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ROLE OF THE COURT VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN BECAUSE IT IS NOT AN ECONOMIC (34) Humpries, ruled that the president

NOT AN ECONOMIC (34) Humpries, ruled that the president can’t fire anyone he wants in an
(1)Marbury v. Madison-Emphatically the province and duty of ACTIVITY.(2) UNDER § 5 OF THE FOURTEENTH AMENDMENT, agency whenever he wants.
the judicial department to say what the law is. CONGRESS MAY ONLY REGULATE THE DISCRIMINATORY (39) Clinton v. Jones, president can be sued for things that happened
(2)Martin v. Hunter CONDUCT OF STATE OFFICIALS, NOT PRIVATE ACTORS. before he was president if it is not going to impede the function of the office.
We don’t want state courts to be able to rule on constitutionality (17) Gonzales v Raich, giving some power back to congress and taking (40) Nixon v. Fitzgerald, the Nixon administration fired a guy for being
because if every State is interpreting the Con differently it would some from the states, the court said that where the federal government is a whistle blower, and then the guy tried to sue Nixon, the court held
be trouble. regulating weed, the states can’t make laws that would be cross purposes. that the president had absolute immunity for actions taken under the
(3)Cooper v. Aaron- and particularly the United States Supreme (18) NFIB v. Sebelius I, congress cannot rely on the commerce power to normal course of presidential duties. Absolute immunity from civil suit.
Court, has final authority in interpreting the Constitution, or require individuals to buy into the health insurance marketplace if they are (35) Whitman v. American trucking, Plaintiffs contend that economic
saying “what the law is.” not already in it. THE POWER TO REGULATE COMMERCE costs of implementing stringent pollution rules,the plain and
(4)McChulloch v, Maryland- Taxing a federal bank by the State PRESUPPOSES THE EXISTENCE OF THE COMMERCIAL ACTIVITY unambiguous text of § 109 make clear that cost considerations do not
of Maryland, the power to tax is the power to destroy. The TO BE REGULATED. enter the decision-making process. “INTELLIGLEABLE PRINCIPAL”
NECESSARY AND PROPER clause, congress may choose any RULE: TO SOLVE A PROBLEM THAT HAS A SUBSTANTIAL can be vague in delegation
means, not prohibitive by the constitution, to carry out its lawful EFFECT ON THE COMMERCIAL HEALTH OF THE UNITED IMMIGRATION AND PRESIDENTIAL POWER
authority. Article 1 § 8 (18) STATES, A LAW PASSED BY CONGRESS IS Preemption A EXPRESS PREEMPTION. B IMPLIED
STANDING CONSTITUTIONAL UNDER THE COMMERCE CLAUSE PREEMPTION. C FIELD PREEMPTION WHERE THE FEDERAL
(5)Allen v. Wright- To have standing to bring a lawsuit, plaintiffs WHEN: A. THE LAW RELATES TO ECONOMIC STRUCTURES GOVERNMENT OCCUPIES THE WHOLE FIELD AND LEAVES NO
must sufficiently allege that they have personally suffered a THAT SPREAD ACROSS THE STATES. (OGDEN) B. THE ROOM FOR THE STATE TO REGULATE D CONFLICT
distinct injury, and the chain of causation linking that injury to the SCOPE OF THE LAW INCLUDES MARKETS THAT HAVE PREEMPTION- WHERE IT IS IMPOSSIBLE TO COMPLY WITH
actions of a defendant must not be attenuated. NATIONAL IMPLICATIONS. (FILBURN) C. THE PURPOSE OF BOTH THE STATE AND FEDERAL LAW
(6)Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife, THE LAW MUST BE TO REGULATE AN ACTIVE MARKET. D. (36) Arizona v. United States, A state law that addresses
Injury-in- fact, an invasion of a legally protected interest. (a) THE STATES INTEREST IN ECONOMIC EXPERIMENTATION, immigration and alien registration is preempted where Congress has
concrete and particularized, not conjecture or hypothetical- WHERE THEY ARE FAIR TO THE OTHER STATES, ARE NOT completely occupied the entire field. A case about field preemption
Causation, injury is fairly traceable to the defendant- UNDULY IMPINGED. E. NECESSARY AND PROPER (36.5) NLRB v. Noel Canning, is about recess appointments,
Redressability, whether the injury can be fixed. DORMANT COMMERCE CLAUSE they must not while the senate is in session.
