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How to Reignite the Culture Wars (Has SCOTUS gone TOO Far?)
New York Times Magazine ^ | 7 September 2003 | JEFFREY ROSEN

Posted on 09/06/2003 5:18:08 PM PDT by shrinkermd

One morning in the middle of July, in front of the federal courthouse in Charlotte, N.C., the Rev. Flip Benham summoned about 50 of his followers to hold the Supreme Court of the United States in contempt of the Court of Jesus Christ. Benham, the head of the militant anti-abortion group Operation Rescue, is not an admirer of the Supreme Court, and after its decision in June in Lawrence v. Texas, which struck down every sodomy law in America, he was especially displeased.

On the steps of the courthouse, Benham's followers arranged six coffins, each inscribed with the name of a Supreme Court decision that represented a defeat for social conservatives in the moral and political clashes known as the culture wars. The coffins began with the decisions in the 1960's that outlawed school prayer, moved on from Roe v. Wade in 1973 to the decision in 1980 that banned the posting of the Ten Commandments in public schools and ended with Lawrence in 2003.

As one of his supporters sounded an earsplitting blast on a shofar, Benham sentenced the decisions to be burned. Small children in anti-abortion T-shirts tore up copies of the decisions and placed the fragments in a large metal urn. As Benham set them on fire, officers from the Charlotte Police Department swooped down, opened their fire extinguishers and put out the tiny flames. ''That's not going to work in hell, I tell you!'' Benham shouted. The police officers, backed up by federal marshals, descended from the plaza, handcuffed Benham and led him into the courthouse to be arraigned for unlawful burning.

It was not surprising to see Benham and his followers exercised by the court's decision in Lawrence, nor was it surprising to see them embrace their defeat as an opportunity to rally the faithful. Dramatic resistance to the court, after all, is their reason for being. But in the months since Lawrence, what has been startling is how many social conservative leaders with larger constituencies have also come to view Lawrence as an unexpected and welcome political opportunity. It was four years ago, after the Senate refused to convict President Clinton of high crimes and misdemeanors, that Paul M. Weyrich, one of the leading conservative strategists in America, sent a letter to his supporters conceding defeat in the culture wars and advising them to ''tune out'' of the modern world. With Lawrence, however, social conservatives are suddenly talking as if they've been given a chance to tune back in. As the Rev. Richard John Neuhaus, the editor of the religious journal First Things, told me, ''People really think that on this one they have a winner.''

The Supreme Court in Lawrence did far more than strike down an extreme and discriminatory Texas law that forbade sodomy by homosexuals but not heterosexuals. Justice Anthony Kennedy's opinion for the court also overruled Bowers v. Hardwick, a 1986 opinion holding that moral disapproval was a legitimate reason for states to regulate intimate behavior. By ruling out moral disapproval as a permissible basis for legislation, Kennedy, in the eyes of liberal activists and social conservatives alike, made it more likely that lower courts will come to recognize a constitutional right to gay marriage. If this happens -- the Massachusetts Supreme Court may have already ruled on the question of gay marriage by the time this article appears -- conservative activists hope and expect that many Americans will finally be roused to take political action.

''I think the Supreme Court decision will serve to awaken the sleeping giant of the majority of conservative Americans who believe in the traditional institution of marriage to get involved in the culture wars again to preserve traditional marriage and culture in this country,'' Mathew D. Staver, the head of the conservative Liberty Counsel, told me.

This optimism has some historical support. During the past decade, on those occasions when a lower court has recognized a broad right of gay marriage, the decision has provoked a political backlash. When the Supreme Court of Hawaii implied in 1993 that gays and lesbians had a constitutional right to marry in that state, 34 states passed laws declaring that they wouldn't recognize same-sex marriage, and Congress passed the Defense of Marriage Act, which announced that those laws were constitutional. The voters of Hawaii promptly amended their state Constitution to prohibit same-sex marriages. In Alaska in 1998, voters adopted a similar amendment by a similarly overwhelming margin months after a lower court declared a right to same-sex marriage.

