Showing posts with label Antonin Scalia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Antonin Scalia. Show all posts

February 25, 2016

Scalia Fought Kritarchy, Trump Fights Stupidity, Anti Americanism



Antonin  Scalia fought against Kritarchy

[From article]
Among this election season’s oddities was the dust-up between Pope Francis and Donald Trump. After departing Mexico, the pontiff appeared to criticize Trump in an interview, suggesting that building walls — not bridges — “is not Christian.”
Calling the comment “disgraceful,” the presidential front-runner and insulter-in-chief compelled the Vatican to Think Again before retreating. Meanwhile, comedians joked that the perceived papal putdown would cause church attendance to fall and Trump’s poll numbers to surge.
Indeed, by crossing swords with the pontiff, Trump burnished his image as a fearless fighter, a trait his voters prize. Unfazed by his incoherence, lack of policy specifics or controversies, Trump supporters, like columnist Jim Nolte, are tired of losing and want “someone who will do whatever it takes to win.”
Buoying Trump is Americans’ sense of powerlessness and insecurity. Consider these controversial policies imposed on disapproving majorities using extra-constitutional means: the Iran deal, the irresponsible and never-debated Omnibus budget, Obamacare, trade promotion, and executive actions and sanctuary-city policies that nullify immigration laws.
[. . .]
That Bork was Scalia’s ideological and intellectual equal but was rejected shortly after Scalia’s unanimous approval speaks to how politicized the theoretically independent judiciary has become. Consider that it was President Franklin Roosevelt’s fellow Democrats who foiled his plan to pack the Supreme Court.
[. . .]
Thomas Jefferson warned that giving “judges the right to decide what laws are constitutional and what not … would make the judiciary a despotic branch.” Now, having morphed from “the least dangerous branch” into an unelected super-legislature of nine philosopher kings with lifetime appointments, it’s not surprising Supreme Court nominations are hotly contested and fraught with hypocrisy.
[. . .]
By short-circuiting the democratic process for resolving emotionally charged issues, Scalia believed the court was violating “a principle even more fundamental than no taxation without representation: no social transformation without representation.”
[. . .]
As Scalia argued while pointing to unfree nations that have charters of rights, “It isn’t the Bill of Rights that produces freedom; it’s the structure of government that prevents anybody from seizing all the power.”
Essentially, the founders used constitutional walls to separate and check power so that diverse people with differing beliefs would be free to build bridges of mutual respect and tolerance, forging an open and decent society. The Supreme Court’s unlikely “best buddies” — rivals Scalia and Ruth Bader Ginsburg — built a remarkable bridge, a lesson for Pope Francis, Trump and Trumpkins.
Think Again — Isn’t the best way to “Make America Great Again” to elect a president who’ll adhere to America’s great constitution?

http://www.aspentimes.com/opinion/20807989-113/sturm-scalias-lessons-for-trumpkins

Melanie Sturm
Think Again
February 24, 2016
Sturm: Scalia's Lessons For Trumpkins

February 22, 2016

Scalia Led Fight Against Rule By Courts




[From article]
this outpouring of feeling and machinations regarding his replacement exposes a second tragedy – that the United States now edges on becoming a kritarchy, a government of judges. How else can one possibly explain the wall-to-wall media coverage on how his death might transform 5-4 victories into 4-4 stalemates or, worse, 5-4 defeats if Obama picks the next associate justice?
[. . .]
The political influence of judge-made law is clearly visible in everything from Obamacare to gun control, same-sex marriages, abortion, redistricting, the death penalty, immigration, campaign finance, and racial preferences in higher education. It is no exaggeration to say that the highest laws of the land now reflect the views of at least five unelected officials who are 99.9% immune to public pressure. And this power seems to be growing. Hard to believe that Scalia's nomination to the Court was so uncontroversial that it passed the Senate by a 98-0 margin.
If one's side has sympathetic judges, the kritarchy temptation can be irresistible, but evaluated against democratic criteria, the liabilities far outweigh the benefits. Let me offer some of the key anti-kritarchy arguments prior to discussing reversing this dangerous drift.



