The supreme court just overturned Roe v Wade – what happens next?
The Roe ruling is not about states’ rights. It’s about power and control Derecka Purnell
Supreme Court Ruling Rejects the Promise of Miranda Rights
U.S. Supreme Court's 'Miranda' decision further guts 150-year-old civil rights law
Supreme Court rules against detained immigrants facing deportation
Supreme Court makes it more difficult to challenge immigration policies in court
U.S. Supreme Court allows Louisiana electoral map faulted for racial bias
Supreme court sides with high school coach who led on-field prayers -Sotomayor accuses supreme court conservatives of dismantling church-state separation
Alarm as US supreme court takes a hatchet to church-state separation
SCOTUS Just Expanded States’ Power to Prosecute Crimes on Tribal Land Undermining Tribal Sovereignty
SCOTUS just quietly slashed your Sixth Amendment rights
Supreme Court’s gun proliferation ruling masquerading as constitutional interpretation
Reuters: U.S. Supreme Court throws out rulings upholding gun restrictions
US supreme court case could give state politicians huge power over elections
Biden, changes stance, now backs exception to Senate filibuster to protect abortion access
‘It’s incredibly far-reaching’: medical students on the Roe reversal
TIME: Does Religious Freedom Protect a Right to an Abortion? One Rabbi's Mission to Find Out
SCOTUS Vote To Overturn Roe v Wade Archive
The Supreme Court sharply curtails the authority of the EPA to regulate greenhouse-gas emissions that cause climate change. In a 6-3 ruling, the court sides with conservative states and fossil-fuel companies in adopting a narrow reading of the Clean Air Act.
— SCOTUSblog (@SCOTUSblog) June 30, 2022
If you want to understand how the Supreme Court rules on politics rather than the law look no further than the arena of Federal Indian Law.
— Rebecca Nagle (@rebeccanagle) June 29, 2022
Today #SCOTUS changed who has criminal jurisdiction on over 300 reservations not based on precedent or even the facts on the ground…
Federal courts think white high school football coaches have more rights to prayer than Apache people do to their place of prayer. Or it could be that profit has more sanctity than Indigenous people. https://t.co/naKBihZ4Bd
— Nick Estes (@nickwestes) June 28, 2022
This #SCOTUS opinion in #CastroHuerta is an act of conquest. Full stop.
— Elizabeth Hidalgo Reese (Yunpovi) (@yunpovi) June 29, 2022
The right and power of tribes to rule themselves is being dismissed in favor of state power.
Tribes are…I can’t even write it…part of states.
All of yall who were so vocal about Native Nations being a loophole for abortions, where's the same outrage as the Supreme Court just took another swing at our tribal sovereignty by granting states jurisdiction over crimes committed by non Natives on tribal lands #CastroHuerta
— Autumn A. BlackDeer, PhD (@DrBlackDeer) June 29, 2022
What pisses me off so much is that decisions affecting Native people and Native lands won't matter to most Americans, because many of you don't believe we exist anymore anyway.
— Kaitlin B Curtice (@KaitlinCurtice) June 29, 2022
We matter to you when we are useful to you.
…And now, SCOTUS has limited the scope of the historic McGirt decision, which reestablished Tribal lands in Oklahoma & supported Tribal sovereignty & Treaty law. I expected this—it’s in line with much of Indian law criminal jurisdiction on the books.
— Ruth H. Robertson (Red Road Woman) (@Ruth_HHopkins) June 29, 2022
Gorsuch dissented. https://t.co/iE8ESrMQZ0
So Supreme Court overturns Roe v. Wade and @JoeBiden responds by nominating anti-choice Republican to a Judge in a “deal” with the cartoon villain who blocked Obama’s Supreme Court pick. With opposition like this… https://t.co/bCtPhNZnUx
— Jordan (@JordanChariton) June 29, 2022
One of the many reasons that U.S. law is not a path to liberation is that there will never be robust notions of liberty and autonomy in a system that was created to maintain chattel slavery. There is no history and tradition of bodily self-determination here.
— Chase Strangio (@chasestrangio) June 29, 2022
A year of work proving Louisiana's congressional map discriminates against Black voters. A 152-page district court opinion finding discrimination, upheld in a 33-page opinion by the most conservative federal court in the nation. Taken away by 6 justices in an act of raw power. https://t.co/PhJ9iROha1
— Sam Spital (@SamSpital) June 28, 2022
“Banning abortion nationwide would lead to a 21% increase in the number of pregnancy-related deaths overall and a 33% increase among Black women”
— Ronelle (@Ronelle__) June 28, 2022
The maternal mortality rate is already 3-4x higher for Black women than it is for white women.Reproductive justice is racial justice. https://t.co/iYqpLFwbww
In reversing Roe v. Wade, the Supreme Court has shown its intent to act against the popular will — and it won’t stop at abortion rights. From packing the court to defunding it, here are five ways Democrats can act to prevent further damage. https://t.co/0I93fmNjPc
— Jacobin (@jacobin) June 28, 2022
In overturning Roe v. Wade, the Supreme Court strikes a blow to bodily autonomy that will disproportionately harm people with disabilities — a community that has consistently fought for the right to agency over our own medical decisions.https://t.co/zirdewy458
— ACLU (@ACLU) June 28, 2022
The separation of church and state is a vital protection guaranteed by the Constitution.
— ACLU (@ACLU) June 22, 2022
Public school students deserve the right to attend school events free from official prayers. https://t.co/tk0QeSY2qI
Sotomayor, dissenting: "This Court continues to dismantle the wall of separation between church and state that the Framers fought to build. ... The consequences of the Court’s rapid transformation of the Religion Clauses must not be understated." https://t.co/saVbopQJyq
— Mark Joseph Stern (@mjs_DC) June 21, 2022
NEW: The Supreme Court ruled today that you can’t sue the police for failing to read your Miranda rights to you.
— ACLU (@ACLU) June 23, 2022
This dangerous decision widens the gap between what the Constitution guarantees and what we can hold our government accountable for.
SCOTUS just handed a big win to fossil fuel giants & a loss to humanity.
— Ruth H. Robertson (Red Road Woman) (@Ruth_HHopkins) June 30, 2022
Amy Coney Barrett’s father was an attorney for Shell Oil for decades.
The new SCOTUS right wing majority has gone fully mask off & is not ruling based on the law. This is all about a political agenda. https://t.co/rzSHGVOVAI
Congress can change the number of justices on the Supreme Court at any time, and has done so 7 times throughout history.
— Ilhan Omar (@IlhanMN) June 30, 2022
Since 1869, the last time the court was expanded, the U.S. population has grown by over 800%, yet the court has stayed stagnant at 9 justices.
Apparently the government isn’t allowed to regulate anything that isn’t a uterus. https://t.co/8sRBPKUj9O
— Nina Turner (@ninaturner) June 30, 2022
This Supreme Court is prepared to destroy this country https://t.co/BdSPfCpFZ3
— Olayemi Olurin (@msolurin) June 30, 2022
A radical Supreme Ct can be reigned in. Codifying Roe, funding for abortion transit, reducing jurisdiction, impeaching justices, expanding number of justices, reducing Ct appropriations are options per Jamelle Bouie @nytimes and others. Ask your candidates, "What's the plan?"
— Andru Volinsky (@AndruVolinsky) June 26, 2022
Today marks the end of what is surely one of the worst terms in #SCOTUS history. Guns and prayer and abortion got most of the attention. But that's not all the Court did. Here are just some of the Court's bad decisions:
— Jason P. Steed (@5thCircAppeals) June 30, 2022
1/25