, but they passed this law anyway -- what could be their motivation to pass a law for a problem that doesn't exist?

Oh, yeah, to improve their chances of winning every election forever. Many counties already use voting machines with no paper trail or any possible way to verify the results.

Need a recount, okay that's simple we'll just look at the number the computers gave us again.

They pass laws all across the country to fight against the non-existent problem of "voter fraud" and completely ignore the massive, wide-spread ELECTION FRAUD perpetrated by Republicans across this country.

But that's okay, most of us will have too much on our minds with the coming of the second Republican Great Depression in less than a century.

Nice work Republicans. And with their efforts to finally be rid of any semblance of real democracy in this country they can prevent another disaster like a Democratic president and Democratic congress bailing us out of this one like FDR did in the 1930's.

So we can have a 100 year Depression to go with our 100 year occupation of Iraq.

After the first 10 or 15 years most people will have forgotten what peace and prosperity was like so we won't know what we're missing.

So go on regressive, conservative trolls keep posting about how democracy is bad for America. Keep touting the magic of the free market. Toss in a little pseudo-Christian prosperity gospel too for good measure.

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It'll take a little extra work
Posted by: robbie.seal on Apr 29, 2008 5:55 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
OK, so the state passed this law and it affects those that cannot afford the ID. I'm not from Indiana, so this is teach the guy from GA day... Does the state offer free IDs to folks? Did they close a bunch of the ID places? If so, why not make that part of the voter registration process. When you canvas neighborhoods to identify unregistered voters, ask folks if they need help getting to the places that give the free IDs. Then take them there. You can suck on the lemon you were given, or make lemonaid. It couldn't hurt the elderly to get a free ID in the long run anyway.

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» RE: It'll take a little extra work Posted by: Cybershaman
» RE: It'll take a little extra work Posted by: robbie.seal
Plaintiffs had an uphill battle, and--even so--got treated with kid gloves...
Posted by: ABetterFuture on Apr 29, 2008 6:47 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...in the majority opinion.

It's pretty hard to demonstrate that a law is unconstitutional before anyone's rights have been violated, but that's what plaintiffs tried to argue.

If you read the court's majority opinion, they leave the door wide open for this law to be challenged as soon as the first person with standing is disenfranchised as a result of bringing...say, his or her voter I.D. card, instead of a driver's license.

Our Constitution grants states tremendous leeway in the procedural issues of their own elections. However, when the procedure infringes on our civil rights, that procedure is out of bounds. In effect, the court is right--there is nothing wrong with the law, until it's practice results in disenfranchising a citizen.

Now, lots of folks who lack a historical context will scream "poll tax", "literacy test", and what ever else makes them feel radical. The fact that ID's are freely provided formally--if not in practice--circumvents any means-test.

No doubt, it's a bad law. Shame plaintiffs didn't have the foresight necessary to mount a credible challenge. I suspect they will regroup, rethink, and find someone with standing to bring this law back before the court, where it will probably be overturned--applicable nationwide--by at least 6-3, if the majority opinion is really indicative of the three writers feelings on the matter.

You simply should not be able turn otherwise eligible voters away for lack of a picture. You check their voter ID card, you cross their name off the list, and they go vote. If someone with the same credentials comes in, then you investigate and prosecute for fraud. Not in advance!

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» Outstanding comments Posted by: robbie.seal
Gool old Jim Crow is back in town
Posted by: citizenjoe on Apr 29, 2008 6:49 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Jim Crow was, in part, the practice of excluding black people from American political life by erecting barriers to their exercising their right to vote. Racists wrote the book of tricks on how to do this.Little tricks like a pole tax that burdened poor people or literacy tests that uneducated people could not pass. Well, here we go again. We see conservative, racist, chauvinists pretending to keep the vote free from fraud. That is Jim Crow bullshit. What they are doing is making tests for voting that poor, transient,older people will find difficult to pass. These people tend to vote for a more progressive America and against the racist bigotry of the extreme conservatism that has gripped the America elite, and especially the Republican party. And now the Supreme Court once again as in the days of slavery and reconstruction (Dread Scott, perhaps the worst decision of the Court ever) refuses to protect the basic rights of the American citizen. Shame, absolute shame on this court!

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The public lynching of Barack Obama & voter ID cards.
Posted by: HughScott on Apr 29, 2008 8:01 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Since Monday, April 28, on TV and radio news broadcasts, I've heard a nonstop parade of so-called Americans condemn Rev. Wright for exercising his right to free speech. Many of those same critics, both Democrat and Republican, are demanding that Obama condemn Rev. Wright as well.

