The U.S. Supreme
Court – the law of the land – has just begun a new term. This is scary
because the court is made up of the same judges who brought us the Citizens
United decision, which legalizes bribes to politicians. Looking at the Supremes is also timely
because we have also begun the race for the presidency, the winner of which
will likely appoint new justices for a lifetime on the court of the last
resort. And finally, it will soon be Halloween and at night, before I sleep, I see
the terrifying masks of Justice Antonin Scalia everywhere.
The great failure of Scalia is that the premise on which he
hangs his understanding of the U.S. Constitution is wrong — backward, really.
Unfortunately he has followers on and off the Court who make the same mistake.
As a self-proclaimed “originalist,” or ‘strict constructionist” as he is
sometimes called, Justice Scalia and his allies miss the original purpose of
the document and therefore pervert the document’s enduring meaning.
I apologize for stating what is or should be obvious. The
Declaration of Independence was written to make it clear that the inhabitants
of colonial America were about to set up their own government because, in
short, they sought economic freedom from the Royals and their trade allies, and
religious freedom from a shameless and cruel theocracy. The new country’s founders wanted individual
legal protections the Crown withheld. They tossed the rules and those who
enforced them overboard.
The writing of the U.S. Constitution followed to set the
rules of governance for this new, sovereign country.
The writers almost immediately added the Bill of Rights,
fearful that some of their comrades might suggest that the constitution would
be interpreted as the limitation of rights rather than the extension of rights,
which was what the revolutionary war was about.
And thus began a dreadful confusion. And it is the fossilized Scalia and his
minions – slow-witted Alito, taciturn Thomas and a caught-in-the-middle Roberts
who have a bizarre and muddled understanding of freedom and who have deserted
original intent.
Getting it right is important. It boils down to this: Are
you entitled to all rights not specifically prohibited by the document or are
you entitled to only those rights explicitly granted by it? This question pits the literal or
fundamentalist against the conceptualist or liberal. Is this profound document,
conceived by the finest minds of the time, a living and adaptable philosophy
that accommodates the evolution of our culture or is it an ironclad set of
rules frozen in the time of muskets and quill pens?
The battle is familiar. Christians have long debated the
literal meaning of the Bible with those who urge folks to view the words more broadly
and find meaning that relates to our times. It is a battle, involving various
faiths and governments throughout the world. Most enlightened Christians do not
worry about wearing clothing made of two different fabrics or eating scallops.
But back to the U.S.A.
and our Constitution. Below is
the text from Section 1 of the 14th Amendment:
All persons born or
naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are
citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside. No State
shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities
of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of
life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any
person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.
Justice
Scalia cannot find in that last clause that discrimination against women because
they are women, is forbidden by our constitution. To deny women equal treatment
is either in defiance of the Constitution or women aren’t people.
“Certainly
the Constitution does not require discrimination on the basis of sex. The only
issue is whether it prohibits it. It
doesn’t,” Scalia said in an interview with the magazine California Lawyer.
The word, “person” baffles Justice Antonin Scalia |
When
people remind us that justice should be blind, it didn’t mean it should be
without vision. And, of course, this
same, logic-free Scalia interpretation of equal protection sets a precedent on
other equal protection issues based on ethnicity, religion, height, disability,
vocation – you name it. Chances are this affects you. The Fourteenth amendment clearly states,
“equal protection.” What Scalia seems to say is we have a right to equal
victimization.
To me, this kind of restrictive interpretation of freedom
comes from a petty mind, not to mention a stingy heart. This conclusion is not
exactly in the spirit of American freedom, nor, for the unsentimental, can it
be found in the actual words of our
governing document.
And this is the man who somehow construed the Constitution
to recognize corporations as people and money as speech. He can find that in the Constitution, but not
that women are entitled to equal rights?
He has also told us we have no right to privacy. The Fourth Amendment states:
The right of the people to
be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable
searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no warrants shall issue, but
upon probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation, and particularly
describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.
This is pretty straightforward, a simple,
direct statement that even a strict constructionist should understand.
What’s more frightening is that most of the current
Republican Party presidential nominees name Scalia as the kind of Supreme Court
justice they would appoint if they became president.
If Yogi Berra were still around, maybe he’d ask what the
Fourth and Fourteenth amendments mean if they don’t mean what they mean?
3 comments:
It has been awhile since I checked what was worthy of comment as you see the world, and I find a passionate attack on a man who says things like, "The founding fathers realized that things would change in the future and provided a mechanism to alter the constitution in response to those situations that need modification; namely by amendment, a method of change which has been used many times." If some say that the amendment process is too hard, takes too long, etc., I believe he might say that it is better to convince enough of the people that change is appropriate than to have nine old people deciding the change is not necessary because what we think is "good" was there all along.
Have a good day!
There is no need to pass an amendment when the constitution is clear. All citizens are equal before the law. that includes women. Perhaps there should have been an amendment when Scalia decided corporations were people and money was speech. But he didn't seem interested in the amendment process then. Hope you have a god day as well.
RBP, while I disagree with your take on my Scalia rant, I do appreciate yor taking the tim to comment on it, providing a different point of view.
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