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The Dangerous Self-Delusion of Some Conservatives
markamerica.com ^ | June 30. 2012 | Mark America

Posted on 06/30/2012 10:23:54 AM PDT by EternalVigilance

In the wake of the Supreme Court ruling on the Affordable Care Act, I have noticed a curious phenomenon in which some conservative commentators seem to be so desperate to find a silver lining to the ruling that they have abandoned all logic. Consider George Will, who wrote a column in the aftermath of the ruling that actually puts forward the argument that we conservatives should take the fact that Roberts didn’t rely upon the commerce clause as evidence that there might be some constitutional limitation on the federal government after all. That would be a wonderful aspect of this ruling, if they had overturned the law! Instead, what we have is a monstrous precedent set in which the court re-writes a law in order to make it constitutional by imputing into the act a tax that had not existed in fact. This is an unmitigated disaster. I have heard a few who have noted hopefully that this ruling will energize the conservative base, and while that’s probably the case, I’m not certain I am so concerned about the political fall-out as I am about the long-run constitutional implications. You see, the political situation may permit us to repair the law, but it doesn’t permit us to immediately repair the damage done to the body of case law upon which future courts will rely as precedents in their own rulings.

The other thing I have read is the bizarre notion put forward by the National Review that what Roberts did was more conservative because he exercised judicial restraint in not striking down the law. Balderdash! Once you realize the legal contortions through which Roberts arrived at this ruling, it makes no sense whatever to claim he hadn’t acted as an activist. The convoluted logic by which he found a tax in a law that plainly states it does not contain one is an onerous breech of any notion of strict construction. I cannot conceive of any intellectually rigorous examination of this ruling by which this can be seen as a positive by anybody who is in favor of strict construction. When it came to the Anti-Injunction section of the ruling, it was held not to have been a tax, but just a few pages later, as Roberts performed mental gymnastics, he declared it was a tax after all.

On Thursday evening, Mark Levin summarized the matter better than anybody I’ve heard speak to this matter, in part because he understands the legalities in question, his Landmark Legal Foundation having been a participant in this case, but also because he knew Justice Roberts years ago when they both worked in the Reagan administration. Levin’s critique of the decision mirrors most of my own, and indeed, there was one aspect I hadn’t considered until Levin led me to it. That premise led me to yet another that I don’t believe Levin has yet realized in full. What one must understand is that this ruling is an unmitigated disaster, and no search for some alleged silver lining can repair it.

What Justice Roberts actually did was to expand the definition of what constitutes a permissible tax . Congress is permitted to levy only certain forms of tax, and this one doesn’t fit the definition of any of them. In dispensing with that issue, Roberts held that it didn’t matter, and that words don’t matter, and that plain-written legislative language doesn’t matter. He also ignored the context of the law, and the intent of Congress. One version of this bill had an actual tax, but Congress could not pass it in that form, so Congress altered it to contain no tax. What John Roberts did was to ignore the actual text of the legislation, and to say that the labels didn’t matter: If it looks like a tax, it is one. The problem with this is that it does nothing to restrain Congress from levying new taxes, and ignores the definitions of what sort of taxes Congress may enact. This is a wholesale extension of Congressional taxing authority because what Roberts ruled with respect to the particular form of the tax, insofar as the question of whether Congress had met the constitutional limits on whether it could impose it was effectively: “Close enough.”

That is offered to us as evidence of John Roberts’ alleged strict construction? Close enough? What this means, effectively, is that if Congress enacts some tax that it has questionable constitutional authority to levy, smiling John will be there to tell us it’s “close enough,” with every leftist monster on the court standing behind him to uphold it.

Ladies and gentlemen, there exists no silver lining to this ruling. All of the crackpot, delusional happy-talk from some conservatives in media is designed to make you feel better. You’ve just lost both arms and legs in a brutal assault, but they tell you, you should consider this a happy opportunity to enjoy the comforts of a new wheelchair and mouth-controlled joystick. You’ve just lost your family to a violent home-invasion, but, they tell you, you should view this as a chance to start over. The intention here is to keep you calm. The intention now is to serve a political end, while your country is dying around you. Your most sacred law, the US Constitution, has been crumpled and tossed into the ash-bin of history, and you are told you should do a happy-dance to the calming sounds of “Oh Happy Days.”

I’d like you to inventory the whole of the conservatives to whom you listen, or whose columns and opinions you read, and I want you to take care to note which of them are imploring you to consider some silver lining. They are lying. They have good intentions, many of them, and they have contorted themselves into a formless spaghetti of reasoning in order to find some good in this awful plate of refuse you’ve been handed. Don’t surrender your minds by sprinkling Parmesan on it and wolfing it down. Are there some limited political opportunities as a result of this decision? Yes, but they require the fulfillment of a whole laundry-list of “if-then” statements.

