Sounds good - glad you found the help you needed!
Well, I didn't find the answer with help. Nobody seemed to know.
I'm surprised nobody here asked what the answer is.

Sounds good - glad you found the help you needed!
Well, I didn't find the answer with help. Nobody seemed to know.
I'm surprised nobody here asked what the answer is.![]()
Well, I didn't find the answer with help. Nobody seemed to know.
I'm surprised nobody here asked what the answer is.![]()
I would imagine a legal scholar would. But then again, few here are legal scholars, right? Most just seem to be the type who like to spend their days googling, 7 seconds at a time.Does anyone care?
That's the "bummer" of volunteers: we don't care and we don't do homework.![]()
Do tell us the fascinating history of 11th amendment jurisprudence since Hans v. Louisiana. I beg of you. I sincerely cannot stand the legal quandry any longer!
Well, since you asked, here's the skinny in a nutshell:
The 11th Amendment only forbids suits against a state in federal court where the remedy sought is damages, injunctive relief, etc. It does not forbid suits against a state where the plaintiff is only seeking to render a state law unconstitutional. Thus, your Commerce Clause cases are okay, as was the Texas sodomy case.
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Ummm, I wasn't talking about suing state officers. I was talking about suing states.That is not right. It only prevents money damages against the state (but not state officers) -- the exceptions are damages under the civil war amendments of course.
Again, you're talking about state officers. I'm talking about states.Injunctive relief, in addition to declaratory relief, are still available.
I would imagine a legal scholar would. But then again, few here are legal scholars, right? Most just seem to be the type who like to spend their days googling, 7 seconds at a time.![]()
Ahhh, so this WAS homework![]()
Ummm, I wasn't talking about suing state officers. I was talking about suing states.
Again, you're talking about state officers. I'm talking about states.
badapple was, of course, 100% correct.
If you don't know the difference between suing a state and suing state officers, then you really shouldn't be posting here.