Conservatives also point to recent polls as an indication that even in a country that has grown more accepting of gays and lesbians, a significant number of people were not prepared for the breadth of Kennedy's opinion. After the Supreme Court decision, the number of Americans who said sexual relations between homosexuals should be legal fell from 60 percent in May to 48 percent in July, the lowest number since 1996. Polls taken after Lawrence also revealed a sudden drop in the number of Americans who said they would support civil unions for gays and lesbians, from 49 percent in May to 37 percent in August. Weyrich told me that as a result of these shifts, he has been having second thoughts about the need for conservatives to concede defeat in the culture wars. ''I have never seen people so energized and activated, even more so than at the time of Roe v. Wade,'' he said.

The outcome of the next phase of the culture wars is far from certain. But if social conservative leaders are able to convert the ambivalence of the country as a whole about gay marriage into active resistance, then Lawrence could have the paradoxical effect of setting back the cause of gay and lesbian equality at a moment when greater acceptance of gay life had seemed inevitable. This would be an unfortunate paradox, but hardly an unprecedented one.

Liberals who came of age in the postwar era like to think of the Supreme Court as a heroic check on the tyranny of the majority, and Lawrence has been heralded in this vein. But it's not clear that this picture of the court's role in the culture wars is historically accurate. In the decades after World War II, it was political agitation -- in particular, the efforts of the civil rights and women rights movements -- rather than the Supreme Court that was primarily responsible for the expansion of equality in America and the steady growth of a libertarian national consensus. On those occasions when the Supreme Court ruled in favor of expanding rights, it was typically reflecting a change in public opinion, not marching as an advance guard. For most of Earl Warren's tenure as chief justice, the court's decisions were remarkably popular with a majority of Americans. The court's decision in 1963 to ban the Lord's Prayer and the reading of Bible verses in school was supported by mainstream Protestants as well as Catholics. In the late 1960's, the court's decisions liberalizing pornography also provoked no significant backlash. As the pill, the sexual revolution and the women's movement were transforming American sexual mores, the court's opinions inspired resistance only among small groups of social conservatives, mostly evangelicals in the South.

The greatest threat to social conservatives came, as it always has, not from a crusading court but from the relentless American pressures to assimilate. With the expansion of women's equality -- along with an increase in higher education and mobility -- conservatives as well as liberals began to embrace what the sociologist Alan Wolfe has called an ethos of ''moral freedom,'' based on the laissez-faire belief that individuals should decide for themselves what it means to lead a good life. Even within more conservative, God-fearing communities, younger generations increasingly abandoned traditional attitudes, to the point at which their outlook on the importance of personal autonomy no longer differed from those of their secular counterparts. ''There is the distinct possibility,'' the sociologist James Davison Hunter wrote at the end of his authoritative book, ''Culture Wars,'' in 1991, ''that orthodox communities may become so assimilated to a progressive political . . . culture that they will not be capable of offering any effective opposition to the worldview that currently plagues them.''

But the court has not always trod carefully in the culture wars. Most notably in 1973 in Roe v. Wade, it ruled with far less restraint. In the cases involving school prayer, obscenity and sex discrimination, the court not only acted in line with a growing national consensus but it also based its decisions on clearly established constitutional law. The school prayer and obscenity decisions were rooted in the First Amendment's protections for free speech and religious freedom; even when social conservatives disagreed about the outcomes of particular cases, they could embrace the principles that supported them.

In Roe v. Wade, however, the court did something very different. It struck down abortion laws in 46 states, and it did so in a freewheeling way that even some scholars and justices who were in favor of abortion rights found constitutionally questionable. In his majority opinion, Justice Harry Blackmun said the Constitution protected the right to choose first trimester abortions, but he failed to specify where in the text or history of the Constitution this right was located.

Moreover, by striking down so many laws rather than just the draconian Texas law before it (which banned abortion in nearly all circumstances), the court largely short-circuited a national debate about abortion. Popular opinion about abortion in the early 70's was becoming more and more liberal. According to abortion rights advocates who are critics of Roe, like Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, the state legislatures would have continued to repeal the most extreme laws like the one in Texas. By cutting off that debate, the court in Roe had the effect of giving abortion rights advocates a false and complacent sense of victory; anti-abortion groups, by contrast, were energized -- they suddenly felt like martyrs instead of mere losers. A series of conservative interest groups, from the Concerned Women for America to the Moral Majority, arose in response to Roe in the 1970's and 80's, and they were initially effective. While states had been liberalizing their abortion laws before 1973, they increasingly limited access to abortion after Roe came down. These newly formed interest groups also set out to oppose pornography, gay rights and the E.R.A., to resurrect school prayer and, above all, to appoint Supreme Court justices who would reverse Roe.