Meanwhile, Rev. Hagee, a hate-filled, Bible-pounding homophobe, is free to attack the gay community with impunity. Why? Because he is white and Rev. Wright is black. It's that simple.

Four years from now, when either McCain or Hillary finish his or her first term in office and the Iraq War is still with us, America will be sorry it lynched Barack Obama.

As for voter ID cards, there is nothing in the GOP-controlled Supreme Court's ruling to prevent states from charging any amount they want for the privilige of exercising citizenship. Don't tell me those "fees" wouldn't be poll taxes to keep poor people, most of them persons of color, from voting.

Welcome to the Dis-United States of Ameri-KKK-a!

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Enlighten me
Posted by: Axiom69 on Apr 29, 2008 9:20 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Can someone please tell me who these people are that have no ID and cannot afford to get one? One needs an ID to get welfare, medicaid, food stamps, subsidized housing or government housing or a host of other programs that poor people utilize. Do poor people not drive, buy beer, cigarettes, have bank accounts or ever go to the airport?
Does anyone here on Alternet know of anybody that doesn't have an ID card and cannot afford to obtain one?

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» RE: nlighten me Posted by: CJC
» RE: nlighten me Posted by: Axiom69
» RE: nlighten me Posted by: delwyncole
» RE: nlighten me Posted by: EncinoM
» RE: nlighten me Posted by: delwyncole
» RE: nlighten me Posted by: Axiom69
» RE: nlighten me Posted by: delwyncole
» RE: nlighten me Posted by: CJC
» RE: nlighten me Posted by: Quannah
Point of fact
Posted by: CJC on Apr 29, 2008 9:25 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I believe that one of the plaintiffs in the Indiana case was an older woman of modest means, perhaps somewhat handicapped, had no driver's license, was a registered REPUBLICAN, and had been a long-time registered voter.
(Someone correct me please, if I have these facts wrong.)

If states want to issue free photo ID cards when one registers to vote then the only burden on the voter is to hold onto the card. But when voter ID's are only available at, say, Depts of Motor Vehicles, or at county offices that may be inaccesible by easy public transportation, if the burden of establishing ID requires other ID like a birth certificate, if long-time registered voters are suddenly unable to vote,
then there's a de facto disenfranchisement.

That's what the now outlawed poll taxes were all about - making it hard for certain classes of voters to vote.

The Supreme Court decision is undemocratic.

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STOP IT
Posted by: Ky Lake Dave on Apr 29, 2008 9:47 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The real reason so many Democrats oppose Photo ID's to vote is simple. The requirement of Photo ID's make voter fraud tougher. Democrats want felons, illegal aliens and dead people to vote early and vote often. If Democrats truely wanted fair and legal elections they would be screaming for Photo ID's.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» RE: STOP IT Posted by: indee1
» RE: STOP IT Posted by: aji
» RE: STOP IT Posted by: EncinoM
» RE: STOP IT Posted by: aji
» RE: STOP IT Posted by: EncinoM
» RE: STOP IT - Just peachy! Posted by: UnEasyOne
» RE: STOP IT - Just peachy! Posted by: EncinoM
» RE: STOP IT - Just peachy! Posted by: maxpayne
» RE: STOP IT - Just peachy! Posted by: EncinoM
» RE: STOP IT - Just peachy! Posted by: maxpayne
» RE: STOP IT Posted by: cherylsass123
» RE: STOP IT Posted by: SufiLizard
elections will soon be irrelevant anyway...
Posted by: Annapurna1 on Apr 29, 2008 10:30 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
the SCOTUS will rubber-stamp the military commissions act by a 5-4 vote.. which will allow the repugs to simply disappear your ass off the street if they think that you might vote for the other guy (gender neutral)...under the MCA..the result of the 2008 and all future elections will mean about as much as one of saddam husseins' plebiscites...

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Stealing Elections
Posted by: BCcovers on Apr 29, 2008 11:44 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I've heard so much crying here about 2000 and 2004 that I find it surprising and hypocrtical that people would be against something that makes "election stealing" all the more difficult. Dead people will no longer be able to vote for republicans and double voting will also be more difficult. I don't see how proving who you are and that you're voting only once is against the democratic process. It seems that this would only make it fairer. And considering that these IDs are offered for free by the state there should be no qualms. It is not a "poll tax" (the IDs are free), it is not Jim Crow a comin' back ( Indiana's black pop. is only 8.9% and is mainly located in major urban areas robust with public transit), and it seems to safegaurd any BS by either Republicans or Democrats. What's the beef guys? It seems like people just criticize anything from "the other side" without thinking it through how it can help you prevent another supposedly stolen election.

