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Down With Judicial Tyranny

Posted on 04/07/2005 7:28:32 PM PDT by Conserve_Freedom2

It's really hard to extract any truth from FR. Here's another shot. I've heard a lot about judicial activism and maliciously liberal judges, but have not heard exactly what they have done. I am a kid whose beliefs have not solidified yet. My parents are very conservative and want me to turn into one too. So I come to this website to learn about the movement, but all you guys do is yell about things that don't seem wrong to me. Here's my question: would is be possible for anyone here to write down 20 liberal usurpations, 20 times that rights were ignored, and 20 things that the courts would do differently if they were unbiased? You guys make it sound like a big problem, so this shouldn't be too hard...


TOPICS: Your Opinion/Questions
KEYWORDS: eris; judiciary; narcolepsy
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1 posted on 04/07/2005 7:28:32 PM PDT by Conserve_Freedom2
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To: Conserve_Freedom2; MeekOneGOP

bump


2 posted on 04/07/2005 7:33:03 PM PDT by TASMANIANRED (Rule # 4. When liberals have factual evidence that their position is wrong they ignore the evidence)
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To: Conserve_Freedom2

Just research the history of the Ninth Circuit Court based in San Francisco --- the most liberal, leftist-activist, AND OVERTURNED COURT in the country.

Have Fun -- !!!!


3 posted on 04/07/2005 7:33:17 PM PDT by EagleUSA (Q)
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To: Conserve_Freedom2

Your name is really cool. What does it mean?


4 posted on 04/07/2005 7:33:23 PM PDT by DC Bound
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To: Conserve_Freedom2

If you are a kid.. define "usurpations" in 10 words or less!
NOW!
If you are sincere, read Congressman Billybob's speech from today.
If you are a kid .. you can find it faster than lightning!


5 posted on 04/07/2005 7:34:37 PM PDT by acapesket (never had a vote count in all my years here)
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To: Conserve_Freedom2
Here are some I can think of off the top of my head:

1. Despite the people of California, through referendum, voting to no longer fund welfare for illegal immigrants, the federal circuit court declared it unconstitutional.

2. The Supreme Court used foreign law precedents to declare capital punishment unconstitutional for anyone under 18, no matter how vicious and premeditated the crime.

3. The Massachusetts Supreme Court forced the legislature to make homosexual marrriage legal.

It is late and I can't think of more, but I am sure there are others who will chime in.

6 posted on 04/07/2005 7:34:50 PM PDT by Miss Marple
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To: Conserve_Freedom2
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1379536/posts

Start here

7 posted on 04/07/2005 7:35:55 PM PDT by TASMANIANRED (Rule # 4. When liberals have factual evidence that their position is wrong they ignore the evidence)
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To: Conserve_Freedom2
My parents are very conservative and want me to turn into one too.

Your parents say that they want you to "turn into" a conservative. What an odd turn of phrase.

8 posted on 04/07/2005 7:36:35 PM PDT by Bahbah (Something wicked this way comes)
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To: Conserve_Freedom2

Anti-Federalist papers 78-82 - The Power of the Judiciary (warning about Tyrants in Black Robes) ^
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1371009/posts


9 posted on 04/07/2005 7:36:50 PM PDT by Libertarianize the GOP (Make all taxes truly voluntary)
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To: Conserve_Freedom2



Suggestion, do your own work -- there is no need to ask others to reinvent the wheel for you. Search "liberal judicial activism" on http://www.google.com ... here is a start of what you'll find --

March 18, 2005
Judicial Activism’s Perfect Storm
By Thomas Lifson

After six decades of expansion, the tendency of judges to impose their preferences on society, rather than simply interpret the law as written, may have reached its apogee. Judicial activism, as this writing of law from the bench is known, faces a confluence of forces which promise relief for the principles of Constitutionalism, and for the American people they protect. The trend of judicial activism morphing into judicial tyranny faces a perfect storm. Here are some of its key elements.

