Even If the CDC's Mask Mandate Made Sense, That Would Not Make It Legal
The decision against the rule hinged on whether the agency had the power it asserted.

Did you know that the federal judge who vacated the federal mask mandate for airline and public transit passengers on Monday is only 35? The New York Times thought that detail was important, and so did Slate legal writer Mark Joseph Stern.
The fact that critics of U.S. District Judge Kathryn Kimball Mizelle's 59-page decision focused on her age rather than her reasoning reflects the confusion of people who tend to assume that any COVID-19 control measure they view as sensible must also be legal. These are two distinct questions, and conflating them amounts to rejecting the rule of law.
Mizelle was responding to a lawsuit challenging an "order" that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) published in the Federal Register on February 3, 2021. She concluded that the rule, which applied to taxis and ride-sharing services as well as airplanes, airports, and public transportation systems, exceeded the CDC's authority and violated the Administrative Procedure Act (APA).
The CDC issued its mask mandate under a provision of the 1944 Public Health Service Act that authorizes regulations to prevent the interstate spread of communicable diseases. The law mentions "inspection, fumigation, disinfection, sanitation, pest extermination," and "destruction" of infected or contaminated "animals or articles" as well as "other measures" deemed "necessary."
When the CDC cited the same provision to justify its nationwide eviction moratorium, it argued that the phrase "other measures" authorizes any disease control measure it considers appropriate. The Supreme Court rejected that "breathtaking" power grab, saying the list of specific examples "informs the grant of authority by illustrating the kinds of measures that could be necessary."
In light of that principle, Mizelle said, the relevant question is whether the CDC's mask mandate qualifies as a "sanitation" measure, as the agency contended, or something similar. She cited five reasons for rejecting that reading: "the context of the nearby words," contemporaneous usage, the sweeping implications of the government's argument, the history of the provision's application, and the fact that it seems to be "limited to property."
Mizelle also concluded that the CDC had "improperly invoked" the "good cause" exception to the APA's "notice and comment" requirement for new rules. And she said the mask mandate was "arbitrary and capricious" because the CDC "failed to adequately explain its reasoning."
Mizelle backed up all three of those conclusions with extensive discussion and cogent reasons. But instead of explaining why she was wrong, Stern complained that "a single unelected, life-tenured, 35-year-old judge just abolished the air travel mask mandate for the entire country."
In Stern's view, that was intolerably undemocratic. He asked "who should decide whether air passengers must wear masks: A federal agency staffed with experts accountable to the president, who is accountable to the people? Or a 35-year-old Trump judge in Tampa?"
The issue in this case was not whether it makes sense to require that travelers wear masks. It was who gets to decide that and under what legal authority—a question that squarely resides with the judicial branch, not with the "experts" at an executive agency.
Federal judges are unelected and have life tenure to insulate them from political pressures when they answer such questions. That is a feature, not a bug, because under our system of government presidents do not get to do whatever they want, even if the majority demands it. Their policies must be consistent with the law.
Neither Mizelle's age nor the fact that Donald Trump nominated her have anything to do with whether she did her job properly. When Stern calls her a "Trump judge," he is echoing Trump, who dismissed a ruling he did not like as the politically motivated work of "an Obama judge."
Judicial independence is essential to upholding the rule of law. Partisans attack both when they suggest that judges have no business interfering with the policies of democratically elected politicians. That is precisely what they are supposed to do when the law requires it.
© Copyright 2022 by Creators Syndicate Inc.
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>And she said the mask mandate was "arbitrary and capricious" because the CDC "failed to adequately explain its reasoning."
This is what has bugged me since forever. I think I bitched about it three times in these threads just this week.
You've had two years. Tell me why some sort of mitigation is required. Is it zero covid? Is it to reduce hospitalization? Is it because covid prevents rainbows and you want low enough infection rates to see a rainbow? Tell me something.
It seems like "There's a virus" therefore "everyone has to do something". More viruses? You have to do that something, but more. Forever.
Glad someone with a modicum of authority saw some sense of reason.
And any studies from any state or city showing that the mask mandates actually worked would be useful too, if you plan to keep renewing them when they expire.