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» RE: Stealing Elections Posted by: willymack
» RE: Stealing Elections Posted by: BCcovers
end the secret ballot
Posted by: billwald on Apr 29, 2008 11:57 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There will never be an honest national election as long as we have a secret ballot. You all should be willing to put your money where your mouth is.

1. post all state voter lists with name and address on the web.

Anyone can then check for dead people and whomever voting.

2. post all national election votes in spread sheet or data list form.

Anyone can then write his own program to tally the votes. Anyone can then see that his vote was listed correctly.

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» RE: end the secret ballot Posted by: willymack
» RE: end the secret ballot Posted by: EncinoM
Excuse me ...
Posted by: notmom on Apr 29, 2008 11:56 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
... but what on earth is the big flap? Identification - OK, photo ID - is required to vote. How does that get morphed into a "pole" - or did you mean "poll" - tax? And - call me naive - what exactly is a voter ID card issued for if not to permit a voter to identify self to polling place workers - before signing The Book in the appropriate space? Granted, I suppose I'm "rich" enough that I don't see the problem with obtaining a government-issued photo ID (I paid a whopping $4 for my driver's license nine years ago), even for non-drivers with low incomes who have never applied for a government financial assistance program. But, living in Arizona, for my vote, voters should not only have to present that government-issued photo ID, but the polling place should have the means to determine the validity (as in genuine-ness) of the said photo ID. To prevent voter fraud.

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» RE: xcuse me ... Posted by: delwyncole
We've got to find a way
Posted by: willymack on Apr 29, 2008 12:09 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
To rid ourselves of crooked not-so-supreme court justices, including the head bushie ass kisser. The sooner this is done, the better.

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So what does it matter anyway? Third parties are still shut out.
Posted by: maxpayne on Apr 29, 2008 12:13 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If you want to vote none of the above these days, the only way to do it more often is to not vote. But here's an idea. Everyone in Indiana can just lie about registering Republican and then vote anyone once they're in. That's how the cons infiltrated the progressives and liberals starting back in the late 1960s or at least the 1980s.

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The lynching of Barack Obama continues.
Posted by: HughScott on Apr 29, 2008 12:40 PM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I watched the senator's press conference today on MSNBC about Rev. Wright.

Obama could not have been more clear. He not only severed his relationship with the pastor but denounced him as well. Even so, commentators Chris Mathews and Pat Buchanan said Barack was not credible.

Why? Because they believe he knew about the three -- count 'em -- three YouTube moments snipped from 30 years of preaching.

Oh, really, Chris and Pat? Where's the proof that Obama was aware of the three brief tirades?

There is NO proof!

Mathews and Buchanan should be taken to task for accusing someone of being a liar based on opinion, not facts. They are a disgrace to journalism -- as are the other biased people, Democrats and Republicans, who are helping to lynch Barack Obama.

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Confused
Posted by: Cynic13 on Apr 29, 2008 1:27 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Call me an idiot - but I've never voted without showing my voter ID card AND my photo ID, and I've lived in and voted in 4 different states.

Is there really a rash of people who don't have any form of ID? Since your voting district is determined by where you live, it seems to make sense that information would need to be verified. The details of what you need to vote successfully is usually out there well in advance - I don't understand why it's so hard.

However - I will say that when there is blantant trickery used - legal action needs to be taken.

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» RE: Confused Posted by: CJC
» RE: Confused Posted by: wmb1957
Supreme Court term limits
Posted by: mgloraine on Apr 29, 2008 4:47 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This illustrates a very serious problem being faced by this nation: our Supreme Court, formerly populated with intelligent, responsible jurists, has been replaced with a panel of partisan stooges who are guaranteed to do the bidding of the Bush Crime Family and their corporate cronies UNTIL THEY DIE!

We can't wait that long; one more week of this phony peanut gallery is too much! The outcome of every case which goes before the Roberts Court can be predicted in advance by asking: "How would Dick Cheney vote on this?"

