Posted on 05/01/2020 6:32:46 AM PDT by Kaslin
Many on the left have accused originalism of being nothing but a cover for conservatives preferred policy outcomes, but Vermeules proposal illustrates how restrained originalists have been.
The Republic often alarms first-time readers. Not only is Platos dialogic style foreign to us, the character of Socrates makes bizarre and even wicked proposals as he outlines a supposed ideal polity, such as a communism not only of property, but also of wives and children. Many readers, including some philosophers, have taken Plato literally and seriously, and therefore condemned him as a proto-totalitarian.
Something similar seems to have happened in response to Harvard Law professor Adrian Vermeules recent Beyond Originalism article in The Atlantic. Vermeule argued for replacing originalism with a robust, substantively conservative approach to constitutional law and interpretation based on the principles that government helps direct persons, associations, and society generally toward the common good, and that strong rule in the interest of attaining the common good is entirely legitimate. In short, he wants conservatives to read their philosophy and policy preferences into the Constitution, rather than trying to abide by its meaning as understood when it was ratified.
That the legal left would hate this was a given, but the response from the legal right has been just as ferocious. David French called Vermeules ideas Christian authoritarianism, and writers at National Review queued up to criticize him. Even a self-described integralist writing in the American Conservative condemned Vermeules article.
Most of these critiques are correct. They may also miss the point.
As Vermeules critics point out at length, his program is unlikely to succeed, a point he is surely aware of, despite his occasional insistence that unexpected things can happen. It is possible the United States will become a confessing Catholic state, and it is possible philosophers might become kings or kings become philosophers. It is also possible Vermeule has become a crackpot fanatic dedicated to an improbable ideal not the first Harvard professor to do so.
But perhaps he is less a Twitter Torquemada than a cut-rate Catholic Kierkegaard, the Dane who spent his time and money writing a series of religious and philosophical reflections under a series of pseudonyms that fooled no one. Plato created characters whose dialogue communicated more than can be said directly; Kierkegaard did something similar with his pseudonyms, but went further by becoming a character himself.
This is not to say Vermeule is insincere, but that his presentation and performance are meant to provoke and persuade beyond the explicit argument he presents. This interpretation is supported by some of the implications Varad Mehta picked up on in Vermeules piece, as well as Vermeules response to some of his critics.
Foremost among these points is that Vermeule demonstrated the legal lefts imperious approach to the Constitution more effectively than a multitude of originalist articles have. If Vermeule didnt exist, originalists might have needed to invent him. As he sarcastically put it in his follow-up:
I am happy to inform the left-liberal critics that the piece was never actually intended to make a Dworkinian argument for reading the Constitution in light of moral principles of the common good. Rather it was intended to make a Dworkinian argument for reading the Constitution in light of moral principles of equality and freedom, as specified by the programme of the American Civil Liberties Union. Somehow the phrase Equality and Freedom was everywhere replaced with Common Good. That change inadvertently transformed the piece from a banal effort, safely mainstream within the legal academy, into a menacing harbinger of fascism.
As this acerbic commentary notes, Vermeule is simply proposing to repurpose the methodology the legal left has used for years, deploying the same approach in the service of a different moral vision. As Mehta notes, Progressives have been embarked on a program of constitutional extremism for years. No one should be surprised to see conservatives start demanding one of their own.
Vermeules enthusiastic endorsement of reading a specific moral viewpoint into the text of the Constitution shows what a right-wing version of the dominant leftist approach to the Constitution would actually be like; many on the left have accused originalism of being nothing but a cover for conservatives preferred policy outcomes, but Vermeules proposal illustrates how restrained originalists have been.
At the same time, Vermeule has provided a warning to originalists of what might replace them if they go wobbly. Originalism promises a rule of law under which conservatives believe they can generally achieve their policy preferences via legitimate political means. But it may not take many betrayals by Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts, or by the new Trump-appointed Justices Neil Gorsuch and Brett Kavanaugh, for a more aggressive approach to gain traction on the right.
Social conservatives in particular might conclude that the system, including elite conservative legal scholarship, is rigged against them, that originalism is just code for libertarian legal theory, and that they should just read their moral preferences into the Constitution like everyone else does.
This also reminds of the extent of the lefts judicial larceny and the impossibility of reparations for it. The lefts judicial coups have changed American culture in ways originalism cannot remedy. For example, even if the court were to vigorously uphold the governments power to ban obscenity, would the public and its representatives favor such restrictions, or would Big Porns hold on something other than hearts and minds win out? Even overturning Roe and Casey would only return abortion questions to the states, many of which would voluntarily retain the abortion-on-demand regime the court had imposed on them.
This highlights that originalism is fundamentally defensive, developed in response to the revolutionary judicial assertion of the Warren and Burger courts. It may launch limited counter-attacks against the worst overreaches of the legal left, but it cannot even return to the status quo ante. This restraint is intentional, but it forces originalists to confront a perennial difficulty of conservatism, which is when and how to become counter-revolutionary.
