ArtK78, on 2015-June-09, 12:44, said:
And that is the proper analogy. The Kansas Supreme Court has the last word on what happens in Kansas, at least when no federal interest in involved. As was mentioned above, the beginning of this controversy involved a ruling of the Kansas Supreme Court based on its reading of the state constitution. The federal courts, including the Supreme Court, have no jurisdiction on matters dealing with state constitutional issues unless a provision in the state constitution violates federal law (for example, suppose the Kansas State Constitution allowed slavery - clearly, this would violate the federal constitution and the federal courts could strike that provision of the Kansas State Constitution).
As for the world court, the less said, the better.
This makes sense to me. I am not a constitutional (or any sort of) lawyer, but it makes sense. Now whether the court's ruling makes senses, I don't know. And, probably, I don't want to invest a lot of energy in thinking about it. All in all, the whole thing sounds awful and the people of Kansas have to deal with it. They all seem seriously odd to me. But yes, I am here, they are there, it's for Kansans to deal with. I wish them luck.
I'll pay my taxes honestly and I won't whine about it. In return, our elected representatives are supposed to be able to plan well enough so that they don't run out of money and then fail to pay state employees. . Is that asking too much? As mentioned, we had many furloughs in Maryland and we are all, well, almost all, Dems here. Reps have no monopoly on incompetence. Although this episode seems particularly impressive.