First, courts, regardless of whose ideology dominates, have scant control over their agenda, so those dependent on judge-made law may never have the chance to be victorious, even if one's side enjoys a 9-0 majority. A virtual perfect storm is necessary to put an issue before a court, and even then, not necessarily in a way that permits a decisive outcome. Opponents of Roe v. Wade (1973) may never live to see it totally overturned, since abortion cases inevitably concern a variety of administrative details, not the core up-or-down issue. By contrast, fighting the battle legislatively permits an unambiguous victory (or defeat). Kritarchy is wonderful only for those possessing the resources to find a good case and then shepherd it through costly legal multi-year battles with the hope that the version that ultimately comes before one's judicial allies can bring the desired success (think same-sex marriage). Not exactly the most practical solution to satisfying a political aim.
Second, since nearly all federal judges serve for life, they are unaccountable save for being impeached, and even removing them (an exceptionally arduous task) does not undo their unpopular behavior. To be sure, a hated decision may be reversed by a legislature, but this solution is far more cumbersome than simply throwing out incumbent legislators (and legislators know that legislatively reversing a judicial decision can, in turn, be reversed by judges). In effect, the Supreme Court's 7-2 majority that existed in 1973 on Roe v. Wade is nearly impervious to reversal, no matter how strong the public's shift on abortion. Of course, this is great news for those who achieved this 1973 victory, but it is clearly a risky strategy – if you lose, it may be forever.
Third, say what you want about disorderly, often theatrical legislative debates, but they can raise almost any issue imaginable and these debates are generally open to public scrutiny and thus serve a didactic purpose. The current brouhaha over immigration among GOP hopefuls perfectly illustrates this point – both Cruz and Rubio relish pointing to each other's legislative record on amnesty. Matters are entirely different with far more secretive judicial deliberations. Few ordinary citizens and non-experts can follow judicial debates, let alone grasp terminology like "strict scrutiny." Moreover, not only are cameras banned in the Supreme Court, but the whole deliberative process is more obscure than the sausage-making of the local butcher shop.


Antonin Scalia, Justice, Supreme Court Of the United States

Lastly, kritarchy is a risky political strategy: winning coalitions can easily be undone by the uncontrollable vagaries of life. Yes, you may appoint a strict law-and-order justice, but who would have predicted the path taken by Earl Warren, a one-time tough prosecutor who became famous as the chief justice adamantly soft on crime? Then there's the uncertainties of the specific lower courts that decide a case – identical cases are often decided differently by different courts, a situation promoting "judge shopping." Indeed, kritarchy – rule by judges – can merge into gerontocracy – rule by elderly, perhaps demented judges. This is hardly an appetizing outcome.
How can kritarchy be avoided? The easy answer is to insist that all judicial appointees swear an oath that they will not invent laws of out of thin air or rely on crackpot social science theories, a judicial philosophy called strict constructivism. It is an admirable approach in the abstract, but problems often emerge when scrutinizing century-old laws. More importantly, how can sitting judges be held accountable if they reject this philosophy once appointed?
Fortunately, a realistic solution exists that begins by acknowledging that the kritarchy can flourish only where the elected branches of government abdicate their governance responsibilities. Kritarchy exists in a power void. Consider the troubled, often confused history of racial preferences in higher education.
Title VI, section 601 of the 1964 Civil Rights Act is crystal-clear: "No person in the United States shall, on the ground of race, color, or national origin, be excluded from participation in, be denied the benefits of, or be subjected to discrimination under any program or activity receiving Federal financial assistance." Nevertheless, within a decade, the Supreme Court began issuing decisions that clearly violated Title VI, section 601 (see here). In multiple instances, the judges, often with the slimiest majorities, creatively overruled "no racial discrimination" by concocting principles – for example, American society's "compelling" need for racial diversity. In fact, even a half-century beyond the 1964 law, the Supreme Court is still trying to navigate all the exceptions and the legal underbrush.