RIPENESS: (a) already suffered a harm. (b) is faced with a (21) Philadelphia v. New Jersey, the court struck down a New Jersey law (37) Lucia v. SEC ruled that ALJ’s are inferior officers under the
specific present harm. (c) under threat of a specific future making it illegal to import waste from other states. Test for DCC: a.Facially constitution and must be appointed by the president or a delegated
harm. discriminatory-strict scrutiny b.Facially neutral but protectionist- stricken as officer.
(7)District of Colombia V. Heller- Subject to certain safety impermissibly burdensome on interstate commerce.c. Disproportionately (41) Fong Yue Ting v. U.S., Immigration law saying that a white
limitations, the Second Amendment to the United States adverse impact on commerce then intermediate scrutiny person had to vouch for an Asian person that they had been in the
Constitution creates an individual right to keep and bear arms (22) Dean milk v. Madison, to permit Madison to adopt a regulation not country for two years or they would be deported.
apart from any military purpose. essential for the protection of local health interest and placing a (42) NFIB v. Sebelius part III, congress used the word penalty
BOBBIT’S MODALITIES discriminatory burden would invite preferential trade areas. to describe the “tax” the court used the operation and function
textual (looking to the meaning of the words of the Constitution (23) Pike v. Bruce Church, Pike balancing test – Do the burdens on the collection of the tax to say that it is a tax even if the congress
alone, as they would be interpreted by the average interstate commerce outweigh the benefits to the regulating states? calls it a penalty.
contemporary “man on the street”); historical (relying on the (24) Kassel v. Consolidated Freight, Iowa law to keep double trucks off its INCORPERATION Slaughterhouse Cases Thirteenth Amendment
intentions of the framers or ratifiers of the Constitution) [Prof. Fox highways was discriminatory and did not pass the Pike test. Forcing trucks was passed to specifically prohibit the evils of slavery as it existed
adds: or the meaning of the words at the time of ratification]; to go around Iowa or change trailers is more of a burden than is shown by during the pre-Civil War enslavement of Africans in the United States.
traditionalism (relying on history of actions of three branches the state trying to exclude them. The Court also shed any reluctance to hold that rights
since ratification) structural (inferring rules from the (24.5) Southern Pacific v. Arizona, Limits train length, safety of the people guaranteed by the Bill of Rights met the requirements for
relationships that the Constitution mandates from the structure it of Arizona? A. DISCRIMINATION/ BURDEN B. LEGITIMATE protection under the Due Process Clause. The Court eventually
sets up) e.g. the separations of powers, federalism)]; doctrinal INTEREST/BALANCING TEST? C.OTHER WAY POSSIBLE TO incorporated almost all of the provisions of the Bill of Rights.
(applying rules generated by precedent – court decisions);ethos ACHIEVE D. BURDEN ON THE EFFICIENCY OF THE INTERSTATE Only a handful of the Bill of Rights protections remain
(deriving rules from the moral commitments of the American COMMERCE TENTH AND ELEVENTH AMENDMENT. unincorporated."
ethos that are reflected in the Constitution); prudential (seeking (19) New York v. U.S., low level radioactive waste disposal case, forcing INDIVIDUAL RIGHTS/ FUNDAMENTAL RIGHTS
to balance the costs and benefits of a particular rule) states to accept ownership of nuclear waste would impermissibly (43) Lochner v. New York A state may not regulate the working
POLITICAL QUESTION “commandeer” state governments. Where monetary inducements for the hours mutually agreed upon by employers and employees as
(8) Baker v. Carr- a Republican living in Shelby County, Tennessee, - states to comply are ok, “a choice between two unconstitutionally coercive this violates their Fourteenth Amendment right to contract freely
A challenge to malapportionment of state legislatures brought under regulatory techniques is no choice at all. under the Due Process Clause.