Although Roe was reaffirmed in 1992, the decision has continued to distort and polarize our judicial politics long after there was any threat of its being overturned.The conservative judicial movement that arose in response to Roe led to the appointment of two justices -- Antonin Scalia and Clarence Thomas -- who continue to refuse to accept the legitimacy of Roe even after their colleagues have repeatedly reaffirmed it. Thirty years after it was decided, furthermore, Roe continues to define the terms of our nomination battles for the federal courts. In the Reagan and both Bush administrations, lower court and Supreme Court nominees were selected largely because of their perceived opposition to Roe, which was used as a litmus test of judicial virtue. The result is a polarizing gap between the moderate views of the country as a whole on abortion and the radical opposition it continues to inspire among conservative legal elites.

Might Roe serve as a cautionary tale for supporters of Lawrence? If any single Supreme Court decision can reinvigorate the culture wars today, conservatives say, the court has just handed it to them on a silver platter.

''It isn't so much the facts of the case; it's the reasoning of Kennedy's majority opinion that was really very offensive to a lot of people,'' Phyllis Schlafly, the president of the conservative Eagle Forum, told me. In Lawrence, the defendants were prosecuted for having consensual sex with each other under a Texas law that forbade sodomy by homosexuals but not by heterosexuals. Texas is one of only four states in America that banned sodomy only when committed by gays and lesbians, and the court could have struck down these four laws as a violation of the constitutional guarantee of equal protection, as Justice Sandra Day O'Connor recommended. This would have left states free to ban sodomy, as long as they did so in an evenhanded way, treating heterosexuals and homosexuals alike. Libertarian conservatives insist that they would not have objected had the court simply struck down these four discriminatory state laws. Even among evangelical and social conservatives, there is a general sense that the effort to stigmatize consensual sexual behavior as immoral has been lost among the younger generation. ''I don't think sodomy laws could be resurrected, because even most Christians believe that what is done in the privacy of one's home is not the government's business,'' Weyrich says. ''I've had a couple of my own kids say that to me.''

But instead, Kennedy's opinion for the court struck down all 13 state laws in America that ban sodomy whether committed by straight or gay people, and it did so in a particularly expansive way, citing the right to privacy and liberty ''in its spatial and more transcendent dimensions.'' Although as a political matter many Americans may agree with Kennedy's concept of liberty, its roots in the Constitution are not self-evident: the Fourth Amendment explicitly protects the privacy of the home against unreasonable searches, but no provision of the Bill of Rights clearly protects such a sweeping vision of personal autonomy. Taken to its logical conclusion, Kennedy's argument would seem to invalidate all moral restrictions on intimate associations that, it could be said, cause no harm to others -- restrictions on polygamy, for example.

The implications of Kennedy's far-ranging opinion have already begun to trigger a backlash. At a rare press conference at the end of July, President Bush went out of his way to endorse a federal definition of marriage as limited to a man and a woman, and he is facing increasing pressure from social conservatives to endorse a federal marriage amendment to the Constitution, which has been supported by the Senate majority leader, Bill Frist. Whether the marriage amendment is actually proposed and ratified -- a notoriously difficult political feat -- conservatives predict it will frame the debate about gay rights in a way that can only help them and hurt liberals. If the amendment makes it through Congress, the thinking goes, it will provoke a mini-culture war in each of the 50 state legislatures that will force Democrats to choose between alienating their liberal base, which favors gay marriage, or alienating the moderate majority, which, at least for now, appears to oppose it. Even if the amendment fizzles in Congress, social conservatives are counting on other lower-court decisions to energize their supporters by extending Lawrence to strike down restrictions on gay and lesbian behavior in public, like the exclusion of gays and lesbians from the military. ''Anything that is the outgrowth of that decision is going to have the effect of keeping the momentum going,'' Weyrich says.

