A Response to Attacks on Marriage in the name of Equal Protection
By Stewart Feil
My sister and her family live in CA right now, so Prop 8 has a bit more
meaning to me than it might to some of you. My brother-in-law wrote
this blog entry on Judicial Review and asked me for some feedback on it.
http://m-m-farnsworth.blogspot.com/
This is how I responded (a bit rambling, but still, a good diatribe):
I'm not sure exactly where to start. It would be helpful to have a
question to address. Or a key subject to direct comments toward. I
guess I'll start with Judicial Review:
You
are quite correct
that Marbury v. Madison was the first time the Supreme Court (1) had
the power to interpret the constitution; and (2) declared the courts to
have the power to review legislative acts signed into law. Remember
that
Thomas Jefferson is credited with saying that the courts are the
weakest branch of government, but that it is through them that this
experiment will be destroyed. Since then the Court has gone through
different phases of how it goes about judicial review. One of the
greatest problems with the court is that the Justices are completely
politically unaccountable. This means that President X could appoint a
bunch of Justices who will shape how policy is applied for thirty years
or more. (Justices have a tendency towards longevity once they are
appointed--See Justice Stevens for an example). Unfortunately many fo
the most important Supreme Court decisions passed down in the last 100
years were made by the appointees of Franklin Delanoe Roosevelt. The
court he created is the epitome of judicial activism.
Now it is also of critical importance to understand that judicial
activists don't believe that they are judicial activists. They think
that they are judges who are not blinded by prejudice, or bound to
"tradition," or the old ways. They see themselves as Progressive
thinkers. And because of the renown given their office, they are truly
pompous enough to beleive that only they are rational enough to tell
the rest of the Universe what is appropriate or what is inappropriate
(having long since abandoned any pretext of a belief in Right and
Wrong). Whenever anyone cries, "Judicial Activist!" those towards whom
the accusation is aimed simply retort with something best summed up as
"Redneck".
Many law professors (who would themselves be judicial activists if
given the chance) try to discredit the title as a mere pejorative. It
is not. The difference lies in the locus of political will: if it is in
the court, it is activism; if it is in the legislative branch or the
people, it is constitutional. And yes, I just juxtaposed as opposites
"Activism" and "Constitutional". It is an apt comparison simply for the
fact that Constitutional court behavior cannot be activist in nature.
The implications to that are broad, and may be somewhat startling.
First, Roe v. Wade must be over turned to maintain constitutional
integrity. Next Brown v. Board of Education (it has nothing to do with
the constitution anyway, it just parades about as being about
constitutional rights. The fact of the matter is, it is about a bad
interpretation of a legislative act, and the interpretation should have
been overturned as idiotic, and irrational, and the statute given its
proper, original meaning rather than by fundamentally changing the
definition of "Liberty" so that the court could force its will upon
the people. Most judicial activism centers around maldefining words,
much like FDR and his inaugural address announcing the "New Bill of
Rights").
Thanks to the last 70 + years of judicial activism, coupled with
the abduction of the word "liberal" by collectivists of every ilk our
society has forgotten that there is a difference between a right and an entitlement. There is a difference between charity and welfare. And there is a difference between welfare and socialism.
Until the court can figure out the differences between those, it will
always present a threat to those who believe in true liberty. It
sickens me that in the name of liberty, those of religious faith are
silenced. It sickens me that in the name of liberty states are
constrained from determining their own moral values with regard to
human life. It sickens me that an institution as old as the written
record of humanity if not older is being challenged by those who behave
in a manifestly unnatural way.
The California Supreme Court would have been within its power, and in fact truly fulfilling its responsibility if it had legitimate cause to strike down proposition 22 as unconstitutional discrimination. "The State shall not discriminate against, or grant preferential treatment to, any individual or group on the basis of race, sex, color, ethnicity, or national origin in the operation of public employment, public education, or public contracting." CA Const. Art. 1 Sec 39(a). Those are the constitutional words upon which the court struck down proposition 22 as unconstitutional. The court would concede that proposition 22 does not discriminate against people for race, color, ethnicity, or national origin. However, there is also no discrimination based upon sex. Sex is an objective category determined by looking at biological features. Proposition 22 applies equally to men who want to marry men and women who want to marry women. There is not discrimination based upon sex as a result of proposition 22, and therefore it should not have been struck down. If the people of California want to protect sexual orientation as a constitutional class, they can amend the process should be amending the state constitution to include that language with the other protected class language already in Article 1 Section 39 (and repeated several other times in article 1), not by judicial fiat that there is another protected class.
