billyshelby
Well-Known Member
I've said it before, many times, in this thread, Biley, and I have said (or let courts say why, when I quote them) why this is NOT the issue. There's no new way to say it. Either you understand, or you don't. Given the content of the statement I have cited above, you don't.
As I said very early, the judge could find as a "fact" that (1) the moon is made of green cheese, or (2) that brunettes are more attractive than blondes. He can find "as a fact" anything he wants. That doesn't settle the issue.
A court can't change opinion into facts (case 2, above) merely by calling them "facts"
Nor can it bind a higher court to accept as "fact" something which is not a fact (case 1, above).
What this particular judge wants, believes, or would implement as policy if he were dictator, is NOT the issue here.
You keep thinking I'm not getting it, but I think the problem is you keep not liking my reason. Your words: "I DON'T THINK Walker can find, as a fact, anything that is virtually beyond doubt." Well, I don't know what Walker can get away with as 'fact' under the legal guidelines. You seem to want to state that a fact can only be something that is incontrovertibly true. If Walker had said, "It is beyond doubt that gay parents are as good as heterosexual parents," that would be incontrovertibly false as a pure fact. For him to say, "It is beyond serious debate" may actually be "true" so long as he stipulates that, in his judgment, the opposing arguments are too frivolous to consider rationally.
What if he needed to stipulate Gravity was a fact? You could undoubtedly find somebody who doesn't think it is. They'd put up charts and graphs and spew numbers to prove their case. Meanwhile, legions of scientists would make the opposing claim. In that instance, no judge could say, as a finding of Fact, that it is "beyond doubt" gravity exists. Neither side can prove that incontrovertibly. But I would guess a judge could find, as a statement of fact, it is 'beyond serious debate' that gravity doesn't exist.
Gravity is an extreme example, but substitute gravity for Walker's estimation of the defense claims to have actual evidence and his semantically worded finding of fact starts to make more sense. Maybe not to your satisfaction, but not nearly as absurd as you want to portray it.