the Equal Protection Clause is not a political question and is thus (20) Prinz v. US, We cannot upset the delicate balance by allowing the (44) West Coast Hotel Co. v. Parrish A state may regulate the
justiciable 1. ISSUE OF ANOTHER BRANCH 2. LACK OF federal government to conscript state actors into execution of federal minimum wage paid to female employees when that regulation is for
STANDARDS 3. IMPOSSIBLE POLICY DECISION 4. SHOWING policies. the purpose of promoting employees’ health, safety and general
DISRESPECT 5. POLICY DECISION ALREADY MADE 6. PRIVILEGES AND IMMUNITIES CLAUSE welfare
EMBARRASSMENT FROM CONFLICTING PRONOUNCEMENTS. 1. Has the state discriminated against out-of-staters regarding the privileges (45) Williamson v. Lee Optical of Oklahoma, Inc
(8) Nixon v. United States- The constitutionality of Senate and immunities it accords its own citizens 2. If there is discrimination then, is A state may regulate a business if its legislature determines there is a
impeachment proceedings is a non-justiciable political question there sufficient justification for the discrimination? particular health and safety problem at hand and that the regulation in
incapable of judicial adjudication. “textually demonstrable” SPENDING AND TAXING POWERS-taxes are regulatory question is a rational way to correct the problem
COMMERCE CLAUSE (25) U.S. v. Butler, department of agriculture pays farmers to not plant all (46) Pierce v. Society of Sisters Requiring children to be educated
(10) United States v. COMSTOCK- UNDER THE NECESSARY available acres, then paying the farmers using money it raises from taxing only by public instruction violates the Fourteenth Amendment of the
AND PROPER Clause, Congress has the authority to enact a the processors of those farm products. The court ruled both the tax and the United States Constitution.
law that allows civil commitment of mentally ill, sexually subsidy unconstitutional. Congress has leeway to spend in furtherance of (47) Skinner v. Oklahoma A state law requiring forced sterilization
dangerous federal inmates beyond the end of the prisoners' the general welfare if it does not violate some other part of the constitution. of criminals convicted of crimes of moral turpitude unconstitutionally
criminal sentences. (26) South Dakota v. Dole, where congress was withholding only 5% of the infringes on the fundamental rights of marriage and procreation and
(11) Gibbons v. Ogden- If a state and Congress both pass subsidy and it was related to the funds it was ok. A PURPOSE TO SERVE violates the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
conflicting laws regulating interstate commerce, the federal law THE GENERAL WELFARE CLEAR STATEMENT OF THE CONDITION (48) Griswold v. Connecticut an implied “right of privacy” exists
governs pursuant to Congress’s constitutional grant of power to RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE CONDITION AND THE PURPOSE OF within the Bill of Rights that prohibits a state from preventing married
regulate interstate commerce. THE SPENDING (GERMANENESS) B NO INDUCEMENT OF THE couples from using contraception. PENUMBRAS FORMED BY
(12) Hammer v. Dagenhart- Congress may not use its STATES TO VIOLATE ANY INDEPENDENTLY PROTECTED EMINATIONS
Commerce Clause power to regulate child labor in the states as CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTS. C. DOES IT RAISE REVENUE? (49) Roe v. Wade The constitutional right to privacy protects a
this is a purely local matter. (27) NFIB V. Sebelius II, on this issue the court found that the taxing power woman’s right to choose to have an abortion. Uses a trimester
(13) U.S. v. Darby-Congress may regulate the labor standards was ok but the spending power was coercive... a gun to the head because construction, 1st all abortions ok 2nd. Ok with limitations. 3rd no go.