What if the U.S. Department of Justice had from the get-go instead issued arrest warrants for university administrators who violated Title VI, section 601? That is, arrest them, put them in orange jumpsuits, and haul them into court, and let a jury decide that the 1964 law really said "no racial discrimination except where such discrimination promotes diversity." And if a jury was stymied, Congress could amend the 1964 law to prohibit the "diversity defense" (or any other exception), so the landmark Civil Rights law could remain true to its original aim.
Racial preferences is only one of many examples of today's kritarchy. The larger point is how judges regularly fill a power vacuum when Congress and the president fail to exercise their responsibilities. If Congress wanted to amend the 1964 law by authorizing multiple exceptions, that should have been openly debated and not decided by a tiny handful of ingenious judges.
Hopefully future courts will not need another Antonin Scalia, a jurist whose singular accomplishment was battling kritarchy. We should live under democratically enacted laws, not make-it-up-as-you-go-along jurisprudence.

http://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2016/02/antonin_scalia_and_the_battle_against_kritarchy.html

February 22, 2016
Antonin Scalia and the Battle against Kritarchy
By Robert Weissberg

Tribute To Justice Antonin Scalia, by Dinesh D'Souza



Dinesh D'Souza

Published on Feb 14, 2016
D'Souza joined Judge Jeanine Pirro February 13 on "Justice with Judge Jeanine" to discuss the death of intellectual giant Antonin Scalia.
"Scalia had a very elastic mind and was able to look at different ways in which we read a text, not just in terms of what the author intended, but also in terms of what the text actually says."
"Scalia was the intellectual giant on the Court, and perhaps the most eloquent Supreme Court Justice going back all the way to the early part of the 20th century. History will see him as a luminous figure."
"Scalia’s originalism was different than, for example, the originalism of Judge Bork. Bork would talk about reading the Constitution in the light of the Framers. And one of the things that Scalia would point out is that the intention of the Framers is sometimes opaque or contradictory. When you’re reading a sonnet by Shakespeare, you may not know what Shakespeare intended to say, but what you do have is the sonnet itself. And by looking at the poem, you can excavate what it actually means."
"When I got the news of Scalia’s death, I felt a sense of deep sorrow, and also a chill of fear down my spine. The Supreme Court has been so precariously balanced. It’s been very frustrating for us as conservatives that the Democrats can depend, almost with euclidean certitude, on their guys."
"We have a president who has shown a willingness to skirt the law with immigration, with the Defense of Marriage Act, and with Obamacare. We need a Supreme Court that is going to stand up for constitutionalism at this point in our history."
"I think it’s important for the Republican Congress to signal very clearly to Obama that any nominee that he puts forward on the left is essentially dead on arrival. That forces upon Obama the choice of either pushing forward and going up in flames, or trying to come up with a unifying nominee that would actually help to bring the country together."

https://youtu.be/1LmqOzrCe80

February 16, 2016

Pat Buchanan: Leave Scalia's Seat on Supreme Court Vacant


Justice Antonin Scalia at Harvard University. "It was this big. Really."

[From article]
It is a measure of the stature and the significance of Justice Antonin Scalia that, upon the news of his death at a hunting lodge in Texas, Washington was instantly caught up in an unseemly quarrel over who would succeed him.
But no one can replace Justice Scalia.
He was a giant among jurists. For a third of a century, he led the conservative wing of the high court, creating a new school of judicial thought called “originalism.”
But originalism is not conservatism, which, in the judicial era that preceded Scalia, often meant court decisions that “conserved” the radical social revolution Earl Warren’s court had imposed upon us.
[. . .]
I remember being called into the office of White House Chief of Staff Don Regan, 30 years ago, to be informed that the judge whom Ronald Reagan would name to replace William Rehnquist, who had been named Chief Justice, would be U.S. Appellate Court Judge Antonin Scalia.
Regan was grinning at me as he made the announcement, and I let out of a whoop of victory.
[. . .]
The window for any Supreme Court nominees should be slammed shut — until 2017.
Republicans should tell our “transformative” president that his days of transforming America are over, that he will not be remaking the court into a bastion of the left after his departure, and that, while he has the right to nominate whom he wishes, the U.S. Senate will exercise its right to reject any nominee he sends up. If the court will then face many 4-4 decisions for the next year, so be it.
[. . .]
Republicans should tell the American people that when they vote in November they will be deciding not only the next president, not only which party shall control Congress, they will be deciding what kind of Supreme Court their country should have. Which is as it should be.
If the GOP can’t win this argument, they have lost the country.
http://buchanan.org/blog/leave-the-scalia-chair-vacant-124793

Leave the Scalia Chair Vacant
Monday - February 15, 2016 at 10:18 pm
By Patrick J. Buchanan

February 15, 2016

Sloppy Police Work After Death Of Supreme Court Justice Scalia In Texas



Antonin Scalia

Remarkable how easily police, US marshals make decisions over which they do not have jurisdiction. In this case as in many, law enforcement officers make determinations usually left for the medical examiner. Is that called usurping? But it was only a Justice of the Supreme Court of The United States, not an important person. And under this White House there is never any reason to suspect lawlessness. Ahhh-hem!