The outcome of these battles is hard to predict. At the moment, Americans seem to feel differently about gay marriage than about consensual sexual behavior in private. Last June, a Gallup poll indicating that a majority disapproved of laws banning sodomy also found that 55 percent of Americans said they believed that gay marriages ''should not be recognized as valid.'' Although two-thirds of Americans now say they believe that same-sex marriage will be legal within the next hundred years, they don't appear ready for courts to enact this social revolution by judicial fiat.

Of course, attitudes evolve. Unlike the debate about abortion, in which those who believe that life begins at conception may never be persuaded to lay down their arms, there is no obvious victim in a gay marriage. If and when gay marriages become a reality, opposition to them will presumably decline over time. If the ratings for ''Queer Eye for the Straight Guy'' are a harbinger of anything, perhaps it will decline more quickly than conservatives hope.

But the constitutional case for a right to gay marriage is more hotly contested than, for example, the court's opinion in 1967 recognizing a right to interracial marriage, which was based on a solid equal-protection argument that came to be accepted by the majority of the country. Seventy-two percent of Americans opposed interracial marriage one year after the decision, but few could deny the court's conclusion that laws banning interracial marriage were based on the discriminatory belief that blacks weren't fit to marry whites. By contrast, many people who oppose gay marriage but support civil unions for gays and lesbians say they don't believe that gays and lesbians deserve less respect than heterosexuals but that there are differences between gay and straight unions that merit a semantic distinction. The history of the court's interventions in the culture wars suggests that judges should thwart the will of the majority only when the principled constitutional arguments for doing it are so overwhelmingly clear and convincing that they are easily intelligible to those who disagree. Both sides should have learned by now that relying on courts for victories that you are unable to win in the legislatures is not a recipe for enduring success.

Regardless of the fate of the gay-marriage debate, Lawrence has already turned up the heat on judicial nominations. ''This will make it all the more important that the president fulfill his promise to appoint justices like Scalia and Thomas,'' Schlafly says. ''We're tired of being betrayed by Republican presidents.'' Interest groups on both sides are now spoiling for a battle to the death over the next Supreme Court vacancy, which will inspire political passions vastly out of proportion to the actual judicial stakes.

The turn away from politics and toward the courts is almost always a sign of weakness rather than strength. But for both sides in the culture wars, the allure of the courts has proved too powerful to resist. Meanwhile, the fractious political sideshows that Lawrence has set in motion may lead not to greater equality and acceptance for gays and lesbians but to greater recriminations, suspicion and strife.

Jeffrey Rosen teaches law at George Washington University and is the legal affairs editor of The New Republic. He writes regularly for the magazine.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Editorial; Government
KEYWORDS: abortion; conservatives; culturewars; evangelicals; flipbenham; gay; homosexualagenda; judicialactivism; judicialnominees; lawrencevtexas; liberals; marriage; operationrescue; prisoners; roevwade; scotus; sodomy; south; supremecourt
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A more fair analysis than usual from the NYT. IMHO the problem with SCOTUS is they unconsciously believe they are philosopher kings in a shining city on a hill. They are quire prepared to breech their oath of office as long as they actualize whatever the leftist wisdom of the day is. Contrary to their claims SCOTUS continuously undermines self-government and democratic procedures. They are quite ready to rely on even foreign laws to govern us without any apology or hesitation.
1 posted on 09/06/2003 5:18:08 PM PDT by shrinkermd
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To: shrinkermd
A more fair analysis than usual from the NYT. IMHO the problem with SCOTUS is they unconsciously believe they are philosopher kings in a shining city on a hill. They are quire prepared to breech their oath of office as long as they actualize whatever the leftist wisdom of the day is. Contrary to their claims SCOTUS continuously undermines self-government and democratic procedures. They are quite ready to rely on even foreign laws to govern us without any apology or hesitation.

That's because they're an unelected body, and don't care what the people think. Had the Founding Fathers foreseen the abuses of SCOTUS power those Justices would be accountable to the electorate today. That's a mistake that will be hard to correct even though the people have the constitutional power to change their government via amendments.

