Posted on 03/17/2016 2:32:35 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
Presidential candidate Ted Cruz today announced the endorsement of Dr. Robert P. George, who has been described by the New York Times as our nation's "most influential conservative Christian thinker."
"I have known Ted for over two decades, since he was my student at Princeton," said Dr. George. "He is among the most brilliant students I have taught and one of the most principled and dedicated public servants I know. But the reason I am recommending Ted to my fellow citizens goes beyond our years of friendship - I am endorsing Ted because he understands the Constitution and has spent his entire career defending it. No one has been stronger than Ted in standing up for religious liberty and other fundamental constitutional freedoms. Moreover, he understands and is determined to restore the basic structural principles of the Constitution that our Founding Fathers knew were the true bulwarks protecting liberty: the separation of powers; federalism; the concept of the national government as a government of delegated and enumerated - and thus limited - powers; the understanding of courts as faithful interpreters of law who have no authority to read things into the Constitution that aren't there, or read things out of the Constitution that are.
"In order to protect religious liberty, restore the right of the people to protect innocent human life in all stages and conditions and the institution of marriage as the union of husband and wife, and preserve other key constitutional values, we need a Republican president who has both the record and the judgment to nominate judges and justices who are faithful constitutionalists," George continued. "Ted Cruz will not only devote political capital to ensuring that every nominee will protect our constitutional freedoms, but he will foster a culture, from the top down, that honors the Constitution - the one thing that, despite our differences, binds us all together as Americans."
Dr. George, an eminent scholar and teacher of constitutional interpretation, civil liberties, and philosophy of law, holds Princeton University's celebrated McCormick Professorship of Jurisprudence and is founder and director of the James Madison Program in American Ideals and Institutions at Princeton. He has served the nation as a member of the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, the President's Council on Bioethics, and as Chairman of the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom. He is the author of a number of books, including In Defense of Natural Law, Making Men Moral: Civil Liberties and Public Morality, and Conscience and Its Enemies: Confronting the Dogmas of Liberal Secularism, and co-author of What is Marriage? Man and Woman: A Defense and Embryo: A Defense of Human Life.
"I am honored to have Professor George's endorsement," said Cruz. "Professor George has been a preeminent voice defending the sanctity of life, marriage, and religious liberty in the 21st century. I've known Professor George over twenty-five years; he was my thesis advisor in college, and is a friend. He is an intellectual powerhouse who never cowers to liberal academia, and he speaks the truth with a clarity and conviction that moves hearts and minds. Professor George is a man of faith. He represents the vibrancy of thought in Christianity, and I've been grateful to fight alongside him for years in defending our God-given rights. We are delighted to have his leadership as we continue to make this election a referendum on our constitutional liberties."
Last week Dr. George, along with more than 30 other Catholic leaders, authored An Appeal to our Fellow Catholics, an article in National Review Online urging Catholics and "all men and women of goodwill" to support a "a genuinely reformist candidate" and to oppose a Trump candidacy, stating that "Donald Trump is manifestly unfit to be president of the United States."
Dr. George is the recipient of many honors and awards, including the Presidential Citizens Medal, the Honorific Medal for Human Rights of the Republic of Poland, and the Canterbury Medal of the Becket Fund for Religious Liberty. He is a senior fellow at the Witherspoon Institute and has been a Visiting Professor at Harvard Law School. He holds honorary doctorates in law, letters, ethics, science, divinity, humane letters, civil law, and juridical science.
Yes :)
Robert George was also a great friend of Justice Scalia if I am not mistaken ?
Love both great men.
Yes; Justice Scalia and Professor George were a Mutual Admiration Society. :o)
the basic structural principles of the Constitution that our Founding Fathers knew were the true bulwarks protecting liberty: the separation of powers; federalism; the concept of the national government as a government of delegated and enumerated - and thus limited - powers; the understanding of courts as faithful interpreters of law who have no authority to read things into the Constitution that aren't there, or read things out of the Constitution that are.
You speak of a little known professor who has written a book you know. Good for you
All the lawyer types I am sure may agree with you.
Please don’t be so intellectually snobbish as to suggest that George is the keeper of conservatism.
I have read Hyaek,Lewis,Druty,Freidman,Buckley, and others. Just because your professor isn’t included is no big deal. The ideas of Locke and Knox and Aristotle and Plato and Pasternak and Solzheneitzen are time less
I find your devotion to one author rather odd
I don’t care.
This endorsement I assume wipes away all the other endorsements, and gives Raphael or Rafael however you say it in Canadian a clean slate.
You obviously want to read about the philosophy of law. Good for you. This man is younger than myself and probably read what I have read
My background and training is in physics and electro optics. I would not expect you to be familiar with writers in that realm
Your time may be unlimited. Mine is not
Is this real smart Catholic professor up in an Ivory Tower — so to speak.
I mean, what does he know ?
Anything about what it takes to be a lawful President ?
Natural Born and that sort of thing.
Well, bless your heart.
Really? That’s the bedst you have?
Abviously you either have way too much time on your hands or you are just a lawyer. Don’t really care which.
My guess is you probably had him in class or some one handed you a book of his.
Who have you read that would be considered a power house in lasers and electro optics?
What year did you graduate high school?
Academics by their very nature are less likely to have worked a real job and have less real world experience. Lawyers and philosophers doubly so
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