The law ought not to be changed unless there are truly compelling reasons.
A mother who asked doctors to give her 15 - year - old daughter (K), who has severe cerebral palsy, a hysterectomy has raised again the ethical and legal dilemma about how
the law ought to balance the human rights of people who, because of mental disability, do not have the capacity to consent to the medical treatment being proposed.
John - Paul, have you ever thought that family
law ought to simply be moved out of the courts and into a regulatory tribunal?
Issues that arise are whether the Sewel convention will apply to the passage of the «Great Repeal Bill» itself, and how the reform of domesticated EU
law ought to be carried out: exclusively by UK ministers under the Great Repeal Bill, or also by the devolved administrations.
It is, arguably, a specific instance of the broader question of how
the law ought to deal with unusual situations on which precedent is lacking; as I observed here, in a post prompted, in part, by prof. Magliocca's musings on the subject of judicial review of unusual statutes, that broader question is not an easy one.
While discussing an issue and the existing law, law students I submit should be asked what, in their opinion,
the law ought to be.
But Palfrey counters that the law, as written, sometimes fails to protect what
the law ought to protect.
However, to suggest that TWU's view shouldn't be acceptable then you are suggesting that
the law ought to ban religious belief and practice that holds the view that marriage is to be between one man and one woman.
There's no reason why a person who is presumed innocent and who is releasable under
the law ought to spend extra days in custody, simply because they have the misfortune of being arrested on a busy Friday night.
The Court also specifically noted that uncertainty in employment
law ought to be resolved in favour of the employee and that, at best, the wording of the termination clause was ambiguous.
Instead of citing authority, tell your judge what
the law ought to be.
The rationale underlying the defense is one of public policy: «
The law ought to promote the achievement of higher values at the expense of lesser values, and sometimes the greater good for society will be accomplished by violating the literal language of the law.»
«The Animal Legal Defense Fund strongly believes that
the law ought to recognize animals» ability to feel pain and suffer, as well as their interest in living their lives without fear and distress,» Dunn said.
«
The law ought to be on the side of helping people stay in their homes,» he said.
Because the law needs people as human reminders of what
the law ought to be, and is capable of becoming, so that it will not arrogantly and comfortably settle for what it is.
It was a payment, as Jesus confirmed in Matthew 23:23, where He told those who were under
the law they ought to tithe ON THEIR HERBS.
In our judgment,
laws ought to specify requirements that generation technologies must meet, such as low pollution, affordability, power quality, and domestic power sources, and leave the means of realizing the goals to technologists and the market.
While I support the notion that privacy
laws ought to be technologically neutral, I think it would give employees much greater comfort if they could point to a statutory provision that said employers were not permitted to ask for unfettered access to personal (online?)
Not exact matches
Foreign ownership
laws prohibiting non-Canadian bookselling operations
ought to go the way of the dodo.
«The old saying: There
ought to be a
law.
The allegation of a threat is what
ought to interest members Congress even more than the possibility that Trump violated campaign - finance
laws when his personal attorney tried to pay off Daniels to keep quiet about the president.
Meanwhile, Professor Stephen Bainbridge of the UCLA School of
Law has written extensively on this subject and summed up his feelings by stating that «if this nonsense is not illegal, it
ought to be.»
Still, the liberal peace is right to hold that
laws and institutions
ought to be based on human rights.
Natural
law theorists derive from human nature and human goods conclusions about what we
ought to do.
NAMBLA takes the position that the Greek erotic ideal is the adolescent or young adult, that sex between the young male and his mentor is a thing of beauty and spiritual exaltation that
ought not to be prohibited by
law.
Those who have followed the debate over same - sex marriage understand very clearly that
law and culture
ought to work together to promote and preserve families and communities; we should apply the same vigor to strengthening economic policies that make it easier for people not to sin.
(New Testament) Whay did Christ die on the cross anyway, if the old way was good enough??? When Paul speaks of the
law he means anything that we should must or
ought be doing.
Although intelligence reform is fundamentally a
law - and - order issue which
ought to appeal to conservative voters, this cautious election year augurs ill for reform in two additional ways.
He makes the rather profound point that «if language is to be of any use to us, then we
ought to try and preserve the meaning of words, and «god» historically has not meant the
laws of nature.»
Some
laws are unconstitutional and
ought to be struck down.
Taking as a starting point the speech of Pope Benedict XVI to the Houses of Parliament in 2010, Duddington echoes the view that Christianity
ought not to be sidelined by
law and policy - makers.
The new unanimity replaces the former legislation and becomes the new
law which
ought to be followed.
Muslims who are not qualified
ought to enquire concerning the qualifications of those who speak concerning the obligations of Islamic
law.
It was the belief of all sects at one time that the establishment of Religion by
law, was right & necessary; that the true religion
ought to be established in exclusion of every other; And that the only question to be decided was which was the true religion.
In the next clause, «these you
ought to have done, without neglecting the others,» the demonstrative «these» refers to what is nearest in the context, the weightier matters of the
law: that is, «justice and mercy and faith» should have prior attention, but the minor duties should be done too.
Origen of Alexandria, the first major interpreter of the Bible in the Church's history, said that «the apostle Paul, «teacher of the Gentiles in faith and truth,» taught the Church... how it
ought to interpret the books of the
Law.»
Certainly William Blackstone and Christopher Columbus Langdell, often cited as Holmes» targets, were as alert to the value of experience as Holmes was; it
ought to be clear to any practicing lawyer that the life of the
law requires both experience and logic.
In fact, I've been taught that homosexuality is just about the worst kind of sin that there is, one we
ought to protest against and make
laws about.
Sane people can disagree about whether there
ought to be a right to privacy, i.e., about whether it is logically a natural right and if so perhaps
ought to be put into the Constitution via amendment, or about whether we (usually at state - level) should pass particular
laws, such as ones that legalize gay - marriage, that factually expand what might be called privacy, but no sane U.S. Citizen, gay, straight, liberal, or conservative, should be left ignorant about the Constitution - wounding judicial usurpations done in the name of this right, more of which are planned to be done soon enough.
There are still enough differences on all sides which, on strict examination, will prove to be not necessarily causes of separation and which
ought to be proclaimed unimportant, whether they concern canon
law, the liturgy, the way of life, administration or theology.
Through his religious education every mature Christian
ought to be able to distinguish between the actual dogma of the Church and theological opinions that may be changed and improved, between immutable divine
law and changeable human
law.
Whether our
laws and our politics
ought to be founded on that difficulty, or grounded in it, is another matter entirely.
First, I fully agree that prescription (statute of limitations) is a significant aspect of the rule of
law, and I did not argue that canonical prescription
ought to be ignored.
When the Nazi officials on trial at Nuremberg argued in their defense that they had merely obeyed the
laws of the state, public opinion quickly agreed that there
ought to be a
law proscribing such crimes against humanity.
And why, if there is no moral
law,
ought we to listen to him?
«We punish those who are ignorant of anything in the
laws that they
ought to know and is not difficult to know... we assume that it is in their power not to be ignorant since they have the power of taking care.»
Pastors are not exempt from the
law of the land, rather, the
law of the land
ought to protect them from the encroachment of lawmakers, such as Mayor Parker.
for you tithe mint and dill and cummin, and have neglected the weightier matters of the
law, justice and mercy and faith; these you
ought to have done, without neglecting the others.
«More than any great Christian leader before him,» Niebuhr observed, «Luther affirmed the life in culture as the sphere in which Christ could and
ought to be followed; and more than any other he discerned that the rules to be followed in the cultural life were independent of Christian or church
law.»
The rule of
law, rather than of men,
ought to hold good for schools as well as for communities and nations.