So what makes the court Conservative or Liberal?
How people read the same words differently?
Why one way or the other?
What leans them?
What leans engineers to it is It to code or not?
Legal or we can get away with it and have a plausible argument?
(Code is pretty specific but hard to decipher)
Unfortunately that’s not the case here on either side. Even without “tea”.
I hope I’ve applied both.
Is she 2A or not 2A, that is the question.
If you have to ask, you're already part of the Liberal low-information sheep-force.
The Legislature creates laws. The Constitution is where the laws derive their validity.
The court is to decide cases in which laws are made in opposition of the Constitution, where a question of Constitutionality in enforcement needs settling, and where appeals from lower court rulings need a hearing.
You are calling the judges/the court "Liberal" or "Conservative." That's inaccurate.
The court is not a person, and therefore is not partisan. The individual justices who seek to interpret laws in order to push an activist agenda, especially in areas where the Congress has failed to pass laws regarding these very issues, are the issue.
To that point, it's more often the case that the Liberals are unable to get their Social Justice, Progressive, Socialist agenda passed in Congress. They therefore turned to the SCOTUS to rule in ways that give them what they wanted. There's a reason there was no federal law making abortion legal in all states ahead of Roe v Wade. The Congress members knew that was an issue the individual states must decide for themselves because there's no legal basis for putting the issue in federal jurisdiction.
The Liberal Activist Judges then hammered the issue of abortion into the Constitution using very flimsy and loose interpretations of what "privacy" meant according the the Bill of Rights.
Non-Activist judges, Conservative or Liberal, would have maintained the issue as a state's right to regulate.