Emergency rules should be for emergencies, say the first 30 days of a pandemic when no one knows much of anything and the potential risk is high. After that they should rely on sound reasoning and real data.
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what is most astoubgibg (and disturbing) is that this idiotic mandate managed to survive almost two years before being dealt with as it needed to the first week it was "in place".
It is simply not true that the critics of the ruling did not attempt to refute her reasoning. See this critique, arguing that (1) She doesn't give the word sanitation its ordinary meaning. and (2) Her distinction between CDC regulations governing “property” and those governing “liberty interests” is contrary to the statute's text. https://www.vox.com/2022/4/19/23031891/supreme-court-trump-mask-mandate-airplane-mizelle-biden
Sorry, Vox is not going to cut it as an authoritative legal source. I'm not even going to read the link; Vox's reputation precedes it.
Vox is Slate for morons.
Vox ... how to live your life like a sniveling coward explained
Vox is Slate for morons.
*Kirkland shows up*
Apparently it's a dinner bell for them, too.
At least two law professors who write at the right-wing Volokh Conspiracy have opined that this judge is full of shit in this context.
That the judge is an unqualified ideologue is a different point, except to the extent this shoddy, result-driven work derived from her ample deficiencies.
Cry more.
Now refute the part about the CDC exceeding its lawful authority (again).
the ONLY issue that kept her from being considered "qualified" is that she only has ten years of lawyering under her belt, not the twelve that is tyical. Not a hard and fast rule, could easily and soon be changed, but so what? Her body or work so far puts her in the eminently qualified category. Snivel much over nuthin?
I think the REAL reason those who don't like her don't like her is that she was working with Clarence Thomas for about two years as a law clerk. If she'd had that same time under the "wise latina judge" everything would be different.. guaranteed.
You should go work for CNN or work with Biden - they pretty much do the same. Make up their lazy minds without bothering to actually read and refute the arguments being made. It's beyond stupid to conclude that it's impossible for anyone with a bad reputation to publish something reasoned and intelligent. The decision that focused solely on a word sanitation for 59 pages was embarrassing. Sanitation is no different then what is found in the second amendment, i.e. '..well regulated militia..' - it is NOT dispositive of the right to bear arms or the rights afforded the CDC regarding masks. My complaint with the law is that it's so overbroad, it covers everything, including the common cold, flu and COVID regardless of context or circumstance (e.g. a pandemic), it should be struck down.
Can't say whether Vox itself is an "authoritative legal source," but you can't doubt that authoritative critics of this decision are aplenty, and they include many law professors. Incidentally, the ABA rated this nominee UNQUALIFIED for the obvious reasons: inexperience, lack of scholarly distinction, lack of professional eminence. Moreover, you can't deny Trump's stated commitment to nominate ideologues of the Federalist Society stripe rather than professionally distinguished candidates. That being so, "Trump judge" is hardly a stretch.
You could “win” any argument that way. “I refuse to consider an argument because I have a low opinion of the person making it.”
I have no particular opinion of Vox but the argument DavidS-T quotes is superficially plausible.
Unlike Reason, Vox doesn't allow comments on their article because they don't want anyone to refute or discuss their reasoning.
Don't worry his article is based off of a zero covid strategy as if it is still possible - I'm sure his Duke Law degree gave him the tools to logic that out.
The same reason Yahoo News got rid of comments before the 2020 election.
The article above does not say that all critics committed the ad hominem fallacy - it says that some critics did so (and should be ignored because of that). The article even pointed to specific examples.
That said, the criticisms offered in the Vox article are utterly unpersuasive and reflect a poor understanding of the law. Though I will concede that some aspects of the opinion are weaker than others. I believe that's because the judge expected the opinion to be appealed and was attempting to show that she'd considered (and rejected) all possible legal defenses of the CDC's mandate. In other words, she was trying to preempt the "in the alternative" arguments that gets cases sent up and down the appeals chain multiple times.
Please explain to us how requiring anyone to wear a mask on a 10-minute Uber ride across town is:
a) "regulations to prevent the interstate spread of communicable diseases."
b) any business of any portion of the federal government whatsoever.
