MAD-4A wrote:Where do you get that idea, yes it can , and does.gcomeau wrote:No law can prohibit it's own repeal.
No it can't, and no it doesn't.
Saying a law can prohibit it's own repeal is the same thing as saying any given body passing a law has the ability to exercise veto power over all future decisions made by the citizens of the nation. They may never again decide for themselves what they want to do on a topic, the writers of the law at this time forbid it. Your rights of self determination on whatever topic we decide to make an "un-repealable" law are hereby FOREVER revoked.
And NOBODY has that power in the United States. Not the Founders and not anybody else. The very idea that they do is absurd. You would be laughed out of any courtroom in the country for even suggesting it.
Even E's example from Germany of an "eternity clause" isn't really un-repealable, it just makes the repeal process have to clear a far higher hurdle. In short, completely scrapping the entire legal foundation of the nation and starting over from scratch. But they COULD still do that if the citizens of Germany collectively decided that's what they wanted to do.
Law that can't be repealed? No. Such. Thing.