[From article]
[Judge] Guevara told the station that she planned to drive to the ranch but changed her mind when a U.S. marshal told her by phone: “It’s not necessary for you to come, judge. If you’re asking for an autopsy, that’s what we need to clarify.”
Guevara said she asked the Marshals whether there were “any signs of foul play. And they said, ‘Absolutely not,’ ” she told the station. After talking with Scalia’s personal physician, she said, she pronounced him dead and declined to order an inquest.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/texas-tv-station-scalia-died-of-a-heart-attack/2016/02/14/938e2170-d332-11e5-9823-02b905009f99_story.html

The death of Antonin Scalia: Chaos, confusion and conflicting reports
By Lana Straub, Eva Ruth Moravec, Sari Horwitz and Jerry Markon
February 14, 2016 at 3:46 PM

February 13, 2016

Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia Dead at 79



The Supreme Court Justice was at the resort to attend a party on Friday, and didn't show up for breakfast the following morning.

[From article]
Senior Associate Justice Antonin Scalia was found dead on Saturday in a luxury resort in West Texas, authorities say.
Scalia, 79, died of apparent natural causes while he stayed at the Cibolo Creek Ranch in the Big Bend region south of Marfa.
The Supreme Court Justice arrived at the ranch on Friday, where he then attended a private party with approximately 40 other people.
[. . .]
When he did not show up for breakfast in the morning, a person associated with the ranch found his body in his room.
The US Marshal Service, the Presidio County sheriff and the FBI are investigating Scalia's death.
There was no evidence of foul play, a federal official who requested not to be named, told My San Antonio.
US District Judge Fred Biery said he was notified of Scalia's death on Saturday morning.
'I was told it was this morning,' Biery told My San Antonio of Scalia's death. 'It happened on a ranch out near Marfa. As far as the details, I think it's pretty vague right now as to how.
'My reaction is it's very unfortunate. It's unfortunate with any death, and politically in the presidential cycle we're in, my educated guess is nothing will happen before the next president is elected.'
[. . .]
Scalia was nominated to the US Supreme Court in 1986 by President Ronald Reagan and is the longest-serving justice on the Court.
Texas Gov Greg Abbott called Scalia an 'unwavering defender of the written Constitution' in a statement about the Justice's death.
'He was the solid rock who turned away so many attempts to depart from and distort the Constitution,' Abbott said. 'We mourn his passing, and we pray that his successor on the Supreme Court will take his place as a champion for the written Constitution and the Rule of Law.
'Cecilia and I extend our deepest condolences to his family, and we will keep them in our thoughts and prayers.'

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3445976/Associate-Justice-Antonin-Scalia-dies-natural-causes-luxury-Texas-resort-aged-79.html

U.S. Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia dies of natural causes in luxury Texas resort, aged 79
Scalia, 79, died of apparent natural causes at the Cibolo Creek Ranch south of Marfa, Texas, on Saturday
The Supreme Court Justice was at the resort to attend a party on Friday
When he didn't show up for breakfast on Saturday, a person associated with the ranch went to his room and found a body
Scalia was nominated to the US Supreme Court in 1986 and is the longest-serving justice
By KELLY MCLAUGHLIN FOR DAILYMAIL.COM
PUBLISHED: 16:58 EST, 13 February 2016 | UPDATED: 17:15 EST, 13 February 2016

June 24, 2010

Scalia Notes Ways of Tyrants

[From Speech]
"remember this — neither Hitler, nor Lenin, nor any despot you could name, ever came forward with a proposal that read, ‘Now, let’s create a really oppressive and evil society.’ Hitler said, ‘Let’s take the means necessary to restore our national pride and civic order.’ And Lenin said, ‘Let’s take the means necessary to assure a fair distribution of the goods of the world.’"

http://www.nypost.com/p/news/opinion/opedcolumnists/advice_for_new_grad_weXZe5ZSzYVP0eTDs35xuM

Advice for a new grad
By JUSTICE ANTONIN SCALIA
New York Post
Last Updated: 3:49 AM, June 20, 2010
Posted: 1:06 AM, June 20, 2010