How can all this be going on? Obviously national legislation has
never been able to solve the question of abortion. I don't recall any
clause in the constitution granting the federal government power to
define morality for the states. In fact, the constitution quite clearly
purports to LIMIT the powers of the federal government to those
enumerated. It is not supposed to work like a well oiled machine. It is
supposed to be a slow, tedious, and almost painful process. That way,
the laws passed will at least have been given due consideration. But
since FDR, that hasn't been good enough. The government must move
faster. As such, the court greases the cogs. Congress delegates away
much of its responsibility to agencies. Why? For efficiency. The system
was never meant to be efficient. It was designed ensure that only the
RIGHT laws passed. The problem arose when what was "right" in the eyes
of 9 people wasn't being enacted quickly enough by the process, so they
took it into their own hands. Of course, in doing so they paved the way
to tip the scales well past the justice they sought to serve towards
the tyranny that looms over use today as caused by such judicial fiat
as the decision in In Re Marriage Cases. It's not about
liberty. It's about the destruction of right and wrong. It's about the
removal of consequences for wrong doings. It's about dragging society
down to the lowest common denominator--a process done slowly, and piece
by piece until pretty soon everyone, ideally, will think that gay is
normal, religion is the cause of hate, animals have more rights than
humans, and some guy behind a curtain will be left holding a very large
bag of wealth, redistributing it per whim. (aside: no form of
collectivism--communism, socialism, fascism--can function without
extensive "community organizing" (yes, I'm jabbing at Barak with that
one), and the person with the power over the plan has power over the
life and death of every denizen unwilling to live outside the box.
There is no such thing as a benevolent dictator. There is no Utopia.
There is only tyranny and absolute power).
It is one thing for the courts to overturn legislation when
congress, or a state legislature lacked the polictical will to actually
provide a functional law. The court is not supposed to make decisions
of will for exactly the reason that elected representatives are:
Political accountability. Any time our government is to exert will over
the citizenry, those officials who enacted the law must be fully
accountable to the constituencies from whom they derived the power to
enact the laws in the first place. The court has a proper role in
overturning such laws as would shield officials from the political
repercussions of their actions.The judiciary must unmask the charlatans
of government. However, that is only half of the role of the judiciary.
The greater duty of the judiciary is to the people themselves. The
court must only exercise judgment. It must not exercise its will over
the people, especially where the people have resoundingly spoken as to
their will. When the Bill of Rights amended the constitution, it did
not state mere truisms. It spoke of actual meaningful rights. Amendment
Ten reads, " The powers not delegated to the United States by the
Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the
States respectively, or to the people." That doesn't mean that the
people and the states are the same thing. It means that the people have
meaningful power in this nation. If courts can blithely overturn law
duly passed by referendum to the people, then the people have no power.
This I cannot accept. Government only has power so long as the
governed consent to that power. When the faith of citizens in their
government dwindles, or rather is extinguished in the face of manifest
tyranny such as that of the California Supreme Court, then it is likely
the time for the tree of liberty to be watered again with the blood of
patriots and tyrants is nigh at hand.
So, we are left once again with the question of the scope of
judicial review. How far is too far? Too far is when a court creates a new constitutionally protected class where there was none before. Too far is when a state supreme
court acts in such a way as to effectively create law for 49 other
states. Too far is where the voice of the people is squelched by the
voice and will of 4 virtually untouchable judges. Too far is where the
California Supreme Court went with the In re Marriage cases
decision. If that decision is upheld either by the failure of
proposition 8 or in a later challenge before the US Supreme Court, then
we will know that the new tyranny has emerged and established itself.
When they come to take our religion, and our liberty, pray they have
not first succeeded in taking our guns, for if they have, they will
freely, and happily, take your life.