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Monday, June 28, 2010

LIBERALS GOT "SOME SPLAINING TO DO"

The conservative columnists George Will recently wrote a list of questions the current nominee for Supreme Court Justice should answer due to her past comments about how open and informative, etc. these confirmations should be. As Lucille Ball's husband use to say to her, "Lucy! you got some splaining to do. The question Mr. Will poses are here below and Liberty Dispatch invites all to send in their answers. We believe all non-conservatives have "some splaining to do":

-- Regarding campaign finance "reforms": If allowing the political class to write laws regulating the quantity, content and timing of speech about the political class is the solution, what is the problem?

-- If the problem is corruption, do we not already have abundant laws proscribing that?

-- If the problem is the "appearance" of corruption, how do you square the First Amendment with Congress restricting speech to regulate how things "appear" to unspecified people?

-- Incumbent legislators are constantly tinkering with the rules regulating campaigns that could cost them their jobs. Does this present an appearance of corruption?

-- Some persons argue that our nation has a "living" Constitution; the court has spoken of "the evolving standards of decency that mark the progress of a maturing society." But Justice Antonin Scalia, speaking against "changeability" and stressing "the whole anti-revolutionary purpose of a constitution," says "its whole purpose is to prevent change -- to embed certain rights in such a manner that future generations cannot readily take them away. A society that adopts a bill of rights is skeptical that 'evolving standards of decency' always 'mark progress,' and that societies always 'mature,' as opposed to rot." Is he wrong?

-- The Ninth Amendment says: "The enumeration in the Constitution of certain rights shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people." The 14th Amendment says no state may abridge "the privileges or immunities" of U.S. citizens. How should the court determine what are the "retained" rights and the "privileges or immunities"?

-- The 10th Amendment ("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") is, as former Delaware governor Pete du Pont has said, "to the Constitution what the Chicago Cubs are to the World Series: of only occasional appearance and little consequence." Were the authors of the Bill of Rights silly to include this amendment?

-- Should decisions of foreign courts, or laws enacted by foreign legislatures, have any bearing on U.S. courts' interpretations of the Constitution or federal laws (other than directly binding treaties)?

-- The Fifth Amendment says private property shall not be taken by government for public use without just compensation. But what about "regulatory takings"? To confer a supposed benefit on the public, government often restricts how persons can use their property, sometimes substantially reducing the property's value. But government offers no compensation because the property is not "taken." But when much of a property's value is taken away by government action, should owners be compensated?

-- In Bush v. Gore, which settled the 2000 election, seven justices ruled that Florida vote recounts that were being conducted in different jurisdictions under subjective and contradictory standards were incompatible with the Constitution's guarantee of "equal protection of the laws." Were they right?

-- In Bush v. Gore, five justices held that Article II of the Constitution gives state legislatures plenary power to set the rules for presidential elections. The Florida legislature fashioned election rules to produce presidential electors immune from challenge by Congress. But the legislature said that immunity depended on electors being chosen by a certain date, which could not be met if further recounts were to ensue. The court held that allowing more recounts would have contravened the intent of Florida's legislature. So the recounts were halted. Was the court's majority correct?

-- Justice Thurgood Marshall, for whom you clerked, said: "You do what you think is right and let the law catch up." Can you defend this approach to judging?

-- You have said: "There is no federal constitutional right to same-sex marriage." But that depends on what the meaning of "is" is. There was no constitutional right to abortion until the court discovered one 185 years after the Constitution was ratified, when the right was spotted lurking in emanations of penumbras of other rights. What is to prevent the court from similarly discovering a right to same-sex marriage?

-- Bonus question: In Roe v. Wade, the court held that the abortion right is different in each of the three trimesters of pregnancy. Is it odd that the meaning of the Constitution's text would be different if the number of months in the gestation of a human infant were a prime number?

9 comments:

Anonymous said...

Are you kidding me? You want them to answer questions? They still think Bush stole the election from Gore.

Anonymous said...

Liberal hero Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall did what he wanted to do and "waited for the law to catch up to decisions." I suspect you will find that is the more sincere philosophy of most liberals.

Anonymous said...

No one can stop the confirmation of Kagan. She is the chosen one of The Chosen One.

Anonymous said...

Democratic senators are planning to put the right of citizens to challenge corporate power at the center of their critique of activist conservative judging, offering a case they claim has not been fully aired since the days of the great Progressive Era Justice Louis Brandeis. Trial lawyers wanting 40% or more of the larger settlements they could get if Democrats could reverse tort reform legislation will be cheering Democrats and Kagan on from the sideline. Anyone who doesn't want the cost of people who win extravagant settlements from corporations added to our cost of living and likes reasonable standards will hope Kagan answers the questions put to her by Republicans forthrightly - revealing the liberals arbitrary judgement and application of the law and their systematic destruction of the Constitution. Obama may get her in, but the revelations to the American people could cost them the re-election of Democrats from the White House to the local courthouses across America. Let's hope.

Anonymous said...

Kagan is just another of a long list of people or laws that Mobama is trying to ram down our throats.jThere are enough academics appointed to carry out his agenda. But this particular one happens to be a lifetime appointment.PLEASE PEOPLE cast her out,we can't take another one!!!

Anonymous said...

Ms. Kagan has less real legal experience than any nominee in at least 50 years. It's not just that she has never been a judge. She has barely practiced law, and not with the intensity and duration from which anyone should think real understanding occurs. Of course Democrats are saying that Ms. Kagan's lack of experience as a judge is "refreshing," noting that the current Supreme Court is the only one in history composed entirely of former judges. It must be an embarassing time for those few conservatives who remain in a leftists party that has to pretend to embrace the Costitution and common sense. Kagan does not represent the common (or sense for that matter).

Anonymous said...

Kagan and every Democrat from local candidates like Rusty Hight to Speaker Nancy Pelosi need to be voted out of office to stop the ideas their party puts forth that will lead to more spending and a higher debt

Anonymous said...

We can clean house if we just make sure we all vote. Americans who say the economy will get better over the next 12 months fell to 33% from 40%. Last September, the share was even higher, 47%. People know what is happening and they know Democrats will not change course. We have to send them all home.

Anonymous said...

There's a wealth of info on the dem Washington scams and schemes in kevin brady's newsletter, see:

http://www.bradybriefing.com/