Posted on 05/14/2015 7:39:12 PM PDT by Tolerance Sucks Rocks
Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia reaffirmed his commitment to defending the Constitution while speaking to the Federalist Society in his home state of New Jersey on Friday.
Scalia, the preeminent conservative firebrand of the court, told the audience it is the structure of the government under the Constitution and not the liberties guaranteed under the Bill of Rights that makes us free.
As reported by The Daily Signal: Every tin horn dictator in the world today, every president for life, has a Bill of Rights, said Scalia, author of the 2012 book Reading Law: The Interpretation of Legal Texts. Thats not what makes us free; if it did, you would rather live in Zimbabwe. But you wouldnt want to live in most countries in the world that have a Bill of Rights. What has made us free is our Constitution. Think of the word constitution; it means structure.
Congress passed the first ten amendments to the Constitution, which became known as the Bill of Rights, during the opening months of its first session in 1789, largely following those proposed by the Father of the Constitution, James Madison. They were ratified by the states and became the law of the land in 1791.
Scalia argued that without the division of power created by the Constitution, the Bill of Rights, which guarantees freedom of speech and religion, the right to bear arms, protection against unlawful search and seizures, and trial by jury of ones peers among other rights, would just be paper promises with no mechanism to enforce them.
The genius of the American constitutional system is the dispersal of power, he said. Once power is centralized in one person, or one part [of government], a Bill of Rights is just words on paper.
Scalia stands on firm ground with his observation. James Madison wrote in Federalist 51 that the best bulwark against government tyranny is structuring a system where ambition must be made to counteract ambition.
He observed: In the republic of America, the power surrendered by the people is first divided between two distinct governments [federal and state], and then the portion allotted to each subdivided among distinct and separate departments [legislative, executive, judicial]. Hence a double security arises to the rights of the people. The different governments will control each other, at the same time that each will be controlled by itself.
Scalia noted that the most profound departure from the dispersal-of-power structure established under the Constitution was passage of the ratification of the 17th Amendment in 1913, which changed the method of the election of U.S. senators to the popular vote rather than by the state legislatures.
The Founders intended the House of Representatives to be the peoples house with elections every two years, while senators served for six year termstheir constituency being the state legislature. This ensured that senators would have no incentive to trample on the state governments authority through federal action.
The Constitution created a federal government with certain enumerated powers, leaving all the remaining authority to the states and the people. Scalia and many other critics believe the federal government has usurped broad authority in powers left primarily to the states.
What a difference that makes, Scalia said. When you have a bill that says states will not receive federal highway funds unless they raise the drinking age to 21, that bill would not pass. The states that had lower drinking ages would tell their senators, You vote for that and you are out of there.
Repeal of the 17th Amendment is one of the proposals in radio talk show host Mark Levins bestselling book Liberty Amendments.
Regarding interpretation of the Constitution overall, Justice Scalia is an originalist. In other words, he believes that it is not up to courts to re-interpret the nations governing document, but follow what the Founders intended. If the Constitution or laws generally need revision, it is up to the legislative branch to do so. When we read Shakespeare, we have a glossary. We dont think the words have changed there, so why do we think they have changed in the Constitution? the justice has told audiences in the past.
Justice Scalia is currently the longest serving member on the Supreme Court, having been appointed by Ronald Reagan in 1986. Anthony Kennedy is the only other Reagan appointee still serving on the high bench
PING!
That’s a really good point.
Federalist/Anti-Federalist ping.
Bump!
Repealing 16 and 17 would fix most of our problems in short order.
Ping.
Its hard to tell what judges will do once they’re seated in the Supreme Court.
true, but it sounded like he was criticizing himself.
Not to mention it might get people interested in their own state politics again.
It never ceases to amaze me how few people have a clue what’s happening in their state capitols.
Scalia with Thomas and Alito are enough for the US Supreme Court. The other six should be dismissed post haste.
ping
Where necessary to make a regulation of interstate commerce effective, Congress may regulate even those intrastate activities that do not themselves substantially affect interstate commerce.
Justice Scalia, concurring in Raich
The South Dakota vs Dole case was about funds. It didn’t deny the states from making their choice. Plus here he is simply saying that the Senators would be more apt to protect state’s rights if they were elected by state legislatures. That makes a lot of sense. The court case was about a law passed by both houses of Congress and had to do with conditioning money to the legal drinking age. The consequences of the lower ages were considered significant on the entire nation. It didn’t forbid states from having the lower age. It just left them holding some of the financial responsibility. They lost 10% of their highway funds because they contributed more than their fair share to drunk driving. So that’s how they ruled. I don’t see a contradiction in the two positions.
Bookmark
A local judge I’d like to see on our state supreme court.
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We need to instruct the Court on the proper interpretation of the taxing clause, repeal the 16th and 17th Amendments, then figure out what to do on Day 2.
We need to instruct the Court on the proper interpretation of the taxing clause, repeal the 16th and 17th Amendments, then figure out what to do on Day 2.
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