The American Public Is Paying Attention
High profile decisions in which judges nakedly impose their preferences have been accumulating at an accelerating pace. It is no longer an unusual occurrence for Americans to turn on their radios or TVs, or log onto the internet to discover that a judge somewhere has concluded that homosexual marriage is a Constitutional right, or that the death penalty for adolescents has become “cruel and unusual punishment” in the last 15 years, or that the phrase “under God” should be stricken from the Pledge of Allegiance, or that public display of a Christmas crèche is forbidden, while display of a Islamic crescent is not. A federal judge in Kansas City actually imposed tax increases on citizens, in order to fund a lavish “magnet school” program, as part of a desegregation scheme of his own invention, and which ultimately failed miserably in its goals.

Many of these cases are symbolically connected to many people’s self-identity, or to institutions to which they have passionate attachments. Others affect the self-interests or perceived safety of ordinary people. The law is not some abstract notion or set of principles to them, but rather an ongoing force affecting their lives. Accordingly, public interest in the composition and conduct of the judiciary at all levels has never been higher.

Abortion Policy Is An Increasing, Not A Receding Irritant
Of course, the lodestone of judicial activist decisions remains Roe v. Wade, in which a wholly fictional “penumbra” of the Constitution was invented to justify judicial control over one of the most controversial, significant and emotion-filled matters in the sphere of public debate, abortion. The decades since Roe was handed down have not cooled the passions or solidified public acceptance of its dictates, but rather have aggravated discontent. Today, both political parties find themselves required to take a stand on abortion, and it is the Republicans, who generally dissent from Roe, who hold the political advantage on the matter.

Public Awe Of The Judiciary Is Receding
Judicial activism ultimately depends on public acceptance of the rightness of judges handing down their decrees from Olympian heights. To the extent that judges carefully cite principle and precedent, this awe is reinforced. But conversely, when judges cite ephemera-like public opinion polls and current sociological research, they come to be seen as mere human beings with opinions - like the rest of us.

As never before, the new media are able to focus on instances of judicial misconduct, absurdity, and personal misbehavior among judges. Bill O’Reilly of Fox News Channel has become the number one program on cable news with his regular criticism, by name, of judges who hand down outrageous decisions. Some have even left the bench after his unwelcome attention.

Judicial activism consciously rejects tradition as a guide. This disrespect for the guidelines of the past extends to bricks and mortar. Even when they had to be skyscrapers, courthouses were traditionally designed with the architectural accoutrements of Greek and Roman temples, and judges wore the robes of high priests in order to inspire awe, and therefore passive acceptance of authority. More recent trends in courthouse architecture have substituted the bland features of modernism and postmodernism, which fail to inspire even affection, much less awe. The inhabitants of buildings like the new wave of federal courthouses send the implicit signal that they are more kin to the corporate bureaucrats in adjacent office buildings than they are to the god-like seers and priests of classical antiquity.

Judges and justices are increasingly seen as flawed human beings, rather than as principle-driven protectors of an impartial system. The very nature of judicial activism exposes itself to this perception. George Neumayr cuts to the chase on this point:

If the law represents nothing more than the will of whoever has the most audacity to hijack it, won't it occur to the American people at some point that they too can join in the nihilistic jostling? What if the people thought, "the law is just the will of the strongest," and marched on courthouses and threw lawless judges out on the street? What appeal could these judges make to them -- "You must follow the laws that we don't"?

Nobody sane thinks it is a good thing that judges are targeted for violence. But Chicago and Atlanta have both seen outrageous instances of criminals physically and violently expressing contempt for the judiciary in the past few weeks. The unthinkable is clearly becoming more thinkable, at least for the most deranged segment of the population – precisely the group which finds itself in closest contact with the lower levels of the judiciary. They obscenely demonstrate that judges are, indeed, merely mortal, in the most literal sense.

The Supreme Court Is At A Turning Point
Judicial activism received its kick start from the Supreme Court of the United States under Chief Justice Earl Warren. Warren, who had approved the internment of Japanese-American citizens during World War II, including native born second and third generation individuals, may have had a guilty conscience behind his zeal to reform social inequities. His pre-court career was as a political policy-maker, the governor of California. It was therefore natural that he assumed an instrumental view of the power granted to the federal judiciary. His leadership, much-praised in the liberal press, served as a shining example to other Justices, to members of the judiciary, generally, and to professors of law and political science, who use their institutional positions to grant prestige to those of whom they approve.

