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How am I the one making it complicated? The hypothetical scenario you came up with is very similar to the current issue with birthright citizenship. The Federal government does something legally questionable (in your scenario—deporting people to a 3rd country), and a district court issued an injunction against them. This injunction takes precedence over whatever other district court rules until the legality is settled by a higher court. That's all there is to it.
Why would one district court's injunction take precedence over the other court's injunction?
Both courts can do injunctions that contradict each other. Your scenario only makes sense if only one of the courts court did an injunction.
Again, court injunctions can both stop and action as well as compel an action.
How do you still not understand that? It's not some maelstrom of chaos and uncertainty. It's extremely straight-forward. A district court questions the legality of something, an injunction is issued, and the case is settled by a higher court. Period. It doesn't matter if another court on the same level rules a different way; the precedence goes to the injunction that protects the class in question. In your scenario, the injunction is nationwide, because the Federal government has jurisdiction over the entire country in matters pertaining to deportation.
What do you mean "settled by a higher court." District courts across the country are all on the same level. Then higher is appellate court and then the Supreme Court.
If you want a hypothetical scenario where the injunction isn't nationwide, then create a scenario where the Federal government isn't the party issuing the edict. In most (but not all) such scenarios, the district court's jurisdiction would be limited to their district. In that scenario, if a district court in New York ruled one way and a Texas court ruled another, one would not interfere with the other. So in other words, it would not be chaos either.
But in my example both New York and Dallas did nationwide injunctions that conflicted with each other under the old pre-SCOTUS conditions.
I don't know where you get this false belief that the NY federal district court only had limited jurisdiction for my deportation example.
Do you know what would be chaos though? If the Supreme Court ruled that nationwide injunctions are illegal. In that scenario, instead of one injunction being issued until legality is settled, you could potentially have thousands upon thousands of lawsuits all being filed at the same time, tying up the court system for who the fuck knows how long. A scenario which also potentially leaves untold thousands of people unprotected from a potentially illegal act, because they are unable to sue the government.
But they didn't rule nationwide injunctions completely illegal. So that's a moot point.
I almost think you're trolling, because I'm having a difficult time believing that you still can't understand that. Either that or you just don't want to acknowledge it, because you realize how catastrophic the results could be.
Not trolling at all. You just don't seem to understand (or you're willfully ignoring) a very simple concept.