If we are ever to have an actual working Supreme Court again, we have to first get rid of the Republican ditto-heads presently enthroned, and the most expedient LEGAL remedy would be the imposition of term limits. Eight years is enough (and time already served counts toward this limit). It's the only way we'll ever be able to get rid of the current gang of crooks in less-than-a-lifetime.

Even so, people with serious cases which need to be heard by a REAL Supreme Court will have to withold their cases until there's a chance for actual justice. With Roberts and his Goon Squad still occupying the bench, the defeat of justice is the only possible outcome.

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» RE: Supreme Court term limits Posted by: cherylsass123
» RE: Supreme Court term limits Posted by: BCcovers
pfft! the supreme court offered an answer to a question never asked
Posted by: KaptainSpiffy on Apr 30, 2008 6:49 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
voter fraud was not the issue. voter fraud was never the issue. indiana didn't have a problem with voter fraud.

now YOU tell me what really was driving this.

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The junta's beliefs unmasked
Posted by: DaBear on Apr 30, 2008 11:31 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Not that we didn't already know this but the majority opinion reflects the plaintiffs who reflect the entire fundie-Publikaaner 'Merkaan fascist mindset: never mind the evidence, our imagined fears trump reality, trump empirical data, because the delusion is our truth, and since we are superior to you, our truth is the Only Truth.

I also can't help but notice, they are all also members of the owning class...

Want change? Stop listening, trusting, believing, collaborating with the owning class. They are not your friends, they are your enemy.

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Only a retard would slam the ACLU like you.
Posted by: made2order on Apr 30, 2008 4:32 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It takes quite a big retard to think that all
7 billion people would or could vote in the USA.
They have to actually be physically standing in
front of the voting booth. But if they ever could, we all know what they would do, Bush
would be history so fast!!! The whole world is
upset with him, little do they know, that he is
actually a clone. Not a double, you mind, but
they have 60 clones of him. No matter who gets
in the white house next, very soon it will be
a clone, too. This ruling today of course is
the fight for the RFID for the NWO. Why don't we
all insist for all politicians to get an RFID
up their asses, so we can keep track of them!!!

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how about some balance and fact?
Posted by: liberallibrarian on May 2, 2008 5:38 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'm an Indiana resident and pollworker. As such, I can offer a few clarifications, I think:
(1) no ID is required for absentee voting, which is on the increase, and which has greater potential for fraud
(2) few people come to the polls without proper ID, but there ARE some who do, almost all of them elderly in my experience
(3) the state offers free ID's but has not addressed two barriers to getting them: transportation to the Motor Vehicle Bureau (only place to get them) and cost of getting primary documentation (birth certificate or passport) -- the older you are and the poorer you are, the less likely it is that you have these documents available, and/or the fees and know-how to obtain them
Even though there is no evidence that the ID law addresses actual cases of fraud, I can live with it IF the state can remove any and all barriers to obtaining the necessary ID. If that means waiving fees, subsidizing transportation, whatever -- then the law is reasonable and not unduly burdensome. We haven't gotten there yet.

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High time we get rid of this Fallacy of a High Court
Posted by: Purple Girl on May 3, 2008 6:05 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
No more life time appointments.
these 'justices' who have Blanantly SUPPRESSED Voters rights should be Prosecuted by the Indiana State AG. ONE WEEK BEFORE THE PRIMARY?? Please they have become so Brazen they no longer care how such Rulings sheds light on their TREASON!They intentional held off long enough to negate the voters from obtaining such ID's- Notably who do not have a Drivers License becasue they live in theCity and use Public Tansportation, live in outskirts by Choose to use Public Trans (envrionmentalist) and Those who can Not afford a car anyways!It does not take a "Political analyist" Nor A Sociologist to figure out which candidates supporters are going to be adversely effected!this need to be investigated as to WHO pushed this legislation and WHY the 'Justices' timed this 'ruling' as they Did!!!
Scalia also needs to be thrown Out for his lack of comprehension of the mere symantics in the 'Difference' betwen 'Torture & Punishment' 'Innocent until Proven Guilty' Over rules the differnece in timing. You torture when you have already decided someone is Guilty- to get them to confess to their Crimes. You don't torture those you deem Innocent! High Crimes Deserve High Punishment - He's already confessed to his crime on National TV!And we never had to Torture him to get the Truth. People 'confess ' under torture so it will stop even if they know death will be the result- they just want to end the pain !
Scalia's agruement ,as usual, is Circular, thus Illogical and invalid and Criminal for any level of 'Judge'

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