Today’s Supreme Court inevitably faces substantial changes in its membership. While appointments to the Court have always been of public interest, today’s environment makes both the stakes and the visibility of the next few appointments greater than ever before. If President Bush is able to appoint two or three new justices to the Court, including a new Chief Justice, there is the possibility of the Court signaling a retreat from activism, and legitimizing a return to what has been called “originalism,” the modest belief that the writers of law and the framers of the Constitution should be merely interpreted according to the actual words they wrote, not redefined and redirected by inhabitants of the judiciary.

Powerful Voices Advocate A Return To Originalism
Justice Antonin Scalia, widely recognized as a brilliant man and caustic wit, has begun speaking out in public about the abuses of judicial activism. It is rather unusual for a Justice to behave in this manner. It is even more unusual for a Justice to be as funny, erudite, and accessible as Justice Scalia. Even those of us lacking in legal education can follow, enjoy, and be enlightened by Justice Scalia’s speeches, opinions, and dissents. C-SPAN features his speeches and symposia, making them widely accessible.

Mark Levin, WABC radio talk show host and president of the Landmark Legal Foundation, has written an excellent new bestseller, Men in Black, written for a lay audience, denouncing judicial activism, and outlining practical steps to reverse its course. I purchased my copy at the Costco store serving ultra-liberal Berkeley, indicating the widespread interest in his book, even in the bluest of blue state locales.

The blogopshere, with many blogs produced by law professors, lawyers, and others interested in the issue of legal activism, is another collective voice debating the topic, one which bypasses the former monopoly held by liberal media organs, which mostly supported activism with great enthusiasm.

The Republican Senate Majority Seems Inclined To Break Filibusters of Judicial Nominees
Fortified by electoral success in 2004, most specifically the defeat of Minority Leader Senator Tom Daschle, GOP Senators are openly threatening to change Senate rules (requiring only a majority vote), to forbid the application of filibusters to judicial nominees. Since the year 2000, Senate Democrats have broken with tradition, and repeatedly used filibusters to prevent judicial nominees from receiving an up-or-down vote on the Senate floor. They have dubbed the GOP threat to change the rules “the nuclear option” – a clever bit of hyperbole. But the GOP has countered, and renamed this tactic “the Constitutional option” – equally clever, and better-grounded in reality.

The Democrats’ Arguments Will Not Prevail In The Public Arena
Since the Constitution specifies that only a majority vote is required for confirmation, the Republicans have a very good case to make to the American people, should the Democrats stupidly follow-through on their threat to shut-down legislation in the Senate, in response to a rules change. Already, Minority Leader Senator Harry Reid has equivocated on the threat, admitting that war-making and national security issues will not be blocked.

Moreover, the other rhetoric being employed by the likes of Senators Byrd (who employed the filibuster to stall civil rights legislation), Schumer, and Clinton does not withstand the kind of extended scrutiny a public blow-up would entail. Characterizing a filibuster shutdown as a peril to “free speech” (Byrd) is absurd, since no one will unable to express his or her views on the matter. Citing the description of role of the Senate as a “saucer” to “cool” the passions of the House (Schumer) will hold no coffee, either. The rule permitting filibusters was not written into the Constitution, and the primary characteristic of the Senate making it less subject to popular passion, at the time the phrase was coined, was its indirect election via state legislatures, a practice ended a century ago. And Senator Clinton’s strident appeal, with clenched fist, to “tradition” is laughable, given the recent genesis of judicial appointment filibusters.

If and when Democrats force the issue by obstruction of Senate business, they will look ridiculous, continuing a recent self-destructive trend. The fact that Minority Leader Reid is about as un-dynamic and unappealing a spokesman as they could select only amplifies their inability to persuade anyone but loyalists.

There is thus every prospect that substantial changes in the membership of the Supreme Court will take place. With a new Chief Justice to lead them, the Supremes will signal a new era in the judiciary. While it will take time for these changes to filter down to state and local jurisdictions, and many obstacles remain, it is quite possible that future historians will observe that 2005 marked the zenith of judicial activism.