Not selling your wheat is engaging in interstate commerce. You fill in the rest.
Wickard is at the top of my list of 'SCOTUS decisions which need to be explicitly overturned'.
And regardless, at least wheat has an interstate market. What does the interstate market in uber rides look like? Do intra-state uber compete with interstate uber (if it exists), or affect it at all? There's some important fact-based inquiries here before we can apply Wickard.
if SCOTUS cn "find" that growing wheat in your own backyard and eating it ALL yourself is "engaging in interstate commerce" then Buer drivers should be forced to vaccinate everyone who hops into their car, medical qualifications or not.
'Sides that, the so-called "interstate commerce clause is nothing like what these idiotic judges tried making it out to be: that "clause" simply states that, among other duties, Congress is charged with making trade between the several states regular". That does not mean create a thicket of crazy rules and regulatioins RESTRICTING and outlawing interstate trade, no it means quite simpl "make trade between the several states "regular", that is, make certain there are no restrictions on such trade. The clear intent (go raed the Federalist Papers on the subject) is to assure one state cannot erect any barriers to trade with itself, or any other states. Such as California demanding certain stupid labels on anyitem they think needs one (WARNING this coffee contains chemicals known to the State of California to cause cancer") or deciding vehicles (and now even small engine-powered yard and garden equipment like lawn mowers, leaf blowers, chiansaws, etc, ) must meet their own "spayshull" "pollution requirements". before they cn be sold or even "imported" into their "pweshuss" state. Or how about mandating the amount of space each laying chicken must have before the eggs she lays can be sold into California.
Uber drivers often take people to the airport, people who are going to the airport are often traveling interstate.
Is that a good-enough nexus? Dunno. I hope not.
I'm not sure Vox is giving the decision a fair reading.
1. Reasonable minds can disagree on what 'sanitation' means in the context of law, but the judge did specifically refer to a corpus of 1940s era texts to see what the use of 'sanitation' was at the time the law was passed. Vox is reading it like a modern, not as a product of a particular time period. If they think she got the corpus linguistics wrong, they should do that analysis, not pretend that masks are an obvious sanitation measure.
(Honestly, it's not completely clear that "sanitation" covers mask-wearing even with Vox's preferred definition - Vox is assuming that they actually keep the air clean, which requires a fact-based inquiry into mask effectiveness, not just something you can assume. That'll get us to the CDC's inadequate justification for its mandate later).
Of course, I think this is the wrong battle to fight in this decision. I'm ambivalent on what the proper reading of sanitation here is, and think the APA violations are the real problem and the judge gets those issues right.
2. Vox's also dismisses "words in a list should be given related meaning" as 'semantic sophistry', but that quote is from a 1990 SCOTUS decision (as Vox even acknowledges), which means the district court judge is bound by that precedent. She can't ignore it, even if Vox wants to.
3. Vox completely ignores the APA issues. The CDC never went through a notice and comment period, and never adequately justified its mask mandate.
Vox goes on this diatribe about the elected branches deciding, but Congress decided, when it passed the APA, that administrative agencies had procedures they had to follow in order to issue new regulations. The CDC did not follow those procedures with the mask mandate. Ergo, according to the elected branch that actually makes law, the CDC's order was illegitimate.
The judge chose to disregard the usage of "sanitation" as used by safety professional as evidence by her claim that the meaning of maintaining cleanliness rendered the other words superfluous. That demonstrates her lack of understanding of the entire quintuplet of words especially in light of the full text of the law.
She made a convenient choice of meaning to reach a preferred result at at time when the case rate is climbing roughly 40% each day.
It seems more likely that you are taking issue with her decision based on your historical support for masking. Kudos for the fear-mongering 'case rate is climbing 40% daily' bs, at that rate we'll all be infected in a matter of days, only, we won't. Not because people are or aren't wearing masks, but because foolish claims like this ignore basic facts. As does counting cases versus deaths.
The fuck was this article when the mask mandates were first going around?
