With Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s veiled hint yesterday of an impending vacancy on the U.S. Supreme Court, speculation about the necessary qualities of the next Justice will now begin in earnest.
By far the most important criterion for any new Justice is a judicial philosophy that embraces a healthy respect for the vital role played by judicial review in guaranteeing liberty and equal justice for all. (Gender will also be a key criterion if the vacancy is created by the retirement of Justice Ginsburg herself - it is unimaginable that the twenty-first century Supreme Court would not count at least one woman among its members.)
Judicial review, the Court’s power to correct the unconstitutional actions of the legislative and executive branches, is precisely how the framers originally envisioned the Court’s role in the constitutional design.
James Madison, for example, arguing in support of passage of the Bill of Rights before the First Congress, said, “independent tribunals of justice will consider themselves in a peculiar manner the guardians of those rights; they will be an impenetrable bulwark against every assumption of power in the legislative or executive.” Addressing a French correspondent, Thomas Jefferson wrote, “the laws of the land, administered by upright judges, … would protect you from any exercise of power unauthorized by the Constitution of the United States.” And in Federalist 78 Alexander Hamilton commented that “the interpretation of the laws is the proper and peculiar province of the courts…. If there should happen to be an irreconcilable difference between [the Constitution and a legislative act]…, the Constitution ought to be preferred to the statute, the intention of the people to the intention of their agents.”
In principle, judges and scholars from across the political spectrum agree on these basics. Conservative icon Robert Bork, for example, has written that “there are some things a majority should not do to us no matter how democratically it decides to do them. These are areas properly left to individual freedom…. Society consents to be ruled undemocratically within defined areas by certain enduring principles believed to be stated in, and placed beyond the reach of majorities by, the Constitution.”
In practice, however, conservative ideology has latched onto the idea that the use of "undemocratic" judicial review is “activist” and will almost always constitute inappropriate “legislating from the bench.” (This position is consistently held by a bare minority (four) of the current Supreme Court Justices, which explains the critical importance of the next Justice’s views on the matter.) What this argument ignores, of course, is that the whole point of the Constitution’s scheme of majoritarian government is to protect liberty and equal justice. As amply explained by Madison, Jefferson and Hamilton, the true original intent of the framers was that constitutionally-protected liberty and equal justice are not to be sacrificed to majority will.
When the Court fails to properly exercise its power of judicial review, liberty and equal justice suffer, because there is simply no other institution left to protect individual and minority rights. During World War I, for example, the Court upheld vast legislative prohibitions on speech; and during World War II it refused to curb executive forced-relocation and internment of thousands of innocent Japanese-Americans. America would look quite different today if the Court – largely under the leadership of Chief Justice Earl Warren, whose strong support of judicial review prompted President Dwight Eisenhower to grumble that his 1953 appointment of Warren to the Court was “the biggest damn-fool mistake I ever made” - had not eventually returned to checking the unconstitutional excesses of the democratically-elected executive and legislative branches.
So as President Obama looks at candidates for a Supreme Court vacancy, he should insist on a person whose judicial philosophy includes a strong understanding of the important role judicial review has played throughout American history in vindicating individual rights and ensuring equal justice for all. The U.S. Supreme Court must not shrink from fulfilling its crucial - yes, active - original constitutional role of critically reviewing the actions of the executive and legislative branches and striking them down where necessary.
Saturday, March 14, 2009
Ginsburg: Opening Soon on Supreme Court; Qualities of the Next Justice
Tuesday, March 10, 2009
Dharma: Heaven or Hell
A big, burly samurai comes to a Zen master and says, “Tell me the nature of heaven and hell.”
The Zen master looks him in the face and says, “Why should I tell a scruffy, disgusting, miserable slob like you? A worm like you, do you think I should tell you anything?”
Consumed by rage, the samurai draws his sword and raises it to cut off the master’s head.
The Zen master says, “That’s hell.”
Instantly, the samurai understands that he has created his own hell—black and hot, filled with hatred, self-protection, anger, and resentment.