involved in the manufacture of goods for interstate commerce states had become so dependent on federal medicade money.If the law is (50) Planned Parenthood v. Casey A state abortion regulation
and may exclude from interstate commerce any goods produced insufficiently germain to the funding purpose, or the federal tries to places an undue burden on a woman’s right to an abortion and is
under substandard labor conditions. commandeer a state for its own ends then the court will step in. invalid if its purpose or effect is to place a substantial obstacle in the
(14) NLRB v. Jones and Laughlin Steel, the congressional PRESIDENTIAL PRIVILEGE path of a woman seeking an abortion before the fetus attains viability.
authority to protect interstate commerce from burdens and (28) Youngstown Sheet and tube v. Sawyer, Truman tries to seize the (51) Whole Woman’s Health v. Hellerstedt
obstructions is not limited to transactions which can be deemed steel industry because a labor strike is keeping steel from being produced A law with the purpose or effect of placing a substantial obstacle in the
an essential part of the flow of interstate commerce. for the Korean war effort. Even if it was a war, he didn’t have the power to path of a woman seeking an abortion imposes an undue burden on a
(15) Wickard v. Filburn- Congress may regulate local activity if interfere in a civilian dispute by taking over the companies. A. POWER IS woman’s right to have an abortion and is thus unconstitutional. What
that activity exerts a substantial economic effect on interstate AT ITS MOST WHEN PRESIDENT CAN RELY ON EXPRESS was a burden test is now a balancing test.
commerce. AUTHORITY OF CONGRESS. B. WHEN THE PRESIDENT ACTS WITH (51.5) Gonzales v. Carhart Congress may ban a specific type of
(13) Heart of Atlanta v. U.S.- Congress may enact regulations HIS OWN POWERS WITHOUT EXPRESS APPROVAL FROM partial-birth abortion provided its restrictions on the practice are narrow
that prevent racially discriminatory policies in hotel LEGISLATURE THEN HE IS IN THE ZONE OF TWILIGHT. C. WHEN HE and clear and the ban does not constitute an undue burden on a
accommodations because of the negative effects of those TAKES MEASURES INCOMPATIBLE WITH THE EXPRESS OR IMPLIED woman’s right to an abortion.
policies on interstate commerce. WILL OF CONGRESS, HIS POWER IS AT ITS LOWEST EBB. (52) Washington v. Glucksberg right to physician-assisted suicide
(14) Katzenbach v. McClung (Ollie’s)- Congress may regulate (29) Trump v. Hawaii, the travel ban was upheld because the statute is not a constitutionally protected liberty interest under the Due Process
the discriminatory policies of restaurants through Title II of the “exudes deference to the president in every clause. Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. “History and tradition”
Civil Rights Act if those policies have a substantial effect on (30) Ex Parte Milligan, Lincoln tries to try a civilian at a military tribunal and (52.5) Curzan you have a right to refuse medical treatment
interstate commerce the court says, no. (53) Loving v. Virginia A state may not restrict marriages between
(15) United States v. Lopez- Congress may not, pursuant to its (32) Curtis Wright, the court says we won’t take this case “it is long persons solely based on race under the Equal Protection and Due
Commerce Clause powers, pass a law that prohibits the possession of standing practice” that the president has powers of negotiating foreign Process Clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment
a gun near a school Congress may regulate only three broad affairs. The power abrogates a treaty is a political question. (54) Lawrence v. Texas Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth
categories of activities: THE CHANNELS OF INTERSTATE (31) U.S. v. Nixon, presidential privilege is not absolute. When unofficial Amendment includes a right to liberty in individual decisions
COMMERCE. THE INSTRUMENTALITIES OF, OR PERSONS OR conduct is done then no absolute immunity. You must balance secrecy concerning the intimacies of their physical relationship.
