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U.S. Constitution Title: Why the Supreme Court is not Supreme townhall.com Why the Supreme Court is not Supreme Judicial activism occurs when judges write subjective policy preferences into the law rather than apply the law impartially according to its original meaning. The Heritage Foundation To vocal opponents of judicial activism, this comes as little surprise. The U.S. Supreme Court has suffered a major credibility blow in the wake of its politically motivated 5-4 Obergefell v. Hodges gay marriage opinion. In it, they presumed to do the impossible both redefine the age-old institution of natural marriage and to give this fictional definition precedence over freedoms actually enumerated in the Bill of Rights. According to Rasmussen, only 36 percent of Likely U.S. Voters still think the high court is doing a good or excellent job. Incredibly, even the Chicago Tribune had this scathing assessment of the high court: We must confess we are shocked at the violence and servility of the Judicial Revolution caused by the decision of the Supreme Court of the United States. We scarcely know how to express our detestation of its inhuman dicta, or to fathom the wicked consequences which may flow from it.
This decision has sapped the constitution [sic] of its glorious and distinctive features, and seeks to pervert it into a barbarous and unchristian channel
Jefferson feared this Supreme Court, and foretold its usurpation of the legislative power of the Federal Government. His prophecy is now reality. The terrible evil he dreaded is upon us. As many of us warned, this opinion is already being used to crush Americans constitutionally guaranteed freedoms. This was not lost on the Tribune, which added, To say or suppose, that a Free People can respect or will obey a decision so fraught with disastrous consequences to the People and their Liberties, is to dream of impossibilities. No power can take away their rights. They will permit no power to abridge them. The New York Tribune was equally dismissive: The decision, we need hardly say, is entitled to just as much moral weight as would be the majority of those congregated in any Washington bar-room. OK, Ill come clean. The above quotes are not in reference to Obergefell. But they might as well have been. These quotes addressed the Supreme Courts equally illegitimate 1857 Dred Scott decision. Whereas, in Dred Scott, the justices defied natural law and presumed a right for whites to own blacks, the courts 2015 Obergefell decision likewise defied natural law and presumed to deconstruct and redefine the institution of marriage. Both decisions are illegitimate, and heres why. For the U.S. Supreme Court to justifiably overturn some law duly passed by the United States Congress, its opinion must be deeply rooted in one or more of the following: A clear reading of the U.S. Constitution; Some prior court precedent; History and the Common Law; Our cultural customs or traditions; Some other law enacted by Congress. As the high courts four dissenting justices rightly observed in Obergefell, the five attorneys who invented this newfangled right to gay marriage, failed, abysmally, on each and every requirement. The same was true of Dred Scott. And so both opinions should be summarily ignored. As President Andrew Jackson famously quipped of a Supreme Court opinion he thought usurped his executive authority, [Chief Justice] John Marshall has made his decision; now let him enforce it! After the Dred Scott decision was released, Sen. William Pitt Fessenden, R-Maine, who later served as Abraham Lincolns secretary of treasury, said this: [It is charged] that I am undermining the institutions of the country by attacking the Supreme Court of the United States! I attack not their decision, for they have made none; it is their opinion. Over the last few decades, the other two branches of government, the legislative and the executive, have, for some inexplicable reason, acquiesced to the notion of judicial supremacy a dangerously dominant concept that erroneously regards the United States Supreme Court as the final arbiter of all things public policy. If this is so, then these nine unelected lawyers are ultimately unaccountable to anyone or anything, and the other two branches of government are but toothless figurehead bodies merely spinning their wheels while spending our dollars. This flies in the face of the framers intent. Its also the very unfortunate reality under which we live. It is fully within the constitutional authority of the other two branches of government to rein in these judges gone wild. Article III, Section 2, of the U.S. Constitution gives Congress the authority to check judicial activism, up to and including when justices illegitimately legislate from the bench: [T]he Supreme Court shall have appellate jurisdiction, both as to law and fact, with such exceptions, and under such regulations as the Congress shall make. Our Republican-led Congress, from a regulatory standpoint, has the absolute constitutional authority to smack down this rogue Supreme Court. Unfortunately, to date, it has either been unwilling or unable to do so. Still, its not Republicans alone who must halt this judicial imperialism. Freedom-loving Democrats, to the extent that such animal yet exists, must also join the fight. After the Dred Scott opinion, they did. [F]orthwith we are told that the Supreme Court of the United States has become the appointed expounder of Democratic principles. Since when? asked Sen. George Pugh, D-Ohio. Who constituted the judges of the Supreme Court the makers or expounders of Democratic principle? Certainly not Thomas Jefferson, who pronounced them the sappers and miners of the Constitution; certainly not Andrew Jackson, who told them he would interpret his own oath, as well as his own principles, according to his views of the Constitution.
