Ender
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- Joined
- Dec 3, 2007
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- 12,527
So, you have no problem with our courts ignoring the Constitution and imposing their personal opinions as the rule of law?
JWK
You just noticed?

So, you have no problem with our courts ignoring the Constitution and imposing their personal opinions as the rule of law?
JWK
So, you have no problem with our courts ignoring the Constitution and imposing their personal opinions as the rule of law?
JWK
You just noticed?![]()
Did you comprehend my post?
Marbury v. Madison (211 years ago), McCulloch v. Maryland (195 years ago), Texas v. White (145 years ago), Missouri v. Holland (94 years ago), West Coast Hotel Co. v. Parrish (77 years ago, overturning Lochner), Wickard v. Filburn (72 years ago), and Kelo v. New London (9 years ago) are all examples of court over-reach from a libertarian perspective. And this list is not exhaustive; I'm sure I could find examples from EVERY term of the SCOTUS and most terms of the various Circuit courts.
And these examples are only the ones where the outcome was unreasonable. Taking into account the justification actually used in the opinions of otherwise tolerable opinions (like the one in this thread, IMO), NEARLY EVERY Court decision violates a libertarian view of the constitution.
I have a problem with the wording in this case, but not as much as some other decisions. For instance, in the recent Heller decision (6 years ago), Scalia said that, in that case, the right to have a firearm was okay, but rights can be attenuated generally. This just said that the 2nd amendment is open to the interpretation of the courts, and your "constitutional rights" are left to be bounded, regulated, and made into state-granted privileges by the personal opinions of the judges and legislatures.
I was just wondering why it took you so long to notice that the very nature of the state is to "impose their personal opinions as the rule of law."
What does your insulting remark and post have to do with Judge Reinhardt's written opinion?
JWK
At the close of the Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia on September 18, 1787, a Mrs. Powel anxiously awaited the results and as Benjamin Franklin emerged from the long task now finished asked him directly, `Well, Doctor, what have we got? A republic or a monarchy?' `A republic, if you can keep it,' responded Franklin.
I would suggest that it is WAY beyond reason to assume the SCOTUS was meant to have the final word on what the Constitution means. It doesn't make sense that the framers of the Constitution, who were trying very hard to restrain the power of the Federal government would grant to that government the power to decide beyond appeal the limits of its own power. Both Jefferson and Madison opposed that doctrine.I'm not sure how Marbury is necessarily anti-libertarian or anti-textual. After all, the Constitution explicitly bestows the "judicial power" upon the federal courts, and it's not beyond reason to argue that this authority includes the power of judicial review.
Several of the cases you cited involved legislative overreach (Parrish, Wickard, Kelo), which the Court upheld. But without the power of judicial review the overreaching legislation would have stood anyway. Are you suggesting the Court should have overturned the statutes in these cases?
So, you have no problem with our courts ignoring the Constitution and imposing their personal opinions as the rule of law?
JWK
I would suggest that it is WAY beyond reason to assume the SCOTUS was meant to have the final word on what the Constitution means.
It is so sad to see that most of those who have entered the thread have ignored the topic of the thread which questions the legitimacy of Judge Reinhardt’s written opinion alleging homosexual marriage is protected under the 14th amendment.
But it doesn't. Its decisions on constitutional law can always be overridden by constitutional amendments, so in that sense the people (acting through state legislatures) have the last word. From a more paractical standpoint, the Court has to be careful to not go off the deep end in its decisions because it has no power to enforce its rulings and must rely on the executive branch to do so.
I would say that every government employee has a duty to refrain from exceeding Constitutional authority no matter what SCOTUS says. Furthermore, every state has a duty to protect its citizens from Federal over-reaching through nullification and ultimately secession.
You're wrong if you believe Judge Reinhardt simply invented his equal protection analysis out of thin air instead of basing it on over a century of Supreme Court precedent applying the EP Clause to matters other than discrimination against African-Americans and in particular on the Court's decision in Windsor. You apparently want a lower court judge to ignore all this SCOTUS precedent and use an originalist approach that hasn't been adopted by a majority of the Court and that wasn't even argued by any of the parties in the case.
No doubt you also consider McLaughlin v. Florida and Loving v. Virginia (which invalidated anti-miscegenation laws) to be illegitimate, since at the time of the adoption of the 14th Amendment such laws were prevalent and were even declared constitutional by the Court in 1883.
I would say that every government employee has a duty to refrain from exceeding Constitutional authority no matter what SCOTUS says. Furthermore, every state has a duty to protect its citizens from Federal over-reaching through nullification and ultimately secession.