THINGS IN, INTERSTATE COMMERCE. AND ACTIVITIES THAT against the criminal process. (55) Obergefell v. Hodges Under the Due Process and Equal
SUBSTANTIALLY AFFECT OR SUBSTANTIALLY RELATE TO (33) Trump v. Mazar, the process of congressional subpoena should not be Protection Clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment, states must
INTERSTATE COMMERCE. used as a police power. A. Warrants the step. B. Narrow scope C. Valid issue marriage licenses and recognize lawful out-of-state
(16) United States v. Morrison-(1) CONGRESS DOES NOT HAVE legislative purpose. D. Burdens imposed. marriages for same-sex couples. Coverture, marriage has
THE AUTHORITY UNDER THE COMMERCE CLAUSE TO REGULATE changed.
(56) Cleveland Board of Education v. Loudermill Due Process quartered in any house, without the consent of the Owner, nor in standard when it is contraception
Clause requires a pre-termination hearing before the discharge time of war, but in a manner to be prescribed by law.
of an employee who has a constitutionally protected property AMENDMENT IV The right of the people to be secure in their
interest in his employment, followed by a more elaborate post- persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable
termination hearing to challenge the discharge. PROCEDURAL searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants
DUE PROCESS. Must have a property right that is deprived. shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or
DISCRIMINATION-EQUAL PROTECTION affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched,
(57) Yick Wo v. Hopkins A facially neutral law that is applied in a and the persons or things to be seized.
discriminatory manner based on race or nationality violates the Equal
Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. AMENDMENT V No person shall be held to answer for a capital, or
otherwise infamous crime, unless on a presentment or indictment of a
(58) Washington v. Davis A state-sponsored racial classification Grand Jury, except in cases arising in the land or naval forces, or in
violates the equal protection provisions in the Fifth Amendment’s Due the Militia, when in actual service in time of War or public danger; nor
Process Clause only if it is shown to have both a disproportionate shall
impact on a particular race and is motivated by invidious racial any person be subject for the same offence to be twice put in
discrimination. jeopardy of life or limb; nor shall be compelled in any criminal case to
(59) Dred Scott v. Sandford People of African descent brought to be a witness against himself, NOR BE DEPRIVED OF LIFE,
the United States and held as slaves, as well as their descendants LIBERTY, OR PROPERTY, WITHOUT DUE PROCESS OF LAW;
(either slave or free), are not considered citizens of the United States nor shall private property be taken for public use, without just
and are not entitled to the protections and rights of the Constitution. compensation. AMENDMENT XIII Section 1.Neither slavery nor
(60) Strauder v. West Virginia The Fourteenth Amendment involuntary servitude, AMENDMENT XIV No State shall make or
prohibits states from enacting laws that deny any of its citizens enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of
equal protection under the law. citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person
(61) Plessy v. Ferguson Public accommodations that are of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny
segregated according to racial classifications do not violate the Equal to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the
Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment if such laws. Section 5. The Congress shall have the power to enforce, by
accommodations are “separate but equal.” appropriate legislation, the provisions of this article. AMENDMENT
(62) Brown v. Board of Education (Brown I) Separate XV Section 1. The right of citizens of the United States to vote shall
educational facilities based on racial classifications are inherently not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any State on
unequal and violate the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth account of race, color, or previous condition of servitude-Section 2.
Amendment. The Congress shall have the power to enforce this article by
(63) Grutter v. Bollinger Consideration of race as a factor in appropriate legislation. ARTICLE I, SECTION 8, CLAUSE 18: To
admissions by a state law school does not violate the Fourteenth make all Laws which shall be NECESSARY AND PROPER for
Amendment because supporting student body diversity is a carrying into Execution the foregoing Powers, and all other Powers
compelling state interest; however, the school must demonstrate vested by this Constitution in the Government of the United States, or
it previously made a serious, good faith consideration of in any Department or Officer thereof.
workable, race-neutral alternatives to achieve the sought-after SAY HI TO STANDING—END WITH NECESSARY AND PROPER
racial diversity. Carolene Products- “discrete and insular” led to skinner
(64) Gratz v. Bollinger A university’s admissions policy that SUSPECT CLASS-1. HISTORY OF DISCRIMINATION 2.