There are some who will go down with the ship in their zeal to protect the Founder's intent to have a Court free from the influence of the people, but it is these same peope who yell the loudest about the excesses and abuses of the High Court. The fact remains that the High Court is out of control, and will, in pursuit of its personal agenda, degrade the words of the Constitution and misrepresent the intentions of the Founders. Only if the fate of the today's Justices are in the hands of today's electorate can the people be in control of their nation.

It is wise to remember that the Supreme Court can do nothing without the acquiescence of Congress. Congress has the authority to regulate the Court, but never uses it except to stop Conservative Justices from being appointed to the Federal bench. In all the rulings that have affected American society the Judiciary Committees have never held investigations into the High Courts reasons, rational, or precedents. In this respect the activism we see from the High Court is the direct result of inaction by liberal members of the Judiciary Committees.

The Court is removed from any form of control by the people, so it's to Congress the people must turn if they are to have any influence over the High Court. There will be more abuses of constitutional law by the High Court since their congressional master has dropped their leash and let them run free among the people's rights.

Stop the congressional liberals that allow the Court to run amuck, and you stop the Court from further abuses and usurpation of power. Amend the Constitution and you take power away from the liberal Congress and give it directly to the people.
3 posted on 09/06/2003 6:48:32 PM PDT by Noachian (Legislation Without Representation Is Tyranny)
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To: shrinkermd
In his majority opinion, Justice Harry Blackmun said the Constitution protected the right to choose first trimester abortions, but he failed to specify where in the text or history of the Constitution this right was located.

Because Justice Blackman was not interested in law. He was interested in advancing the secular liberal agenda.

4 posted on 09/06/2003 7:37:18 PM PDT by Zack Nguyen
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To: shrinkermd
First of all, before I go any further, I want to say that I support a Constitutional Amendment to protect traditional marriage, but considering the difficulty in amending the United Stats Constitution, I want to present another possibility in defending traditional marriage from activist judges.

Let's say that the homosexual activists get the NJ or MA Supreme court to rule in favor of homosexual marriage. Let's say that the activists then proceed to go to federal court to force other states to accept their false marriage. What follows is my analysis that suggests it is not necessarily a done deal for homosexuals to use the "full faith and credit" clause to force marriage on the other states.

First of all, and perhaps the most important, (the liberals in the media don't want you to know this), The Supreme court did not rule in Lawrence V Texas that there is a "Fundamental Right" to homosexual sodomy. In fact this is one portion of the Bowers V Hardwick ruling that was left intact.

In order for something to be found a "Fundamental Right" and therefore be subject to a much higher standard of review (Strict Scrutiny) it must be "Some principle so rooted in the traditions and conscience of the people as to be ranked as fundamental." Snyder V Commonwealth of Massachusetts, 291 US 97 (1934).

This standard was upheld more recently in Reno V Flores 507 US 292 (1993) where again the court ruled that a Fundamental Right must be considered "So rooted in the traditions and conscience of our people as to be ranked as fundamental."

Most Recently in Washington v. Glucksberg. 521 US 702 (1997) "The Court's established method of substantive due process analysis has two primary features: First, the Court has regularly observed that the Clause specially protects those fundamental rights and liberties which are, objectively, deeply rooted in this Nation's history and tradition. E.g., Moore v. East Cleveland, 431 U.S. 494, 503 (plurality opinion). Second, the Court has required a "careful description" of the asserted fundamental liberty interest. E.g., Reno v. Flores, 507 U.S. 292, 302. The Ninth Circuit's and respondents' various descriptions of the interest here at stake--e.g., a right to "determin[e] the time and manner of one's death," the "right to die," a "liberty to choose how to die," a right to "control of one's final days," "the right to choose a humane, dignified death," and "the liberty to shape death"--run counter to that second requirement. Since the Washington statute prohibits "aid[ing] another person to attempt suicide," the question before the Court is more properly characterized as whether the "liberty" specially protected by the Clause includes a right to commit suicide which itself includes a right to assistance in doing so. This asserted right has no place in our Nation's traditions, given the country's consistent, almost universal, and continuing rejection of the right, even for terminally ill, mentally competent adults. To hold for respondents, the Court would have to reverse centuries of legal doctrine and practice, and strike down the considered policy choice of almost every State. Respondents' contention that the asserted interest is consistent with this Court's substantive due process cases, if not with this Nation's history and practice, is unpersuasive. The constitutionally protected right to refuse lifesaving hydration and nutrition that was discussed in Cruzan, supra, at 279, was not simply deduced from abstract concepts of personal autonomy, but was instead grounded in the Nation's history and traditions, given the common law rule that forced medication was a battery, and the long legal tradition protecting the decision to refuse unwanted medical treatment. And although Casey recognized that many of the rights and liberties protected by the Due Process Clause sound in personal autonomy, 505 U. S., at 852, it does not follow that any and all important, intimate, and personal decisions are so protected, see San Antonio School Dist. v. Rodriguez, 411 U.S. 1, 33-34. Casey did not suggest otherwise. Pp. 15-24."

