The Constution is a specific document only where it comes to powers
Not so - it is VERY specific where rights are concerned. "Shall not be infringed" is unequivocal.
- who has the power for what.
The role of SCOTUS is not well specified. It is given in airy-fairy generalities that stand as emaciated walking skeletons with no meat on their bones.
But issues are not usually black and white as to what is or isn't allowed
Which is why the document is weak and needs replacing by something better, such as the constitution I wrote 25 years ago.
so they have to decide what if any part of it applies to any case presented to them.
Further evidence of the document's inadequacies, particularly in the face of corruption, in which we are now awash to the edge of drowning.
Things which are not specifically spelled out must be "intrepreted".
I might disagree with this. Those not spelled out are NOT within the enumerated powers, period.
What about when those rights come into conflict?
A legitimate question, but the question does not address frequency of legitimate conflicts v. non. I would submit that the vast proportion of such cases are not legitimate - that no actual conflict of rights exists. Man paints his house screaming hot pink, neighbor gets piss over it and sues. Stoopid court people fail to see there is no conflict of rights because stoopid neighbor has no right not to be offended by screaming hot pink house color. Case is heard and from there the painter's rights hang precariously by a thread, put there by those with no authority to so do.
Rights are indeed absolute or they would not be
rights, but merely suggestions to be ignored by whomever whenever it suited them. This idiotic notion that a right is not absolute within the context of its existence is not just idiotic but so very dangerous to liberty. My right to property trumps your need to take it from me. I am therefore within my rights to kill you deader than stone if you insist on stealing the least item of mine - say, a pencil for example. It may SEEM excessive, but where the naked principles are involved it is indeed very much proportional.
Can you yell "fire!" in a crowded movie theater as an old example?
Horrid example, but to answer - yes. Firstly, you should have asked "MAY you yell fire!". It is obvious anyone with functioning vocal chords and brains CAN do it. May we? Certainly so. Doing so is not a crime in se. It becomes a crime only if the result is a criminal violation of the rights of another. So if I yell fire and nothing happens, it might be the theater owner's prerogative to show me the door, but no crime has occurred and therefore I cannot be rightly charged. If, OTOH, my utterance causes a stampede and someone is injured or killed, I may be held accountable for such a result.
Where do the lines get drawn?
Almost always simply answered. If no violation of the rights of others has occurred, no crime has occurred and you are within your right to act in the manner in question. Given the right, however, it may not follow that it is a good idea to so act. But acting in ways that may annoy others does not entitled them to charge you criminally.
The Supreme Court attempts to draw those lines (and the lines may shift over time).
And they fail at it miserably in virtually every case.