User:Sosobra

=I am sosobra=

You can put anything you want on this page, but as this is the one part of 'pedia I have (almost) absolute control over if I dont like it I will remove it. Kisses.

History teaches that grave threats to liberty often come in times of urgency, when constitutional rights seem too extravagant to endure. . . . [W]hen we allow fundamental freedoms to be sacrificed in the name of real or perceived exigency we invariably come to regret it. . . . Constitutional requirements like probable cause are not fair-weather friends, present when advantageous, conveniently absent when ‘special needs’ make them seem not.

Skinner, 489 U.S. at 635-36 (Marshall, J., dissenting).

"Great cases, like hard cases, make bad law. For great cases are called great, not by reason of their real importance in shaping the law of the future, but because of some accident of immediate overwhelming interest which appeals to the feelings and distorts the judgment. These immediate interests exercise a kind of hydraulic pressure which makes what previously was clear seem doubtful, and before which even well settled principles of law will bend." Northern Securities Co. v. United States, 193 U.S. 197, 400-401 (1904).