The homosexual activists cannot argue that Homosexual marriage is deeply rooted in the traditions and conscience of the American people.

In fact even in cases where the Homosexual Activists have won a right to marriage under a state constitution, those same activists courts could not rule that Homosexual Marriage was not a fundamental right. In Baehr V Lewin (The marriage case before the Hawaii Supreme Court.) The majority found: "we do not believe that a right to same-sex marriage is so rooted in the traditions and collective conscience of our people that failure to recognize it would violate the fundamental principles of liberty and justice that lie at the base of all our civil and political institutions. Neither do we believe that a right to same-sex marriage is implicit in the concept of ordered liberty, such that neither liberty nor justice would exist if it were sacrificed. Accordingly, we hold that the applicant couples do not have a fundamental constitutional right to same-sex marriage arising out of the right to privacy or otherwise."

So with a Fundamental Right argument dead in the water, the Homosexual Activists must retreat the the full faith and credit clause option.

I believe that here as well the Homosexual Activists do not have a leg to stand on. The Full Faith and Credit clause of the Constitution does not mandate that one state accept the laws of another, in addition it specifically gives Congress the Authority to provide for implementation of the Clause. (Congress has done so with the 1996 Defense of Marriage Act.)

The Supreme Court has ruled in two cases on the extent of the Full Faith and Credit Clause. The first Pacific Employers Ins Co V Industrial Accident Commission of California 306 US 493 (1939) The Court ruled : "we think the conclusion is unavoidable that the full faith and credit clause does not require one state to substitute for its own statute, applicable to persons and events within it, the conflicting statute of another state, even though that statute is of controlling force in the courts of the state of its enactment with respect to the same persons and events."

The court restated this principle in Sun Oil CO V Wortman 486 US 717 (1988) where it stated "The Full Faith and Credit Clause does not compel a state to substitute the statutes of another state for its own statutes dealing with a subject matter concerning which it is competent to legislate."

Now please keep in mind, these principles do not stop individual state supreme courts from using judicial activism to find a right to homosexual marriage in a specific state. They can only be used to stop activists winning in one state, then forceing other states to accept those false marriages.

Individual State Constitutional Amendments on Marriage will go much further than state Statutes in defending marriage in individual states from activist state courts.

Better yet would be a United States Constitutional Amendment to defend marriage once and for all, but short of that, we as conservatives, do have other options.

5 posted on 09/06/2003 7:41:21 PM PDT by MichaelWilliams18
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To: Noachian
Impeach them. That is our power over them if only our elected representatives had the guts.
6 posted on 09/06/2003 7:52:53 PM PDT by kuma
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To: MichaelWilliams18
That sounds cohesive. It would stop the complaints of the Federalists as well ^_^. The whole point with me and the Federal Marriage Ammendment is to stop the activism within the U.S. Supreme Court. Do you think they would take individual states Constitutional Ammendments to the Supremes to have them outlaw them as being against the U.S. Constitution?
8 posted on 09/06/2003 7:59:23 PM PDT by kuma
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To: Noachian
SCOTUS = Axis of Evil
9 posted on 09/06/2003 8:02:59 PM PDT by azhenfud ("He who is always looking up seldom finds others' lost change...")
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To: kuma
That is our power over them if only our elected representatives had the guts.

It's not a matter of guts. It's a matter of agenda. Congressional Liberals love the Court, so why change it?
10 posted on 09/06/2003 8:09:14 PM PDT by Noachian (Legislation Without Representation Is Tyranny)
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To: Noachian
That's because they're an unelected body, and don't care what the people think. Had the Founding Fathers foreseen the abuses of SCOTUS power those Justices would be accountable to the electorate today. That's a mistake that will be hard to correct even though the people have the constitutional power to change their government via amendments.