Thomas Lifson is the editor and publisher of The American Thinker.

http://realclearpolitics.com/Commentary/com-3_18_05_TL.html


10 posted on 04/07/2005 7:38:11 PM PDT by Jackson Brown
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To: Conserve_Freedom2

OK, here's one to get the ball rolling. Circa 2002, the voters of Mass approved a ballot measure defining marriage as that between one man and one woman. That measure was blocked by the state senate. Two years later, the Supreme Judicial Court of Mass ordered the legislature to change the laws of Mass to permit same sex marriage. Get the picture yet? I lived in Mass at the time, so I know.


11 posted on 04/07/2005 7:39:33 PM PDT by brivette
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To: Conserve_Freedom2
Read Men in Black by Mark Levin. If you're still confused after that, come back and let us know.
12 posted on 04/07/2005 7:39:57 PM PDT by clintonh8r (Heteronormative and PROUD!!)
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To: Conserve_Freedom2

Consent of the Governed.

Several States have voted to pass state constitutional amendments to legally amend the document.

The State supreme courts have declared them unconstitutional.


13 posted on 04/07/2005 7:40:00 PM PDT by TASMANIANRED (Rule # 4. When liberals have factual evidence that their position is wrong they ignore the evidence)
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To: Conserve_Freedom2

For one thing they created out of thin air a right to abortion as deriving from an equally non-existent right to privacy. That's not to say there shouldn't be a right to privacy, but it wasn't for the Sup Court to deem it to exist in the Constitution after nearly 200 years of not existing. The 10th Amendment left it for the states to decide such things, and that is how it still should be.

They have also twisted the Establishment Clause, which was intended to prevent Congress from establishing an official state Church, as barring public nativity scenes, or prayers before a a highschool football game.

They have imposed busing in the past.

They have twisted the 14th Amendment and used it to grant citizen-like status to illegal aliens.

They have ruled things like state sodomy and capital punishment laws to be constitutional, only to turn around and say otherwise less than 20 years later.

And coming soon, they will impose either gay marriage or civil unions on the entire nation despite the people and/or their legislatures rejecting them in almost every state.


14 posted on 04/07/2005 7:40:58 PM PDT by Aetius
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To: Conserve_Freedom2

sniff

Drive by poster?


15 posted on 04/07/2005 7:41:29 PM PDT by TASMANIANRED (Rule # 4. When liberals have factual evidence that their position is wrong they ignore the evidence)
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To: acapesket

If you're talking to a home schooler - you'll be really embarrassed!!


16 posted on 04/07/2005 7:43:18 PM PDT by CyberAnt (President Bush: "America is the greatest nation on the face of the earth")
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To: Conserve_Freedom2
Do not confuse your personal views on a subject with whether the subject was handled by the courts in a legal and constitutional manner.
You can be pro something (ie, gay marriage) but still grasp how the courts overstepped their given powers and legislate their own presonal agenda without regard to the constitution.
It take maturity and intellectual honesty to put your personal feelings aside to view the larger picture of what is right and what the negative consequences of such rulings will be.
17 posted on 04/07/2005 7:43:55 PM PDT by Sisku Hanne (Deprogramming the left, one truth at a time.)
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To: Conserve_Freedom2

You'll never turn into a conservative. You want people to wait on you.

I feel sorry for your parents. Go clean your room!


18 posted on 04/07/2005 7:44:13 PM PDT by ladyjane
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To: Miss Marple

Maybe I can add one--Legislatures in several states have passed laws requiring parents be notified if a girl under 18 leaves school to have an abortion---fed. courts have overturned.

I also believe that laws have been passed banning partial-birth abortion that fed. courts have overturned.

What about campaign finance reform--Supreme Court took freedom of speech away within two months of elections--


19 posted on 04/07/2005 7:44:25 PM PDT by Txsleuth (Mark Levin for Supreme Court Justice)
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To: brivette

Sorry.. Brivette.. it's now Asschusetts!, we left "Masshole" behind!





Really bad pun.. couldn't help myself!


20 posted on 04/07/2005 7:47:51 PM PDT by acapesket (never had a vote count in all my years here)
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