[Home] [Headlines] [Latest Articles] [Latest Comments] [Post] [Mail] [Sign-in] [Setup] [Help] [Register]
Status: Not Logged In; Sign In
Opinions/Editorials Title: Did Justice Scalia Already Give Us the Solution to the Problem of Filling His Seat? The death of the intrepid Justice Antonin Scalia has shaken the political world. If his successors appointment cannot be delayed until the next presidency, its assured that an unassailable hard-left majority will control the Supreme Court. This will mean, conservatives warn, the end of significant Second Amendment rights, curtailment of many religious freedoms and a consistent rubber-stamp for the progressive agenda. Unfortunately, the likelihood of replacing Scaliathe courts pre-eminent legal mindwith even a pale imitation is slim. For it to happen the Senate will have to exhibit fortitude and delay the confirmation of a successor. a Republican will have to win the presidency. the GOP will have to retain the Senate in Nov., and 24 GOP seats but only 10 Democrat ones are up for grabs. the Republican president in office will have to nominate someone not a wolf in constitutionalists clothing; the chances of this alone happening are likely less than 50 percent. The probability of all four of the above coming to pass isnt great. And, regardless, while we will fill the great Scalias position, well never fill his shoes. Yet perhaps the real solution to this problem lies with something Scalia himself saidjust last year. The real issue here is not whether Scalias successor will abide by the Constitution. Its whether we will. Consider: in a representative republic of 320 million people, were all now talking about how one appointment of one unelected lawyer can radically change the face of American law, rights and freedoms. Anything wrong with this picture? This isnt to say that a civilizations fate being radically altered by one mans death and anothers ascendancy hasnt been humanitys norm. Autocracy has been humanitys norm. The king would pass on and people might lament, You mean Aylwin, that kid who drools on his cloak, is next in line? How shall we be ruled? But does this sound like a concern in a land of, by and for the people? The fact is that a government cannot be stable if one mans fancies and fortunes can have such a great impact on it and the wider society. Did the Founding Fatherswho were most concerned about avoiding the aggregation of power by any one entityreally devise such a flawed system? This brings us to Scalias comment, made in his dissenting opinion in the 2015 Obergefell v. Hodges (marriage) ruling. To wit: with each decision
unabashedly based not on law the Court moves one step closer to being reminded of [its] impotence, he warned his colleagues. To what was he referring? Obviously, the Court has neither army nor police to enforce its judgments; it is governments executive branchheaded by the president on the federal level and governors in the stateswith the constitutional warrant to enforce law. And whatever executive branches dont enforce doesnt happen, period, no matter how much black-robed lawyers stamp their feet. But is this just a matter of might makes right? Arent we to be a nation of laws? For sure. A nation of laws, not lawyers. Lawsnot judicial decisions. There is a difference. Note that Scalia complained of decisions unabashedly based not on law, clearly drawing a distinction between decisions and laws. Conclusion? An executive branch upholding illegal decisions is, by definition, not safeguarding the rule of law. And an executive branch that defies ignores illegal court decisions is preserving the rule of law. Defies is crossed out above because that term can connote resistance to authority. But the Supreme Court is not the Supreme Being. What authority over all and sundry does it have? Some will now answer, Judicial supremacy! Lets examine that. The legislative branch has the power to make law because the Constitution grants it. The executive branch has the power to enforce law because the Constitution grants it. And the courts exercise judicial supremacywhere its decisions constrain not just its own branch but the other two as well, making it not a co-equal branch but a super-legislature/über-executive because ____________? The answer has nothing to do with the Constitution. Rather, the Supreme Court unilaterally declared the power in the 1803 Marbury v. Madison ruling. Thats right: Like an upstart seizing the reins in a palace coup, the Supreme Court assigned the Supreme Court its oligarchic power, all without the force of arms. Its a nice con if you can pull it off. This isnt how our system is meant to work. A governmental branch derives its power from the Constitutionnot from itself. And how dangerous is this usurpation? Founding Father Thomas Jefferson warned in 1819 that judicial supremacys acceptance would do nothing less than make our constitution a completefelo de se a suicide pact. He explained: For intending to establish three departments, co-ordinate and independent, that they might check and balance one another, it has given, according to this [judicial supremacy] opinion, to one of them alone, the right to prescribe rules for the government of the others, and to that one too, which is unelected by, and independent of the nation