But doesn't this site allow for that? 59 pages focusing on 'sanitation' and claiming that is dispositive of the issue is like arguing '...well regulated militia..' is dispositive on the right to bear arms. The decision is something you'd expect from Kagan or Sotomayor and soon, from a Justice appointed based solely on her gender and color of skin.
READ the words again. The "well regulated ilitia" is the RESULT of THE PEOPLE being armed. The PEOPLE BEING ARMED is not the result of the "well regulated militia".
Here, the mask mandate is the result of improper lawmaking protocol. Anyone who has done aven a teensy bit of research will soon clearly understand that masks are not only useless in stopping the spread of an aerosol-borne virus, but the masks themselves CAUSE often serious and irreparable harm to those who wear them. Onely they who refuse to explore the adverse issues involved with the stupid mug nappies will miss this. Not only do they do NOTHING to "stop the spread" they can and do cause harm. I find that after ten or fewer minutes with one of those cheap VERY permeable blue mug nappies accross y face I begin to go hypoxic and get faint. My solutioin is to drop my chin way down, tile my head down some, hike the wretchd think up on my mug, open my mouth WIDE and reathe freely underneath it. Soon enough my dizziness goes away. Awkward, but not nearly as awkward as falling flat on my face from passing out because of not enough oxygen in my lungs.
The issue with Mizele is not her age dummy, but the fact that she was rated "not qualified" by the ABA because she had never led a trial in court or done much of anything except clerk. Her nominations was confirmed on 11/18/2020 by the lame duck GOP majority, and of course having been nominated by the lame duck Trump. This from the party which also threw Barret over the transom after the 2020 election had begun, claiming Garland was nominated too soon before an election (about 9 months prior). All you "freedom" loving MAGA and "Libertarian" idiots who would defend this - apparently including the lame author of this article - don't actually give a flying fuck about the Constitution or the will of the people.
Cry more.
"the will of the people"
the "will of the people" was to choose an unqualified" lawyer
How does experience in trials court help you figure out appeals? Seems to me law profs are better appeals court judges than trial court judges are. The procedures are different, the issues are different.
So, like Kagan?
Kagan was a prominent legal scholar long before her nomination. In fact her appointment was urged by Scalia.
Your going to have to do better than that Clinton hack Axlerod claiming Scalia whispered it to him over dinner but no-one else heard and Scalia isnt here. This is called heresay.
I like how you keep going with your dead horse argument that she is not qualified because she wasn’t approved by the politicized ABA.
If the ABA were to come out tomorrow and say they made a mistake and upon further review approved of her, you would do what you are known for doing.
You use the Appeal to Authority Fallacy to make your weak arguments and when that said Authority changes a decision you previously supported you immediately shit on said authority. You did this prior when the CDC made a point you didn’t like. When this is pointed out to you you use the False Consensus Fallacy to counter.
So it goes like this, Joe Friday’s Weak Argument——> Appeal to Authority Fallacy——> Rebuttal——> False Consensus Fallacy Counter——> Rebuttal——> Blind Spot Bias Pronouncement——> Anger——> Ad Hominem Attack.
Rinse. Repeat.
You call the ABA, which uses objective criteria in evaluating judicial candidates, "politicized." Well, what do you call the Federalist Society, which supplied Trump's list of potential nominees? Unlike the venerable and profession-wide ABA, Fed Society was expressly founded as a political interest group to create a both a scholarly basis for a revisionist theory of constitutional history and to exert political influence in the selection of judiciary candidates and resolution of judiciary issues.
I've never yet heard of anyone quoting a judge as "unqualified" because zhe wasn't recommended by the Federalist Society.
"You call the ABA, which uses objective criteria in evaluating judicial candidates, "politicized." Well, what do you call the Federalist Society, which supplied Trump's list of potential nominees?.."
We call assholes like you proposing false equivalences steaming piles of lefty shit.
Dariush,
The entire legal profession is based on appeals to authority. You rant is not convincing
I'm gonna MIIIISSSS Joe Ftalin when he, she or it is gone...
Both YOURS and STERNS problem.
You don't even understand what nation you live in or you both *pretend* to redefine it as a Democratic Nazi-Regime land... Well let me be the first to clue you in. This is a CONSTITUTIONAL Union of REPUBLICAN States.