IF Mitt Romney is elected, and IF he doesn’t sell us out, and IF we hold the House, and IF we recapture the Senate(and at least 60 votes) and IF the moderates in either house don’t screw us, and IF Boehner and McConnell have the guts to do in repealing what the villains Reid and Pelosi did in passing the ACA, and IF they can deliver a bill to President Romney’s desk, and IF John Roberts and the other liberals on the court can be replaced, and IF Mitt Romney can replace them with actual strict constructionists, THEN you might have a chance to undo this damage. IF any of these don’t happen, your constitution is effectively dead as a restraint on government.

The danger of self-imposed delusions is that you come to believe them, like a pathological liar. It is by this form of self-delusion that we’ve permitted our country to lose its roots in reverence for the Constitution. We cannot defeat the statists by pretending this isn’t the disaster that it is, if we can defeat them at all. I believe some talking heads know this, but do not want to yield to what will come in the wake of such a monstrosity. They’re hanging on, stubbornly telling us that the stench of smoke reaching our nostrils is merely an air freshener of a novel scent. Rather than screaming “Fire,” and warning conservative Americans that the house is ablaze, the barn is wiped out, the surviving farm animals running loose in a frantic bid to stay ahead of the flames licking at their heels, many are now telling you that it’s all okay. It will be fine.


TOPICS: Editorial; Government
KEYWORDS: abortion; deathpanels; obamacare; roberts; romneycare; socialism; zerocare
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To: mojito
So, what caused the CJ to change is vote at the 11th hour? I think the people of this country are owed an explanation. I'm waiting for one.

I reached the conclusion the morning this decision came down that it could only be two things:

1) Roberts is stark-raving mad.

2) Roberts, being the inside-the-beltway Republican political hack lawyer that he is, decided, probably with some help, that this was the best thing he could do to try and help elect Mitt Romney.

And, since I don't think Roberts is nuts, I settled on number 2. It was a cynical, cruel, unprincipled, unconstitutional political calculation.

141 posted on 06/30/2012 1:13:51 PM PDT by EternalVigilance (Liberty. What a concept. TomHoefling.com)
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To: EternalVigilance
Good Article . Roberts is a liberal/marxist POS who destroyed freedom and the constitution in the U.S.. There is no silver lining.
142 posted on 06/30/2012 1:20:57 PM PDT by rurgan (Sunset all laws at 4 years.China is destroying U.S. ability to manufacture,makes everything)
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To: Marcella
I quit posting on Romney threads as there was no control imposed on the Romney people’s language so it was unproductive and waste of time.

There are no controls on the anti-Romney people's language either.

Not a problem? Not a waste of time?

143 posted on 06/30/2012 1:29:52 PM PDT by x
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To: roses of sharon

I’m the least worried guy I know.


144 posted on 06/30/2012 1:43:17 PM PDT by dead (I've got my eye out for Mullah Omar.)
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To: dead
Everytime something bad happens, we got the "all is lost" crowd bitching and moaning and talking about how nothing good can ever exist again.

When was the last time something good happened? We have to go back to last century to find Republicans on the national level that did something that advanced a conservative agenda.

When are you going to wake up and realize electing RINOs like the Bushes and Romney does more harm than good?

The whole Bush Presidency now that Roberts has gone liberal was a disaster. Romney is even more liberal, dishonest and untrustworthy than Bush was.

I'm not giving up, BTW. I favor building a conservative majority in Congress and waiting for a Scott Walker or another conservative to win the nomination and Presidency in 2016.

145 posted on 06/30/2012 1:59:59 PM PDT by Kazan (Mitt Romney: The greater of two evils)
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To: rogue yam
We defeat every Democrat on the ballot on November 6th, and then we take it from there.

Then, Romney gets in, convinces RINOs in Congress to enact an Obama-lite agenda, the agenda fails, Republicans are routed and lose control of Congress in 2014 and a Democrat is elected President in 2016. Wash. Rinse. And repeat.

If that happens, you damn well better acknowledge you were wrong and realize voting for Republicans like the Bushes and Romney is the problem, not the solution. Some us already know that.

146 posted on 06/30/2012 2:04:47 PM PDT by Kazan (Mitt Romney: The greater of two evils)
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To: EternalVigilance
Great thread!
147 posted on 06/30/2012 2:06:27 PM PDT by wagglebee ("A political party cannot be all things to all people." -- Ronald Reagan, 3/1/75)
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To: dead
Are elections now irrelevant or do they still matter?

They do and that is why conservatives must vote for conservatives and stop pretending RINOs aren't going to undermine conservatism from within the Republican party and move the nation to the left. It's a strategy that has NEVER worked. Nixon and Bushes were a disaster. Why would you expect Romney to be any better?

148 posted on 06/30/2012 2:11:42 PM PDT by Kazan (Mitt Romney: The greater of two evils)
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To: Jim Robinson

I doubt if RINO Romney cares enough to want to fix it...