Conservatism usually attains self-consciousness under threat and is therefore defensive. What it should do to retake the ground it has already lost is often unclear. Thus, Vermeules proposed common-good constitutionalism is attractive insofar as it resolves that dilemma by promising, well, everything. What couldnt conservatives read into the Constitution if they adopted the lefts interpretive approach? But this would require conservatives to jettison their traditional mistrust of concentrating power, especially in unelected parts of government.
This unease will not be assuaged by Vermeules support for integralism, which is particularly unappealing to those of us who are not Catholic. To be sure, in a crisis like the Spanish Civil War, Id rather be a second-class citizen in a Catholic dictatorship than dead at the hands of the communists, but fortunately I do not have to make that choice.
Nor is the dubious allure of integralism increased by its motley band of internet advocates. With a mix of petty feuds and performative fanaticism, integralist Twitter is often more off-putting than stimulating, though Vermeule at least sometimes has a sense of humor about it.
So what is Vermeules game? Hes not leading a serious challenge to originalism, let alone the broader left-liberal legal consensus. But neither is he only a Twitter gadfly like some of his fellow integralists. He is a clever man capable of intellectual depth and subtlety, particularly as a critic of mainstream theories and ideologies.
Perhaps his role is not so much a revolutionary as a jester permitted to persist in a usurpers court, reminding the left-liberal powers-that-be of their crimes, and demonstrating to the conservative loyal opposition the limits they have accepted.
Too many people have accepted the harassment and control of people by the power of the state and the use of modern technology in the name of the “common good”. The protections of the Constitution? In NJ , Democratic Governor Murphy is fond of saying that the constitution is not a suicide pact.
I think what happens is that the tree of liberty gets watered again.
The left is mostly kids. They are like puppies “pretending to be tough” and not really hurting anybody (much) with their actions. They protest and then go home, smoke a joint and get laid by the person they met at the protest.
If the right gets violent, people die. If a single stray shot had been fired at the bundy ranch standoff, this country could have been changed forever. And no small number of people think it would have been for the better.
The Kenyanesian Usurpation happens.
The left may be mostly kids, but they have many in positions of power such as Governors, judges, and congress.
Bkmk
I find this statement to be so ambiguous that anyone could define it, far-left and far-right, for their own purposes.
I think the problem with governments, any type, is that they are the source of power and tend to attract to them people who lust for that power. And for too many, that power is never enough.
The next step in the American Revolution should be a government that is attractive to those who desire to serve their nation and people (not just mouth the words) and not those who want to be privileged overlords (power for me but not for thee).
How to accomplish that? It will take people much smarter than I...
To be sure. However, they are not likely to shoot people en-mass. I’m really just talking about the rank and file folks.
Simple. Government is force. Force is not freedom.
Lansing Michigan attendees protesting the shut down will be countered today by the far left group “Refuse Fascism”. You can’t make this stuff up.
In 1994 the Warren Court - by unanimous vote - issued a diktat which overturned all prior American jurisprudence - the New York Times Co. v. Sullivan decision. The effect of Sullivan has been to drastically curtail the journalism cartels fear of libel suits by conservative politicians. This has led to the fake news media that we now know and loathe.All jurisprudence prior to Sullivan held that libel law - exactly like pornography law - was not touched by the First Amendment. This is easily understood by reference to the word the preceding freedom . . . of the press.
The freedom of the press was freedom as it existed, and as it was limited in 1788.
The reason for that is the fact that not only did the Federalists consider a bill of rights unnecessary (since the Constitution had nothing to say about Common Law, and thus did not overrule it), they understood that assaying to codify all the rights embedded in Common Law was a fools errand. They were not trying to modify the rights of the people - at all - when they passed the Bill of Rights. The entire motivation of the Bill of Rights project was to suppress - not court - controversy over rights and the effect of the Constitution on rights.
In effect the Federalists considered that the Ninth and Tenth Amendments should have been unnecessary but certainly were sufficient to cover that. But to assure the suppression of controversy over rights, the first eight Amendments enumerated (as the Ninth Amendment puts it) those rights which had historically been denied by tyrants. But those eight amendments were crafted not to touch any other rights such as the right not to be libeled (or, to make an extreme comparison to the Second Amendment, shot).
Justice Brennans justification for overturning that obvious original intent
". . . libel can claim no talismanic immunity from constitutional limitations. It must be measured by standards that satisfy the First Amendmentis, from an original intent perspective, fatuous.
“Too many people have accepted the harassment and control of people by the power of the state and the use of modern technology in the name of the common good. “
I told my wife i was going hiking today at ...... She said “that’s outside of the Govorner’s travel zone”. I looked at her like she was a secret STASI agent. She said “you’re one of THOSE people aren’t you?”. Yes.
Sadly America has been becoming a country that can’t tell it’s right hand from its left for decades.
Fact of life noted throughout recorded history: Frightened people succumb to authority. Right now most Americans are very frightened and are not objecting to the loss of their constitutional rights.
You need a new wife.
“You need a new wife.”
Great advice. We’ve been married 42 years. She has turned into her Mother and I’ve turned into her Father.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.