That's the whole REASON it has a Justice Department.. Now the real question is; Why would it even have a Justice Department if it was just a Democratic Nazi-Regime???????????
What you Democrats are wildly naive about is that unlimited "democracy" is EXACTLY [WE] mob tyrannical RULE..... It's Gang-land politics... Do you F'en idiots really believe the most successful nation was built on the principles of Gov-Gun armed GANGS????????
Correction - Not 'Justice Department' but 'Judicial Branch'.
The ABA said she wasn't qualified because she only had 5 years of experience instead of 10+ years. Even they don't pretend she had no experience. (And 3 of those 5 years were as a trial attorney, so not just clerking).
No one seems to ask why only a small fraction of the attorneys out there belong to the ABA (after their free LS membership expires). The answer is that it is an elitist institution that doesn’t provide much in return for those actually paying for it out of their own pockets. That means LS academics and big firm attorneys, whose firms pay for their memberships. So, why are we deferring to academics and Big Law attorneys?
"a single unelected, life-tenured, 35-year-old judge just abolished the air travel mask mandate for the entire country."
Good for her! Reasonable and more accurate quote:
"a single unelected, life-tenured, 35-year-old judge just explained why federal agencies must follow the law."
Look at any proclamation by Grover Cleveland, HL Mencken's favorite President. In every case the basis in law legitimizing his exercise of power is clearly spelled out. Both halves of today's Kleptocracy studiously avoid any mention of why their initiation of force is legitimate or legal.
35 is old enough to be President.
Perfectly State ... "why federal agencies must follow the law"
Deserves a repeat +10000000000
"follow the law." which she deliberately misunderstands
A simple common sense reading of the statute demonstrates the overreach by the CDC and Government. Personally I don't care that She is a woman, is only 35 or that she was deemed unqualified by the partisan American Bar Association.
What I do care about is that the court is at least to some degree placing a checks and balance on the Government. I would like to see more checks on the overreach of Government and un-elected agencies.
"Personally I don't care the She is a woman"
How in the hell do you know that? Are you a biologist?
Resorting to ad hominem attacks shows the weakness of ones own argument, as well as a lack of basic ability as a writer... which highlights how far the NYT has fallen in recent years.
Its basic high school level writing skill, something that both the NYT and Slate cant seem to manage to reach anymore.
Given that childhood now reaches (for some) to age 30, any enterprise filled with twenty-somethings will sound like high school.
I think 27 is the legal cutoff.
Hey, Democrats, you like federal mask mandates? Why don't you have Congress enact them, huh?
And keep it in their state/city where it's legal to be ( depending on State's Constitution )...
No, the law also talks about human beings coming and going and traveling between the States with the potential to spread disease and illness. So 'sanitation' (picking up the garbage or washing down the streets) doesn't apply at all here, and the Judge totally missed the boat. The decision is pretty embarrassing and does give credence to the ABA saying she did not have enough experience to be a Judge. The law clearly allows for putting masks on human beings. The real problem with the law is it allows a POTUS to mandate masks for just about everything, i.e. the common cold, the flu and COVID regardless of death rates or the existence of a pandemic. It is overbroad and should have been struck down in its entirely and rewritten and limited to deal with real emergencies.
Well, if the CDC is so sure of itself, they can appeal the ruling. If SCOTUS overturns it, we'll know you were right.
"they can appeal the ruling."
they will
Sure. They can appeal. But they won’t win.
You're basing that argument on a presumptive argument of a perfect system, i.e. perfect fit, perfect conditions, set amount of time of use and many other factors that can't be done outside a lab.
Fuck off and die, slaver.
"traveling between the States with the potential to spread disease and illness"
LMFAO! Did you just pretend human disease is commerce?????
"the confusion of people who tend to assume that any COVID-19 control measure they view as sensible must also be legal."
This is not confusion; this is presumptive emotional thinking that humans have employed since the species emerged. As individuals and bands, people develop gut feelings about right and wrong. Rulers both manipulate and leverage these feelings, along with the expectations that expedient rules must deliver the desired outcome.
