Posted on 07/08/2011 8:29:07 AM PDT by Paladins Prayer
Is constitutionalism akin to blind faith? Some statists certainly think so, as they have called the position constitution-worship. In light of this, what should we call those who lack that faith? Given that they dont believe in the Constitution, and that the document is the supreme law of the land, can it be said that they dont believe in law? Are these people, who are often atheists, also alegalists?
Whatever you call them, theyre more visible and brazen than ever. Writing in Time magazine recently, Richard Stengel insisted that our Constitution must accommodate each new generation and circumstance. Georgetown professor Michael Dyson said recently, When I talk about the document being living and vital, Im talking about the interpretation of it. And these appeals are buttressed by the notion that our founding document is fatally flawed. For example, Harvard Law School professor Michael Klarman wrote, For the most part, the Constitution is irrelevant to the current political design of our nation. And CNNs Fareed Zakaria recently opined, The United States Constitution was drafted in a cramped room in Philadelphia in 1787 with shades drawn over the windows which, presumably, is worse than an idea coming out of his cramped head.
Of course, it sounds oh-so sophisticated to speak of a living, breathing document. But if someone is trying to sell us on the idea that our national rulebook shouldnt matter, we should ask two questions: Who benefits from ignoring the rules? And what is the alternative to following them?
The best way to answer the first question is to apply the relevant concepts to something everyone will understand.
(Excerpt) Read more at thenewamerican.com ...
Richard Stengel, and all the other “living document” proponents (including our President), are domestic enemies of the Constitution pure and simple.
Any American who has a problem with the Constitution as written, and who seeks any “remedy” for its perceived flaws other than through the Amendment process, is by definition a domestic enemy of the Constitution.
We need to start calling them that loudly and often.
Where does the Constitution say this? I can find nothing in the Constitution that limits or in any way regulates what processes the SCOTUS uses to interpret Constitutional Law. As far as I can tell, they are completely independent and unaccountable.
If judges want to apply liberal construction, ala Justice Breyer, there is nothing in the Constitution saying that they cannot do it that way. They are an independent branch with jurisdiction. Therefore, it seems to me, loose construction is constitutional.
They [the courts] will give the sense of every article of the constitution, that may from time to time come before them. And in their decisions they will not confine themselves to any fixed or established rules, but will determine, according to what appears to them, the reason and spirit of the constitution. The opinions of the supreme court, whatever they may be, will have the force of law; because there is no power provided in the constitution that can correct their errors, or control their adjudications. From this court there is no appeal. And I conceive the legislature themselves, cannot set aside a judgment of this court, because they are authorised by the constitution to decide in the last resort. The legislature must be controlled by the constitution, and not the constitution by them. They have therefore no more right to set aside any judgment pronounced upon the construction of the constitution, than they have to take from the president, the chief command of the army and navy, and commit it to some other person. The reason is plain; the judicial and executive derive their authority from the same source, that the legislature do theirs; and therefore in all cases, where the constitution does not make the one responsible to, or controllable by the other, they are altogether independent of each other.The judicial power will operate to effect, in the most certain, but yet silent and imperceptible manner, what is evidently the tendency of the constitution: I mean, an entire subversion of the legislative, executive and judicial powers of the individual states. Every adjudication of the supreme court, on any question that may arise upon the nature and extent of the general government, will affect the limits of the state jurisdiction. In proportion as the former enlarge the exercise of their powers, will that of the latter be restricted...
...When the courts will have a precedent before them of a court which extended its jurisdiction in opposition to an act of the legislature, is it not to be expected that they will extend theirs, especially when there is nothing in the constitution expressly against it? And they are authorised to construe its meaning, and are not under any control.
This power in the judicial, will enable them to mould the government, into any shape they please.
Brutus #11, The New-York Journal, January 31, 1788
“When I use a word, Humpty Dumpty said in rather a scornful tone, it means just what I choose it to mean neither more nor less.
The question is, said Alice, whether you can make words mean so many different things.
The question is, said Humpty Dumpty, which is to be master thats all.”
Lewis Carroll (Through The Looking Glass)
if the Constitution is a living, breathing document, i’d like it to go slap a few gov’t officials in the face. :)
I beg to differ. The analogy is flawed.
In a better analogy to baseball, the States would be the owners, the constitution the rules of the game, the federal judges umpires and the players the departments of the federal government. With this we can see more clearly the flaw in the argument. The problem is not that the constitution has been interpreted into irrelvance (a fact we are more than happy to stipulate as true.) The problem is that the constitution was never designed to constrain the federal government in the absence of sovereign states.
So to understand our circumstance through an analogy to baseball, imagine a world where the commisioner were allowed to rule unconstrained by the owners. He could set the rules of the game, players salaries, decide in which cities the teams could play. In short, he exercized all the powers the nominal owners had surrendered. In such a world would it matter to argue over how the umpires interpreted the rules set by the usurper?
“Interpretation of the Constitution” is an invention of John Marshall, not the Constitution.
Apparently the Dems, who SAY they trust the people, don’t trust them enough to go thru the process defined in the Constitution for its amendment.
ping
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.
Thomas Jefferson
I think it’s your analysis that’s flawed. The commissioner would be like the president. And it isn’t the president that is forcing the judges to rule this way or that. Yes, the problem is the umpires (and everyone else who supports their violation of he Constitution).
“Why that’s silly’’ said Alice. “No one can believe in impossible things’’. “I dare say you haven’t tried’’, said the Red Queen. “Why, when I was your age I could believe in six impossible things before breakfast!’’.
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