When we get to going by courts, it seems to me we have departed from the whole spirit and principle of the Democratic Party. My, how the Democratic Party has changed. In the vast majority of their writings the Founding Fathers were explicit that the judicial branch of government is effectively the weakest of the three. Regrettably, such is not the case with todays modern misapplication. Americans currently live under what is, for all intents and purposes, a counter- constitutional judiciocracy led by nine unelected, unaccountable, black-robed autocrats. No, five extremist lawyers dont get to decide the law of the land. Only the legislature can do that. The high court merely issues opinions. And then the other two branches decide what, if anything, to do with them. The Declaration of Independence acknowledges that true rights are God-given and unalienable. Religious free exercise is sacrosanct. Gay marriage is pretend. And the Supreme Court is not the Supreme Being. (Note: Dred Scott quotes from Kutler, Stanley I., ed., The Dred Scott Decision: Law or Politics (Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company, 1967), 59.) Notice anything wrong? Send Silk feedback Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 17.
#17. To: tpaine, nolu chan (#0)
Our Republican-led Congress, from a regulatory standpoint, has the absolute constitutional authority to smack down this rogue Supreme Court. Unfortunately, to date, it has either been unwilling or unable to do so. This is the facile argument. Now let's deal with reality. The Congress has authority to smack down the rogue Supreme Court by limiting appellate jurisdiction. That's true. But that power is not absolute. For the Supreme Court has itself opined that it has what amounts to original jurisdiction over matters of the Constitution itself. So, were the Congress to attempt to pass a law removing Supreme Court jurisdiction as to the constitutionality of various acts of government, the Supreme Court would review that very act, the act limiting its jurisdiction, to determine whether or not the Congress exceeded its authority by attempting to limit the original jurisdiction of the court granted by the Constitution. And while sola scripturalists would cite to the short little list of Supreme Court original jurisdictional authority in the Constitution as limitative, the Supreme Court would ignore all such arguments and reply that its power of constitutional review is inherent and implied by the Constitution in the creation of the court itself. In other words, Congress can pass laws that restrict the Supreme Court's jurisdiction over certain appellate matters, but the Supreme Court always retains the authority to strike down any particular such restriction as being itself inherently violative of the Constitution, if - in the Courts opinion - it restricts the Court's power to prevent Congress from passing unconstitutional laws. There is no legal respone to that. The response would have to be political: one or both branches would have to forcibly violate the Supreme Court's orders on a matter, and then put the question to the test of power: who will the various authorities obey? Of course, in such a conflict, the answer to that question will depend on the direction of the political winds. After Dred Scott, Bleeding Kansas and Southern Secession, there was no opposition party in Congress to act as any check on the Republicans, who themselves were individually weak and very devoted to Lincoln. So, when Lincoln simply ignored Supreme Court habeas corpus orders, there was nowhere for the Court to turn for redress. The Congress was overwhelmingly populated by Republicans, the Army was serving their Commander-in-Chief in hot battle, and the Commander-in-Chief was the one breaking the law - and doing so asserting that he was taking necessary acts for the prosecution of the war. The Northern public totally rejected the Supreme Court after Dred Scott and Bleeding Kansas, so there was no popular support at all for the Supremes. They wilted into nothingness, and essentially stayed there until they emerged again as a force in Plessy v. Ferguson. In truth, when one looks at the real history of important judicial review that reversed major political issues, we find that Marbury v. Madison was small beer. The first real case was Dred Scott - a disaster. Followed by Plessy - a second disaster. Then Lochner. The first positive use of the power was Brown and some of the civil rights cases, but then came Roe. And now, the Obamacare decisions. Pretty bitter fruit, this doctrine.
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