Any consistent support and application of more abstract, universal laws and legal process is a human anomaly, and not likely to survive without efforts to deny human nature, i.e. populism.
True, but these flaws were reinforced by the subjectivist approach to collectivizing ethics by the likes of Moore. Before 1957, "philosophy" was mankind's greatest enemy.
The law, and limitations on government power, are a reaction to human nature. When government officials have unchecked power, they make life miserable for just about everyone, so it's wise to limit those powers, and have a court system in place to review actions taken that might exceed the limits of lawful authority.
Among our modern fragile people are many who will never get over any number of existential crises. Trump broke a lot of people who will never again be able to think rationally about politics. And COVID broke as many people who will never be able to think rationally about health risks and public spaces. Some of these people will wear masks and perform other talismanic behaviors until they die, and loudly wish that everyone else do the same. Not out of partisanship or a need for signaling, but driven by deep personal psychosis.
Trump broke a lot of people who will never again be able to think rationally about politics. And COVID broke as many people who will never be able to think rationally about health risks and public spaces.
I think these statements assume starting conditions not particularly in evidence, but... I dunno. Sure. It probably made the problem worse. But let's face it, a lot of those people were pretty fuckin' marginal to begin with.
You're right, but maybe not in the way you think.
You're not as smart as you think you are. In my experience, haughtiness and condescension are inversely proportional to competence. Of course, my observation will have zero impact on your self image.
Shutting the gate after the horses have bolted.
O/U on uptake for booster #3?
Sullum's careful responses debunking looter whining are one of the reasons Reason is so successful in advancing freedom by hindering coercion. The Kleptocracy press fills reams of starchy sheets with the most egregious equivocations and snivelling sophistry calculated at all hazards to converge on the rights-free totalitarianism staring us in the face from across many borders. The thing they most fear is careful exposure in print.
Stern is doing a fine job of joining the cascading smear campaign against Mizelle. He's pretty clearly of the opinion that all decisions and laws need to be made by faceless bureaucrats in unaccountable, unelected agencies. Typical left-leaning/progressive, paying lip service to representative government, but in practice wants the exact opposite.
You missed the most important part...
He doesn't even pay lip service to "The People's" law over their government ... The U.S. Constitution ... because his argument would be slam dunked over that one.
The people never gave the 'feds' authority to even have a CDC let alone 'arm' it with the FORCE of Gov-Guns.
And that's exactly how the foundation ensures Individual Liberty and Justice for all.
But what about the "it's an emergency!" or the "compelling government interest" exceptions to appointed officials being required to issue only legally authorized rules?
Her youth aside, is this author really saying judges should decide and not health "experts"? Seriously? When put that way this looks silly.
What if this was airborne Ebola? What if Covid killed kids at a high rate? Are we willing to let our health and safety be dictated by partisan judges who narrowly interpret statutes clearly intended to address "communicable diseases"? We can debate the efficacy of masks and Covid. And maybe the CDC had weak arguments. But this decision blows away our government's ability to make public health decisions. Not all viruses are as mild as Covid. If one comes along that kills kids will the Republicans still resort to these lame freedom arguments? And why can't journalists see through the weaknesses in these arguments? So sad.
You can wear you mask forever if you want, nobody cares.
I always assume anyone wearing a mask has serious health issues and avoid them.
Well, I'm tending to assume mental issues.
He wants to force you to wear a mask.
He’s a coward and a tyrant.
If a virus comes along that kills kids aggressively, I presume the CDC will have a better justification for their policy actions. Remember, part of the decision was that the CDC inadequately justified the mask mandate, making it arbitrary and capricious. The APA parts of the decision are, imo, the strongest parts.
"Neither Mizelle's age nor the fact that Donald Trump nominated her have anything to do with whether she did her job properly. When Stern calls her a "Trump judge," he is echoing Trump, who dismissed a ruling he did not like as the politically motivated work of "an Obama judge.""
Except she is clearly just a Federalist Society pick and not qualified. The ABA called her "not qualified" for that job and she got it anyway.