. The constitution, on this hypothesis, is a mere thing of wax in the hands of the judiciary, which they may twist, and shape into any form they please. Abraham Lincoln, who ignored the Dred Scott decision, also agreed. As Princeton University professor Robert George put it while conducting a December interview with Senator Ted Cruz, Lincoln said that to treat unconstitutional court rulingsas binding in all cases, no matter what, no matter how usurpative, no matter how anti-constitutional, would be for the American peopleand I quote now the Great Emancipatorto resign their government into the hands of that eminent tribunal. Jefferson was even more pointed, writing in 1820 that judicial supremacy is a very dangerous doctrine indeed, and one which would place us under the despotism of an oligarchy. And so it has come to pass. Were now reduced to arguing about how the next appointed oligarch will shape us wax people. Satirist Jonathan Swift wrote, mocking the legal profession in Gullivers Travels, that it is a maxim among lawyers that whatever has been done before, may legally be done again
, no matter how preposterous. Just as bad, however, is when we abide by judicial supremacy again and again, simply because it has been done before. Part of what motivates this deference is ignorance and (bad) habit, and part is cowardice and political expediency. After all, hiding behind unconstitutional court rulings allows politicians to avoid making difficult decisions. When Ohio governor John Kasich said last June after Obergefell that faux marriage is the law of the land and well abide by it, he was essentially stating Hey, dont look at me. The Court did it! Of course, he also said that now its time to move on, which he was more than happy to do. He has got his political career to considerConstitution be damned. Any president, governor or legislator worth his salt would do his duty and tell usurpative judges to go pound sand. Some will say that this would set off a constitutional crisis,but newsflash: were already experiencing a constitutional crisis. This occurs not when the Constitution is protected by bringing to heel those who trample it, but when that trampling goes unanswered. By the way, you know who else apparently questions judicial supremacy? Barack Obama. He has shown willingness to ignore the courts; in fact, he has been so dismissive that a federal appeals court actually ordered the administration in 2012 to submit a letter stating whether or not it recognized the judiciarys power. Of course, Obama will defy constitutional laws; in contrast, conservatives, being conservative (as in reluctant to take bold action), wont even ignore unconstitutional rulings. Its an old story. Liberal- controlled localities have been nullifying (ignoring) federal immigration and drug laws for decades. But conservatives consider nullificationeven in the defense of legitimate freedomssome kind of radical action, despite Jeffersons calling it the rightful remedy for all federal usurpation. And conservative justices tend to feel constrained by precedent, even the unconstitutional variety, yet dont expect any liberal Scalia replacement to bat an eye at overturning constitutional precedent that contradicts the leftist agenda. Is it any wonder conservatives never saw a cultural or political battle they couldnt lose? One might say conservatives fight by Queensbury rules while liberals operate no-holds-barred, but its not even that. Though conservatives are allowed to throw punches, they prefer to stand and block and be a punching bagwhile the liberals throw sand in their eyes and kick off their kneecaps. Calling the Court a threat to American democracy, Justice Scalia wrote in his Obergefell dissent, t is not of special importance to me what the law says about marriage. It is of overwhelming importance, however, who it is that rules me. Todays decree says that my Ruler, and the Ruler of 320 million Americans coast-to-coast, is a majority of the nine lawyers on the Supreme Court. We wont talk the court out of its power-mad, usurpative bent. Only power negates power. Its time to stop acting like impotent fools and start showing the Court how impotent it really is. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 9.
#1. To: Tpaine, nolu chan (#0)
Thats right: Like an upstart seizing the reins in a palace coup, the Supreme Court assigned the Supreme Court its oligarchic power, all without the force of arms. Its a nice con if you can pull it off. A subject near and dear to your hearts. I wonder if Nolu chan is ok. Haven't heard from him in a while.
A subject near and dear to your hearts. I wonder if Nolu chan is ok. Haven't heard from him in a while. Well, you've heard from me, Pete, and our resident socialist.. I'm wondering too, where's Chan?
I used to have his phone number. I will see if I still have it and see if he is ok.
#10. To: A K A Stone (#9)
Thanks.. We rarely agree on anything, but I miss his input.
Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest |
[Home] [Headlines] [Latest Articles] [Latest Comments] [Post] [Mail] [Sign-in] [Setup] [Help] [Register]
|