automatically gives preference to minority students based on IMMUTIBILITY 3. LACK OF POLITICAL POWER
race, “without additional individualized consideration, violates the TOPICS FOR REPRODUCTIVE RIGHTS 1. RELIENCE 2. STARE
Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. DECISIS 3. PRUDENTIAL 4. FETUS NOT A PERSON IN
(65) Fisher v. University of Texas (Fisher II) CONSTITUTION 5. STATES INTREST IN FETUS 6. WOMAN’S
A public university’s decision to consider race in admissions must be HEALTH “ORDERED LIBERTY” “HISTORY AND TRADITIONS”
reviewed under the strict scrutiny standard. GLUCKSBURG- “DEEPLY ROOTED” GRISWOLD- “LIVING
(66) Regents of University of California v. Bakke TRADITION” BODILY INTEGRITY IS STRICT SCRUTINY
Under the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth SUBSTANTIVE DUE PROCESS ISSUE involving (generally) the right
Amendment, a public university may not discriminate based on to privacy and autonomy, but the ideal answer will consider Griswold
race in its admissions policies, even if doing so benefits (contraception), Casey (abortion), and Skinner (sterilization)
members of minority races. RACE CAN BE ‘A’ FACTOR CASEY is very specifically about a woman’s right to choose abortion
GENDER DISCRIMINATION pre-viability. Like all abortion cases, it balances the state interest in
(67) Orr v. Orr state alimony law may not discriminate based on the potential life/health of the fetus and the state’s interest in a
gender if the state’s compensatory and ameliorative purposes are woman’s health with a woman’s privacy and autonomy rights of
equally served by a gender-neutral classification procreation and bodily integrity. To get there you would have to at issue and not abortion. Casey changes the test to a more
(68) United States v. Virginia All governmental gender argue that the state’s interest in citizens making choices about permissive undue burden test, but only for abortion. So, you
classifications must be substantially related to an important procreation and being informed about important medical procedures would want here to make sure you also apply a compelling
government purpose that can be demonstrated by the government if it is analogous to Casey and so one could argue that a court should interest/narrow tailoring analysis (you may want to argue in the
offers an exceedingly persuasive justification for the classification. similarly apply an undue burden test to male reversable vasectomy. alternative using both the undue burden and a struct scrutiny
OTHER DISCRIMINATION Griswold. This is after all contraception. It’s actually confusing here analysis). Under that analysis, would the restrictions on a 48-
(69) Graham v. Richardson Under the Equal Protection Clause, because Griswold is not clear about whether it applies a strict hour waiting period and spousal notification be upheld? Is there
states may not condition receipt of welfare benefits on the beneficiary scrutiny test, but the cases after Griswold make clear that that is the a compelling interest that the state has in the man’s education
having United States citizenship or residing in the United States for a and the spouse’s notice? Are those two provisions narrowly
specified number of years. tailored? Casey is relevant, but not dispositive on this since it
(70) Cleburne, Texas v. Cleburne Living mentally disabled are applied a lesser standard of undue burden. But note that on the
not a quasi-suspect class and thus any legislative regulations affecting spousal notification issue, Casey overturned it in part because of
their rights are subject to rational basis review and not intermediate the concern of domestic violence against women – would the
scrutiny. fact that this fact pattern involves men make a difference?
(71) Civil Rights Cases of 1883 Court ruled that, under the Equal YOU NEED TO IDENTIFY THE ARGUMENTS AND REASONS,
Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, Congress could ESTIMATE THE RELATIVE STRENGTH OF THEM, BUT BE
prohibit only discrimination by state actors, not private individuals. CAREFUL NOT TO JUMP TO A CONCLUSION IF NO SINGLE
(72) Jones v. Alfred H. Mayer Co. Congress may make whatever CONCLUSION CLEARLY FOLLOWS. Skinner, on the separate
laws are necessary and proper for enforcing the Thirteenth part of the fictional law here requiring the procedure of male
Amendment’s abolition of slavery and the negative effects of slavery. felons. Some of you noticed that Skinner is an equal protection
VOTING case and so maybe not quite on point. However, the case has a
(73) South Carolina v. Katzenbach provisions of the Voting fundamental rights aspect to it and generally can support the
Rights Act of 1965 mandating the abolition of literacy tests require claim that mandatory sterilization is a violation of the right to
advance federal approval of proposed changes to voting regulations procreate and privacy (and Skinner has been so cited by later
and authorize the Attorney General to appoint federal examiners to Court decisions that we read). So, the basic analogy works here.
