Talk:Constitutional Court of Spain

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Content from Country Studies[edit]

Text from Country Studies is public domain. So I've copied some content from it, and surrounded copied content with comments <!-- from LoC start --> and <!-- from LoC end -->. Once those parts are significantly modified, you can remove those tags. -- SilverStar 04:50, 8 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Update 2010-07-08[edit]

Missing is information on

  • the current composition and its problems
  • the catalan descision

--Oneiros (talk) 20:19, 8 July 2010 (UTC)[reply]

Lack of Constitutionality as the "Supreme Interpreter" of the constitution[edit]

First, I have read the entire Constitution in English and Espanol, there is nothing in it that says the constitutional court holds the supreme authority/interpretation to the constitution.

Second, the link attached as a footnote to where it says in this article that the Constitutional Court is supreme interpreter is broken. It leads to a page that doesn't offer any information.

Third, the true supreme authority to any Constitution should be Logic, not coercion. If you are using coercion in any form in place of compliance through reasoning then your government is automatically embarking on an interest of tyrannical conduct.

Off-topic ranting, but please don't use the United States for how your government should function. The UK and Canadian interpretation of the United States being founded by crooks and criminals is correct. America seceded from Britain because it wanted indigenous lands and did not believe the British government had any right to enforce its own decrees and laws. The taxation was a ploy by America to raise the cost of services and products even beyond where the tax was levied to insure an uprising would occur. Again, America was founded by Crooks and Criminals, thus entirely illegitimate as a reference for anything.

I know we want someone to just hold the final stay and force everyone in line, especially when we believe we are correct and the opposition is nothing but a bunch of lawbreakers. However, we need to utilize PBIS to insure their compliance and minimize their negative conduct. Therefore, if the constitution doesn't explicitly say something, then you cannot argue what the Catalonian government is doing as unconstitutional until you can find the explicit article in the constitution they are violating. Just the same as stipulating that the amendment of the statut of Catalonia's Community, when it is merely the same foundation as what is already utilized in the Basque Country. I am sorry, but Spain ended its right to being a sovereign country the moment they showed their lack of competence was even greater than Belgrade's. ~ Prince of Catalonia — Preceding unsigned comment added by 128.82.33.109 (talk) 13:54, 5 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]