Cons what the fuck is "absolute immunity?" Is that a legal concept?
| Shaky meetinghouse brethren | 01/08/26 | | Bateful locus | 01/08/26 | | Shaky meetinghouse brethren | 01/08/26 | | Bateful locus | 01/08/26 | | Shaky meetinghouse brethren | 01/08/26 | | Burgundy Site Useless Brakes | 01/08/26 | | Shaky meetinghouse brethren | 01/08/26 | | Burgundy Site Useless Brakes | 01/08/26 | | Shaky meetinghouse brethren | 01/08/26 | | navy racy sanctuary | 01/08/26 | | Infuriating vermilion friendly grandma really tough guy | 01/08/26 | | Sapphire quadroon | 01/08/26 | | Shaky meetinghouse brethren | 01/08/26 | | Dull Brunch | 01/08/26 | | Shaky meetinghouse brethren | 01/08/26 | | Dull Brunch | 01/08/26 | | Shaky meetinghouse brethren | 01/08/26 | | Dull Brunch | 01/08/26 | | Shaky meetinghouse brethren | 01/08/26 | | Dull Brunch | 01/08/26 | | Shaky meetinghouse brethren | 01/08/26 | | Dull Brunch | 01/08/26 | | Shaky meetinghouse brethren | 01/08/26 | | Dull Brunch | 01/09/26 | | Shaky meetinghouse brethren | 01/09/26 |
Poast new message in this thread
 |
Date: January 8th, 2026 8:33 PM Author: Dull Brunch
i'm not sure you and i are focusing on the key issue.
absolute immunity becomes an issue when someone arguably fucks up. it doesn't become an issue when someone follows policy.
so if a judge makes a massively erroneous ruling but wasn't bribed, etc., then it was within the scope of the job but was outside policy -- and the judge gets absolute immunity.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5819258&forum_id=2).#49573986) |
|
|