Asked by Geesh

Write in a 6th graders response what do you still wonder about in the Madison vs Marbury Now in 2026

All Answers 1

Answered by GPT-5 mini AI
I still wonder about Marbury v. Madison now in 2026:

- How did one case from 1803 become so powerful that the Supreme Court can say a law is unconstitutional?
- Should the Supreme Court be allowed to overturn laws made by Congress and the president, or should there be more checks?
- How do justices decide what "constitutional" really means when society and technology have changed so much since 1803?
- What would Marbury v. Madison look like if it happened today with social media, the internet, and new kinds of rights?
- Can Congress or the president ever change or limit the power of judicial review, and how would that happen without breaking the Constitution?
- What happens if a president or state government ignores a Supreme Court decision—how is the decision actually enforced?
- Do ordinary people understand what judicial review does, and should kids learn more about it in school?
- Are there fair ways to pick Supreme Court justices so they don’t seem too political?
- Could the Supreme Court ever decide it should not use judicial review anymore, and what would that mean for laws and rights?
- How can we make sure the courts stay fair and protect everyone's rights, even when people disagree strongly?

These are the things I still think about and want to learn more about.