
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Honorable Jeffrey S. Sutton is a judge for the United States Court of Appeals in the Sixth Circuit. His book 51 Imperfect Solutions is framed around four stories which he uses to illustrate the interplay between state and federal constitutions. The four stories are; school funding, the exclusionary rule, eugenics, and mandatory flag salutes. Sutton believes that many of the state constitutions are actually closer to codes than constitutions. Many states have constitutions that are so long that most residents of that state have not read them in their entirety. The original states have much smaller constitutions that are rather similar in tone and language to the federal Constitution.
What is the interplay between the federal Constitution and the state constitution? What is the exclusionary rule? What role should the state play in comparison to the federal government? Do states know best when it comes to funding education? Is the Supreme Court always “right” when it comes to interpreting the Constitution?
Further Reading:The United States Once Sterilized Tens of Thousands — Here’s How the Supreme Court Allowed It, written by Trevor Burrus
51 Imperfect Solutions, written by Hon. Jeffrey S. Sutton
Related Content:Constitutional Controversies, written George H. Smith
The Constitution in Practice: From Liberty to Leviathan, Free Thoughts Podcast
The Conscience of the Constitution, Free Thoughts Podcast
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
4.6
299299 ratings
Honorable Jeffrey S. Sutton is a judge for the United States Court of Appeals in the Sixth Circuit. His book 51 Imperfect Solutions is framed around four stories which he uses to illustrate the interplay between state and federal constitutions. The four stories are; school funding, the exclusionary rule, eugenics, and mandatory flag salutes. Sutton believes that many of the state constitutions are actually closer to codes than constitutions. Many states have constitutions that are so long that most residents of that state have not read them in their entirety. The original states have much smaller constitutions that are rather similar in tone and language to the federal Constitution.
What is the interplay between the federal Constitution and the state constitution? What is the exclusionary rule? What role should the state play in comparison to the federal government? Do states know best when it comes to funding education? Is the Supreme Court always “right” when it comes to interpreting the Constitution?
Further Reading:The United States Once Sterilized Tens of Thousands — Here’s How the Supreme Court Allowed It, written by Trevor Burrus
51 Imperfect Solutions, written by Hon. Jeffrey S. Sutton
Related Content:Constitutional Controversies, written George H. Smith
The Constitution in Practice: From Liberty to Leviathan, Free Thoughts Podcast
The Conscience of the Constitution, Free Thoughts Podcast
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
10,360 Listeners
8,133 Listeners
65 Listeners
55 Listeners
12 Listeners
2,160 Listeners
27,958 Listeners
35 Listeners
28 Listeners
87 Listeners
33 Listeners
3 Listeners