Jon Stewart Scalia, "Every day Show" host Jon Stewart targeted Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia on Monday night over Scalia's late contradictions on Supreme Court decisions on the Affordable Care Act and same-sex marriage.
"The surliness of Scalia's affront run reverse to his scholarly consistency," Stewart said, ridiculing Scalia's utilization of the expressions "immaculate fruit purée" and "jiggery-pokery" before bringing him a deceiver over his gay-marriage question.
"The judges ought to never upset the will of the voters; its a center Scalia rule," Stewart said, alluding to Scalia's remarks that the same-sex-marriage decision was chosen by a "profoundly unrepresentative board of nine."
"Unless the voters' will was for Obamacare, which [Scalia] was happy to attempt to pulverize the day preceding. On the other hand if the voters needed to utmost crusade account spending, then he had no issue advising the individuals to f - off around then," Stewart said, a reference to the point of interest Citizens United controlling in 2010.
In any case, Stewart recognized he felt awful for Scalia. Furthermore, in a "signal of compassion," he treated viewers to a short cartoon titled "Equity Antonin Scalia and his horrendous, appalling, awful, terrible day.
"The surliness of Scalia's affront run reverse to his scholarly consistency," Stewart said, ridiculing Scalia's utilization of the expressions "immaculate fruit purée" and "jiggery-pokery" before bringing him a deceiver over his gay-marriage question.
"The judges ought to never upset the will of the voters; its a center Scalia rule," Stewart said, alluding to Scalia's remarks that the same-sex-marriage decision was chosen by a "profoundly unrepresentative board of nine."
"Unless the voters' will was for Obamacare, which [Scalia] was happy to attempt to pulverize the day preceding. On the other hand if the voters needed to utmost crusade account spending, then he had no issue advising the individuals to f - off around then," Stewart said, a reference to the point of interest Citizens United controlling in 2010.
In any case, Stewart recognized he felt awful for Scalia. Furthermore, in a "signal of compassion," he treated viewers to a short cartoon titled "Equity Antonin Scalia and his horrendous, appalling, awful, terrible day.

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