Posted on 10/14/2009 10:44:28 AM PDT by bs9021
We the People
by: Sarah Carlsruh, October 14, 2009
Jeremy Rabkin, Professor of Law at George Mason University addressed the topic, Are we outsourcing the U. S. Constitution?, at an Accuracy in Academia Constitution Day authors night on September 17th.
Rabkin, who specializes in international law, asserted that there is an evolving global norm to which some people think the U.S. Constitution should be adapted. He stated his concern that some people think that international treaties should be taken up by American courts, which he said worries him because international treaties potentially affect how the U.S. defines its Constitution. According to Rabkin, international laws should be agreements among states, which [the U.S. will] observe if the other signatories observe. He then pointed out what he saw as potential treaties that are perhaps a bit too ambitious, such as the current push to stop global warming.
He complained of the International Criminal Court (ICC) that these people are going to tell [the U.S] when we can and cannot use force? and claimed that members of the ICC are a bunch of people most citizens have never heard of.
Rabkin pointed to Europe as an example of how not to form a constitution, saying that the European Union Constitution was created by judges who did not consult the people and, consequently, people in Europe are not attached to it or each other. They have a common constitution run by judges, but that is not enough, he argued....
(Excerpt) Read more at campusreportonline.net ...
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