149 posted on 06/30/2012 2:13:21 PM PDT by Tennessee Nana (Why should I vote for Bishop Romney when he hates me because I am a Christian)
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To: dead

Betryal does that to people.


150 posted on 06/30/2012 2:16:20 PM PDT by redgolum ("God is dead" -- Nietzsche. "Nietzsche is dead" -- God.)
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To: rogue yam
So Free Republic is now to be a site predicated on hopelessness and despair?

Some of our wise enough to understand hope for conservatism doesn't lay in the hands of Republicans like Mitt Romney, who is a flip-flopping liar with a record to the left of Bill Clinton.

And, again, we're not giving up. We're simply refuse to vote for Republicans clearly hostile toward conservatism. We will continue to elect conservatives to Congress and that state level and are willing to wait for a conservative like Scott Walker to win the nomination and Presidency in 2016.

151 posted on 06/30/2012 2:18:15 PM PDT by Kazan (Mitt Romney: The greater of two evils)
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To: rogue yam
I will obey Him, and continue to fight for what I believe is right.

God is telling you to vote for the father of gay marriage, a man that used to attend Planned Parenthood fundraisers and included $50 abortions in his healthcare legislation? No, He isn't. Voting for a candidate like that is sinful.

152 posted on 06/30/2012 2:21:21 PM PDT by Kazan (Mitt Romney: The greater of two evils)
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To: dead

>> Everytime something bad happens, we got the “all is lost” crowd bitching and moaning and talking about how nothing good can ever exist again.

>> Then start effing shooting!

Shoot? Hell, they won’t even vote.

These ideologues aren’t serious about jack. No alternatives, no possibilities, no considerations. They’re useless defeatists. The refuse to lead, they refuse to follow.


153 posted on 06/30/2012 2:21:40 PM PDT by Gene Eric (Your Hope has been redistributed. Here's your damn Change!)
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To: rogue yam
Case in point: your claim that Romney is "the most liberal governor in history". Everyone here knows that this is just not so.

Do you really want to compare Romney's record in Massachusetts with Bill Clinton's in Arkansas? If you did, you'll find Clinton was more conservative than Romney as governor.

154 posted on 06/30/2012 2:24:18 PM PDT by Kazan (Mitt Romney: The greater of two evils)
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To: Gene Eric
These ideologues aren’t serious about jack.

So, anyone who won't vote for a pro-choice democrat socialist is now an "ideologue," and is not serious? Interesting definitions.

No alternatives, no possibilities, no considerations.

Not true.

155 posted on 06/30/2012 2:33:10 PM PDT by EternalVigilance (Liberty. What a concept. TomHoefling.com)
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To: dead
It’s like a French battlefield around here lately, with all the white flags being waved.

Not so sure it's white flags vs. red flags - some are grasping at straws to find an upside, but the awakening of the People is only useful if they take appropriate action. November will be the puddin of proof and hopefully some Governors will step headlong into the fray and serve as rallying points for Tea Party Conservatives to gather round.

156 posted on 06/30/2012 2:34:47 PM PDT by trebb ("If a man will not work, he should not eat" From 2 Thes 3)
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To: trebb

I believe that things may get moving after the 4th of July vacation period. The pot has been stirred, the heat turned up, in more ways than one, and November is not a conservative’s only hope.


157 posted on 06/30/2012 2:38:23 PM PDT by Resettozero
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To: rogue yam

I’m no fan of the ACA decision, Mitt Romney, or really so much of what the GOP has been doing lately (actually, I think I could run the state party better than the folks who’ve been doing it). But anybody on here who thinks the Mittster is the most liberal governor in history, let them come to California. I give you Edmund Gerald Brown, Junior, a.k.a. Jerry, a.k.a. Moonbeam. We...uh...win.


158 posted on 06/30/2012 2:49:10 PM PDT by RichInOC (Palin 2012: The Perfect Storm.)
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To: RichInOC
Mittster is the most liberal governor in history, let them come to California. I give you Edmund Gerald Brown, Junior, a.k.a. Jerry, a.k.a. Moonbeam.

Hell, Romney doesn't even win most liberal (R) governor. Remember Ah-nold Schwarzen-kennedy??? California still wins, er, loses, er, whatever....

159 posted on 06/30/2012 2:52:44 PM PDT by ssaftler (Obama 2008: "Hope and Change" Obama 2012: "Excuses and Blame")
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To: Resettozero
I believe that things may get moving after the 4th of July vacation period. The pot has been stirred, the heat turned up, in more ways than one, and November is not a conservative’s only hope.

I believe that Independence Day would serve as a great launching pad instead of a reason to put it off - let's hope some Conservative Governors use it as a platform to publicly state they will fight this Federal overreach with everything at their disposal...

160 posted on 06/30/2012 3:01:43 PM PDT by trebb ("If a man will not work, he should not eat" From 2 Thes 3)
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