He sees that he was so deep in hell that he was ready to kill someone. Tears fill his eyes as he puts his palms together to bow in gratitude for this insight.
The Zen master says, “That’s heaven.”
- Pema Chodron, from Comfortable with Uncertainty: 108 Teachings (Shambhala Publications, 2002)
The Zen master looks him in the face and says, “Why should I tell a scruffy, disgusting, miserable slob like you? A worm like you, do you think I should tell you anything?”
Consumed by rage, the samurai draws his sword and raises it to cut off the master’s head.
The Zen master says, “That’s hell.”
Instantly, the samurai understands that he has created his own hell—black and hot, filled with hatred, self-protection, anger, and resentment.
He sees that he was so deep in hell that he was ready to kill someone. Tears fill his eyes as he puts his palms together to bow in gratitude for this insight.
The Zen master says, “That’s heaven.”
- Pema Chodron, from Comfortable with Uncertainty: 108 Teachings (Shambhala Publications, 2002)
Wednesday, March 4, 2009
Raymar Morgan Clutch Dunk
One of the great things about sports is the opportunities it presents for great plays.
Every game, from beginners (what parent isn't thrilled to see his/her young kid running around out on the field and making a nice catch or kick?) to pros, offers these moments. ESPN has its highly entertaining top ten plays of the day which highlight some of the best examples of pure athleticism of the day, regardless of the game context.
There's another kind of great play that's even more impressive - one that combines a feat of great athleticism (or great thinking) at a highly crucial moment in a contest. Recent prominent examples in pro football are the last two Super Bowls, with Santonio Holmes' catch on 3rd down with less than a minute left to win the game against the Arizona Cardinals; and David Tyree's last-minute 3rd down catch in last year's game to keep alive the Giants' game-winning drive. From the 2008 college football season the highlight was Michael Crabtree's (Texas Tech) last-second touchdown against Texas, which entirely changed the complexion of the college football season (by knocking Texas out of the No. 1 spot, and ultimately denying them the chance to play in the national championship game).
Raymar Morgan of the Michigan State basketball team made such a jump-out-of-your-chair clutch play in last night's Big Ten basketball game that sealed a victory guaranteeing the Spartans outright Big Ten championship.
Setting the stage: MSU had led against Indiana by 13 points with 9 minutes left, but then it failed to score another field goal for another 8 minutes, allowing Indiana to cut the lead to 2, with several chances to tie. Then, with less than a minute left, Morgan made his play, snatching a rebound with one hand and in one motion dunking it to give MSU a virtually insurmountable 4-point lead. Check it out.
Every game, from beginners (what parent isn't thrilled to see his/her young kid running around out on the field and making a nice catch or kick?) to pros, offers these moments. ESPN has its highly entertaining top ten plays of the day which highlight some of the best examples of pure athleticism of the day, regardless of the game context.
There's another kind of great play that's even more impressive - one that combines a feat of great athleticism (or great thinking) at a highly crucial moment in a contest. Recent prominent examples in pro football are the last two Super Bowls, with Santonio Holmes' catch on 3rd down with less than a minute left to win the game against the Arizona Cardinals; and David Tyree's last-minute 3rd down catch in last year's game to keep alive the Giants' game-winning drive. From the 2008 college football season the highlight was Michael Crabtree's (Texas Tech) last-second touchdown against Texas, which entirely changed the complexion of the college football season (by knocking Texas out of the No. 1 spot, and ultimately denying them the chance to play in the national championship game).
Raymar Morgan of the Michigan State basketball team made such a jump-out-of-your-chair clutch play in last night's Big Ten basketball game that sealed a victory guaranteeing the Spartans outright Big Ten championship.
Setting the stage: MSU had led against Indiana by 13 points with 9 minutes left, but then it failed to score another field goal for another 8 minutes, allowing Indiana to cut the lead to 2, with several chances to tie. Then, with less than a minute left, Morgan made his play, snatching a rebound with one hand and in one motion dunking it to give MSU a virtually insurmountable 4-point lead. Check it out.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)