Stop with this both sides shit you duplicitous fucks. You know damn well one is not like the other.
Fucking sucking off these unqualified hacks only because your master Kochs want you to.
The ABA is a partisan democrat organization.
I read the ruling. The best way to explain it is as an audition for a seat on a Court of Appeals.
From Ballotpedia:
<iDuring his four years in office, the ABA offered ratings for 264 of President Trump's nominees. The ABA rated 10 of those individuals not qualified for the nomination.
Hardly proof of partisan bias on the part of the ABA, although it an article of faith on the Right.
ABA is entitled to their opinion and I'll give them credit for consistency on that one data point which is completely reliant on the number of years of experience. Doesn't mean she wasn't worthy of the nomination
Her ABA rating is about number of years of experience. That's fine. Consistent. Cool. ABA doesn't get to pick nominees tho
APA is pretty bad.
I read the ruling. The best way to explain it is as an audition for a seat on a Court of Appeals.
From Ballotpedia:
<iDuring his four years in office, the ABA offered ratings for 264 of President Trump's nominees. The ABA rated 10 of those individuals not qualified for the nomination.
Hardly proof of partisan bias on the part of the ABA. I wonder how many of those 264 were members of the Federalist Society, though?
I absolutely agree with the ruling, that doesn't mean she isn't supremely unqualified for the position. She'd never tried a case as lead or co counsel. The Barr very rarely says someone is unqualified to be a judge when they are nominated. They made those remarks about her.
Statists gonna State
As a former practicing lawyer and age 59, the judge's age is pertinent. I remember when I was 35, and clients thought I was too young and lacked "seasoning" to represent them in court.
Lawyers are like doctors and airline pilots. We want to see some gray hair and crow's feet, before we feel confident that things will work out alright.
One of my grade school classmates ran for judge in her 30s. The major Chicago-area bar associations did not find her qualified, in part, because they thought her age meant a lack of broad experience for the bench.
Even If the CDC's Mask Mandate Didn't Make Sense, That Would Not Make It Illegal
"Making sense" or not has nothing to do with it. What authority does the law give, under what circumstances? Rizelle does not address these questions. Her decision is bad law.
She didn't address some questions you have about the law that weren't part of the lawsuit. Instead of making some grand, over-arching pronouncement, she only addressed the matter at hand.
You think that makes her decision bad law?
She's a federal judge, not the Supreme Court.
Gee, even a lying pile of lefty shit like you should know it is not up to the judge to answer your idiotic questions, it is up to those claiming such authority to justify it.
And they haven't. They, like you, failed.
Stern complained that "a single unelected, life-tenured, 35-year-old judge just abolished the air travel mask mandate for the entire country."
Good for HER. I don't know how many gubbermunt dweebs it took to formulate that "mandate" illegally, nor the collective or average years of that group, but this one judge demonstrated far more sense and wisdom than all of the CDC dweebs dumped together into a pot do.
And she is correct.
I don't care if Congress delegated THEIR responsibility and duty to make law in this instance. The Costitution plainly decares that CONGRESS shall make ALL laws. That does NOT mean that Congress can tell someone/thing ELSE to make laws because they don't want to. The CDC committee are NOT "congress", nor are tney elected by nor resposive to THE PEOPLE. n There is clear reason for the Framers to have assigned that body of individuals elected by and responsible to the populace to be tasked with the job of MAKING LAW. And yuo can pin any other tail onto the donkey you desire to, that does not change a thing. Even if COngress abdicaate their solemn charge to an outfit like the CDC, and CDC make some laws/rules, that does not make it valid OR legal. This judge has the right of it, plainly. Hate on her all you want it won't change a thing as far as what is right and proper.
King County Seattle Transit is still requiring them because a Justice Dept ruling that Might Happen Might Reverse it so.. and #socialistseattle
"...The fact that critics of U.S. District Judge Kathryn Kimball Mizelle's 59-page decision focused on her age rather than her reasoning reflects the confusion of people who tend to assume that any COVID-19 control measure they view as sensible must also be legal..."
No, it reflects their innate duplicity; they will use any sort of dishonesty to promote the power grab.