Posts Tagged ‘really’

Are “Sobriety Checkpoints” Really Constitutional?

Friday, December 28th, 2012

The Constitution of the United States pretty clearly says that police can’t just stop someone and conduct an investigation unless there are “articulable facts” indicating possible criminal activity….So how can they do exactly that with DUI roadblocks?

Good question. And it was raised in the case of Michigan v. Sitz (496 U.S. 444), in which the U.S. Supreme Court reviewed a decision of the Michigan Supreme Court striking down drunk driving roadblocks as unconstitutional. In a 6-3 decision, the Court reversed the Michigan court, holding that roadblocks were constitutionally permissible.

Chief Justice Rehnquist began his majority opinion by admitting that DUI roadblocks (akaDUI sobriety checkpoints”) do, in fact, constitute a “seizure” within the language of the 4th Amendment. In other words, yes, it’s a blatant violation of the Constitution. However….

However, it’s only a "minor violation", and there’s all this “carnage” on the highways MADD tells us we’ve got to do something about. The “minimal intrusion on individual liberties”, Rehnquist wrote, must be “weighed” against the need for and effectiveness of roadblocks. In other words, the ends justify the (illegal) means….aka, “The DUI Exception to the Constitution”.

The dissenting justices pointed out that the Constitution doesn’t make exceptions: The sole question is whether the police had probable cause to stop the individual driver. As Justice Brennan wrote,

“That stopping every car might make it easier to prevent drunken driving…is an insufficient justification for abandoning the requirement of individualized suspicion….The most disturbing aspect of the Court’s decision today is that it appears to give no weight to the citizen’s interest in freedom from suspicionless investigatory seizures”.

Rehnquist’s justification for ignoring the Constitution rested on the assumption that DUI roadblocks were “necessary” and “effective”.  Are they?  As Justice Stevens wrote in his own dissenting opinion, the Michigan court had already reviewed the statistics on DUI sobriety checkpoints/roadblocks:



“The findings of the trial court, based on an extensive record and affirmed by the Michigan Court of Appeals, indicate that the net effect of sobriety checkpoints on traffic safety is infinitesimal and possibly negative”.



p.s. The case was sent back to the Michigan Supreme Court to change its previous decision accordingly. But the Michigan Supreme Court sidestepped Rehnquist by holding that DUI checkpoints, if now permissible under the U.S. Constitution, were not permissible under the Michigan State Constitution! The Court ruled again in favor of the defendant — in effect saying to Rehnquist, “If you won’t protect our citizens, we will”. 
 

DUI BLOG

history help please!!!!! insight students i really need help!!! please help me!!?

Friday, June 10th, 2011

1. LULAC fought discrimination against Latinos mainly through
A) lobbying efforts.
B) demonstrations and other protests.
C) the court system.
D) newspapers and other mass media.
2. “I began to realize what other minority people had discovered: That the only answer—the only hope—was in organizing. More of us had to become citizens. We had to register to vote. And people like me had to develop the skills it would take to organize, to educate, to help empower the Chicano people.”—César Chávez

Based on the quote above, how did César Chávez propose to fight against the discrimination against Latinos in American society?
A) By filing lawsuits
B) By starting letter writing campaigns
C) By holding voter registration drives
D) By protesting against discrimination
3. How did La Raza Unida and the United Farm Workers differ in their goals?
A) The United Farm Workers did not seek greater economic opportunities for Latino Americans, while La Raza Unida supported better job opportunities for Latinos.
B) La Raza Unida worked to mobilize Latino voters, while the United Farm Workers advocated for union recognition and better worker wages and benefits.
C) La Raza Unida did not seek greater economic opportunities while the United Farm Workers advocated for vocational training programs for Latino Americans.
D) The United Farm Workers fought for greater educational opportunities for Latino Americans while La Raza Unida organized boycotts to push for civil rights.
4. What did the political party La Raza Unida do to advocate for Latino civil rights?
A) It supported programs to bring more Latino workers to the United States.
B) It called for an amendment to the U.S. Constitution guaranteeing the civil rights of Latino Americans.
C) It supported legislation ending segregation in public places for Latino Americans in the American Southwest.
D) It worked to get voters to elect people who would call for job-training programs and more access to financial resources.
5. To push for better wages and benefits for farm workers, César Chávez organized a successful
A) march on Washington.
B) sit-down strike.
C) advertising and publicity campaign.
D) national boycott on grapes.
6. Who was the GI Forum founded to protect?
A) African American veterans
B) Women veterans
C) Mexican-American veterans
D) Veterans of Pacific Battles
7. What did LULAC support while fighting discrimination against Latino Americans?
A) Voting rights for Latino American citizens
B) Assimilation into American society
C) A fair wage for Latino farm workers
D) A separate but equal school system for Latino American students
8. In 1966, César Chávez and Dolores Huerta did which of the following to fight for Latino civil rights?
A) They merged their organizations to form the United Farm Workers.
B) They formed the political party La Raza Unida.
C) They organized a march on Washington to advocate for Latino civil rights.
D) They worked together for the passage of the Bilingual Education Act.
9. Which of the following organizations was NOT organized to promote civil rights for Latino groups?
A) Americans of Mexican Heritage
B) LULAC
C) United Farm Workers
D) American GI Forum
10. Latinos argued successfully for the addition of what in public education?
A) Bilingualism
B) Repatriation
C) Feminism
D) Legalism

1) C the court system

2) C By holding voter registration drives

3) B La Raza Unida worked to mobilize Latino voters, while the United Farm Workers advocated….

4) D It worked to get voters to elect people who would call for job-training programs and more access to financial resources.

5) D national boycott on grapes.

6) C Mexican-American veterans

7) B Assimilation into American society

8) A They merged their organizations to form the United Farm Workers

9) A Americans of Mexican Heritage

10) A Bilingualism

(:


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Would you like to have the backing of Obama? This guy really knows how to take care of his political friends?

Sunday, May 1st, 2011

Cash Crunch: Senate Dems Scale Back Ad Campaign in Pennsylvania

According to a source in Pennsylvania who tracks television advertising by political campaigns, the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee bought only 0,000 in TV ads this week in Pennsylvania–about a 50 percent drop from the 0,000 or more the DSCC has been spending on TV ads each week for the past five weeks in the state.

Read more: http://dailycaller.com/2010/09/29/cash-crunch-senate-dems-scale-back-ad-campaign-in-pennsylvania/#ixzz10×7Xt4We

PollDateSampleToomey (R)Sestak (D)Spread
RCP Average9/15 – 9/27–46.339.8Toomey +6.5

Sestak must be really proud to have Obama campaign for him.

Who’s next?

Why not ask me if I need a big case of smallpox?


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Dr. Wolf: How can I really trust my teenager?

Thursday, February 24th, 2011
February 17, 2011

From The Globe And Mail

“Where were you? It’s 2:30 A.M.!”

“Daniel’s car broke down and my cellphone died.”

“You could have used Daniel’s phone.”

“His died too.”

“You’ve been drinking, haven’t you.”

“No.”

Century Council Blog