U.S. Supreme Court Overrules Two Previous U.S. Supreme Court Opinions This Week

It is rare for the U.S. Supreme Court to ever say that a previous U.S. Supreme Court opinion was decided incorrectly, but that has happened on both June 26, 2018, and June 27, 2018.

On June 26, the U.S. Supreme Court said in Trump v Hawaii, 17-965, that the Court had been wrong in 1944 when it upheld internment for U.S. citizens of Japanese ancestry, in Korematsu v U.S., 323 U.S. 214.

On June 27, the U.S. Supreme Court said in Janus v American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, 16-1466, that the 1977 decision Abood v Detroit Board of Education, 431 U.S. 209, had been wrong. The issue in both cases was whether a government employee can be forced to make payments to a labor union as a condition of employment.


Comments

U.S. Supreme Court Overrules Two Previous U.S. Supreme Court Opinions This Week — 4 Comments

  1. ALL of the SCOTUS BALLOT ACESSS JUNK opinions from Williams v Rhodes 1968 onward must be over-ruled.

    EQUAL ballot access tests for ALL individual candidates for the SAME office in the SAME area —

    WHICH WILL QUICKLY LEAD TO PR AND APPV — PENDING CONDORCET.

  2. The Korematsu racist JUNK opinion was a blatant violation of the NO title of Nobility clause —

    rights depending on hereditary.

    IE —
    ALL USA citizens should have been put into the State Militias in 1941-1942.

    Oriental looking folks been ordered away from the West Coast
    — while they was a direct threat of Japanese Empire invasion
    — but have their property protected.

    ALL Axis Power citizens/subjects in the USA should have been uniformly arrested/captured for the duration of WW II.

    Korematsu has a bearing on JUNK UNEQUAL ballot access laws.

  3. See Constitution Annotated for

    appendix list of unconstitutional USA and State/Local laws

    and list of SCOTUS over-ruled cases — including about 5-10 election law cases [so far].

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