oversee voter registrations do not violate the United States Constitution This means that strict scrutiny should apply and requires that the
or exceed the scope of congressional authority. state have a compelling interest and the law be narrowly tailored.
(74) United States v. Morrison (1) Congress does not have the One twist is that this situation involves a reversible procedure,
authority under the Commerce Clause to regulate violence against and so is not strictly speaking sterilization in the same way.
women because it is not an economic activity. Glucksberg mentions it and cites Cruzan) – observes that there
(2) Under § 5 of the Fourteenth Amendment, Congress may only is also a fundamental right to choose medical procedures, and
regulate the discriminatory conduct of state officials, not private actors. that the law here appears to violate that. Also, even if a state
  Scrutiny   Gov't interest  Fit  could show a compelling interest, the law is not narrowly tailored,
as it
Frontiero Strict  Compelling   Narrowly does not limit the procedure to unmarried men (it says the
interest is “out-of-wedlock” births). You might also point out that
Reed  Rational Rational/legitimate  Ration/related 
this law applies only to male felons, which appears to raise an
equal protection issue of its own.
Orr   Intermediate  StereotypeAlimony No subrelated  COMMERCE CLAUSE ANALYSIS- Lopez test then NFIB,
economic /uneconomic, then necessary and proper. See test on
VMI  intermediate  We the people   other side.
AMENDMENT I Congress shall make no law respecting an Wickard-activities that affect commerce are considered in
establishment of religion or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; aggregate. Lopez- limited it to areas directly economic in nature.
or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right Congress cannot rely exclusively on indirect economic
of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the consequences. Morrison- too attenuated for economic activity.
Government for a redress of grievances. AMENDMENT II A Raich- economic but intrastate- necessary and proper if
well-regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free rationally related to broad federal scheme. (does not need to be
State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be over the counter legal sales. NFIB- congress can’t regulate
infringed. AMENDMENT III No Soldier shall, in time of peace be inactivity, and cannot compel activity. Watch out for the GOV
forcing someone to do something ACTIVITY/INACTIVITY can be
a tricky discussion
Levels of Scrutiny Under the Three-Tiered Approach
to Equal Protection Analysis
1. STRICT SCRUTINY (The government must show
that the challenged classification serves a
compelling state interest and that the classification
is necessary to serve that interest.): 
A. Suspect Classifications: 
1. Race 
2. National Origin 
3. Religion (either under EP or Establishment Clause
analysis) 
4. Alienage (unless the classification falls within a
recognized "political community" exception, in
which case only rational basis scrutiny will be
applied). 
B. Classifications Burdening Fundamental Rights 
1. Denial or Dilution of the Vote 
2. Interstate Migration 
3. Access to the Courts 
4. Other Rights Recognized as Fundamental 
2.  MIDDLE-TIER SCRUTINY (The government must
show that the challenged classification serves an
important state interest and that the classification is
at least substantially related to serving that
interest.): 
Quasi-Suspect Classifications: 
1. Gender 
2. Illegitimacy 
3.  MINIMUM (OR RATIONAL BASIS) SCRUTINY (The
govenment need only show that the challenged
classification is rationally related to serving a
legitimate state interest.) 
Minimum scrutiny applies to all classifications other
than those listed above, although some Supreme
Court cases suggest a slightly closer scrutiny ("a
second-order rational basis test") involving some
weighing of the state's interest may be applied in
cases, for example, involving classifications that
disadvantage mentally retarded people,
homosexuals, or innocent children of illegal aliens. 
(See "Should the Rational Basis Test Have Bite?")

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