Posted on 01/28/2004 4:51:36 PM PST by dixiepatriot
Brown Reconsidered
by Joseph Sobran
January 13, 2004
Judicial review was originally proposed (most notably in Federalist No. 78) as a method of making sure legislatures didnt pass unconstitutional laws. Today it has become a method of changing the very meaning of constitutions under the guise of interpreting them.
The problem was highlighted this past November, when the supreme court of Massachusetts handed down the sensational ruling that the states constitution required that same-sex marriage be recognized in law. The court didnt even bother citing any specific passage of the constitution that might be construed to mean this; obviously it couldnt find one. It just decided to do the progressive thing, regardless of the text.
The court knew, of course, that this controversial fiat would find support in the unbiased liberal media, where the trendy is always equated with constitutional rights, and where the universal understanding of words is subject to sudden change. Throughout human history, terms like marriage, marital, conjugal, connubial, and spousal could only refer to unions of the opposite or, more precisely, complementary sexes.
As for judicial review, it was for many years hardly used at all. It existed more in principle and in theory than in practice, even after Chief Justice John Marshall asserted it as a power of the courts. The first notable instance of it was the 1857 Dred Scott decision, which Abraham Lincoln denounced as a threat to popular self-government.
After the Civil War the U.S. Supreme Court exercised judicial review with more frequency to strike down state and Federal laws it deemed contrary to the U.S. Constitution. During Franklin Roosevelts presidency, the Court declared much New Deal legislation unconstitutional, and the enraged president tried to pack the Court with new justices; even his own party was horrified, and the effort failed. Still, Roosevelt finally managed to shape the Court to his will by appointing party hacks whenever vacancies occurred. The Court, as a result, became more liberal and activist.
But the great change began to occur in 1954, when the Court, in Brown v. Board of Education, ruled that racial segregation in state schools violated the Fourteenth Amendment. Though this was a very questionable decision on constitutional grounds, liberals applauded the result, and segregation was so disreputable outside the South that few outside Dixie really objected.
With this triumph the Supreme Court led by Chief Justice Earl Warren, a Republican appointee vaulted to a new and powerful role in American life. Liberals looked with favor on the Courts broad construction of the Constitution, not only on racial issues but on many others: censorship, public school prayer, legislative districting. They soon realized that an aggressive judiciary could be a shortcut to achieving their agenda without the bother of getting it past voters and legislatures.
Thanks to the Federal judiciary, liberals could win victories even when they lost elections! The power of the courts was enormously increased. Some conservatives called for Warrens impeachment, but the media treated this as a joke, and most of the country acquiesced to the Supreme Courts new muscle, even though it meant a degree of arbitrary power that alarmed even some thoughtful liberals. To a great extent, government by judiciary replaced self-government.
And so it has been ever since, most notably in Roe v. Wade, when the Court suddenly discovered that the trendy cause of legal abortion was guaranteed by the Constitution and struck down the abortion laws of all 50 states. Again, the Courts reasoning was feeble; but again, liberals liked the results and, as usual, the unbiased liberal media provided supportive propaganda.
It all started with Brown or rather, with a willingness to tolerate dubious constitutional reasoning for the sake of getting desired results. Since 1954, judicial review has come to mean liberal tyranny, as liberal courts have imposed their arbitrary will. Naturally, liberals love this arrangement, and as they lose elections they fight tooth and nail to retain their judicial stronghold. After all, judges are appointed for life and dont have to face the voters, no matter what they do.
All this could have been avoided long ago if Earl Warren and his colleagues had been impeached for usurping power. The absurd ruling of the Massachusetts court is just the latest bitter fruit of the total perversion of judicial review. And only impeachment will teach the rogue judiciary that its place is below, not above, state and Federal constitutions.
Joseph Sobran
http://www.sobran.com/columns/2004/040113.shtml
Whenever a socialist judge imposes his politics on the state or federal constitution, and usurps the law, his fellow socialists say that, "once again, the system of checks and balances has worked." But letting judges make law is the opposite of checks and balances; it means letting the judiciary usurp the prerogative of the legislative branch. And for such usurpation of power, there is only one form of relief -- impeachment.
Unfortunately, I don't see George W. Bush reaching for relief.
What exactly did the court say? If the problem with the existing marriage law was that it discriminated against homosexuals, the logical solution would be to pass a law expliclty providing that men and woman shall not be prohibited from marriage on the basis of sexual orientation, i.e. a man of any sexual orientation shall be allowed to marry a woman of any sexual orientation. Where's the discrimination in that?
For t he record I support neither vigilante actions nor Holocaust denial laws. They allow this scum to claim persecutions event as they seek to excuse, deny, or forment anti-Semitism.
Except it doesn't. Homosexuals are as free to marry those of the opposite sex as heterosexuals. Yes, the former are a bit more inconvenienced by the law than the latter, but I defy you to name a single instance of a law that doesn't impose heavier burdens on some people than on others. As there are as many variances in people as there are people, there are going to be different levels of difficulty in any given situation.
What it really comes down to is this: If a court is going to denounce a law or policy as unconstitutional, which has been universally understood as a perfectly legitimate cornerstone of society for ages, including by those who wrote and ratified the constitution, the court must demonstrate with absolute certainty that there is no possible way that the law or policy in question can be reconciled with the constitution. The Massachusetts supreme court has not even come close to meeting that standard.
Absolute nonsense. Liberals love to use terms like "anti-Semite" and "racist" when they don't have the intellectual capability to refute their opponents. If you disagree with Sobran, show me where he's wrong. But don't use the liberal tactic of smearing him with terms like "anti-Semite".
All I asked you to do was refute Sobran's assertions. If you can't do that without smearing him with left-wing smear pejoratives, perhaps you're the one that needs to grow up.
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