It the time of the Founders, the Supreme Court had little actual power, which President Andrew Jackson demonstrated to the Supremes when they issued Worcester v. Georgia (1832)

In that decision, the Supremes held that Georgia had no right to evict the Cherokees from their land in Georgia. President Jackson then issued his famous response: "[Chief Justice] Marshall has made his decision -- now let him enforce it". The Indians were moved in defiance of the Supremes

The reason Jackson could do this is that he had the ability to immediately fire any executive branch employee who did not do as he was told by Jackson. This meant that in a conflict between Jackson and the Supremes, Jackson won -- the Supremes did not command any bayonets. The Civil Service acts later changed this balance of power in favor of the courts.

That Supreme Court decision held that

11 posted on 09/06/2003 8:20:43 PM PDT by SauronOfMordor (Java/C++/Unix/Web Developer === needs a job at the moment)
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To: kuma
Most likely the activists are going to sue no matter what. Nebraska has the toughest Constitutional Amendment in the nation defending marriage. It says: Only marriage between a man and a woman shall be valid or recognized in Nebraska . The uniting of two persons of the same sex in a civil union, domestic partnership, or other similar same-sex relationship shall not be valid or recognized in Nebraska.

The activists have already taken Nebraska to Federal Court over the Amendment.

What individual State Consitutional Amendment do however, is tie the hands of Individual State courts from becoming activists and throwing out statutes that defend marriage.

12 posted on 09/06/2003 8:39:24 PM PDT by MichaelWilliams18
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To: MichaelWilliams18
"Better yet would be a United States Constitutional Amendment to defend marriage once and for all, but short of that, we as conservatives, do have other options.

Thank you. An awesome legal and political analysis. One thing I think others forget to mention is why some homosexuals want marriage.

Anyone who has dealt with troubled and troubling individuals routinely experiences the resentment and denial of pathology of any kind. For homosexuals this is frequently (but not always manifested) in a predominantly unconscious desire to prove they are "normal." Indeed, if you want a heated discussion just imply that biologically and statistically homosexuality is not "normal."

I believe this whole mess is being accentuated and dragged out by the federal judiciary since it is clear what is being asked is not to give homosexuals a particular right but to give them an unequivocal proof that their homosexuality is "normal."

13 posted on 09/06/2003 8:52:53 PM PDT by shrinkermd (i)
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To: SauronOfMordor
The Civil Service acts later changed this balance of power in favor of the courts.

And as the years went by the High Court has accumulated more power until today they have become a law making body that some say surpasses both other branches of government. They're unelected so they are unaccountable to the people, and have carte blanche to do with the Constitution as they please. This is despotism.

The fact that the liberals in Congress excuse the activism on the Court instead of taking them to task as they have the power to do means that the people have no defense against a rogue Court. Without the Congress the people cannot stop the Courts extremes. Neither the Senate nor the Executive branch will act against the Court, so the people are now subject to a despotic Court. This is not what the Founders intended.
14 posted on 09/06/2003 9:15:16 PM PDT by Noachian (Legislation Without Representation Is Tyranny)
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To: shrinkermd
This reminds me of Ann Coulter's observations in "Slander" of the left's use of the "religious right" as a Orwellian-style "Goldberg," defeated and then resurrected every time an opponent is needed. Must be resurrection time now.
15 posted on 09/07/2003 10:27:11 AM PDT by mvpel (Michael Pelletier)
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To: shrinkermd; scripter; *Homosexual Agenda; GrandMoM; backhoe; pram; Yehuda; Clint N. Suhks; ...
Bump and ping.

Scripter will be off line occasionally between now and the middle of September. I've agreed to help him out by running his homosexual agenda ping list.

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A simple freepmail is all it takes to subscribe to or unsubscribe from scripter's homosexual agenda ping list. If you wish to be added to the list in scripter's absence, please FReepmail me.

16 posted on 09/08/2003 6:39:04 AM PDT by EdReform (Support Free Republic - Become a Monthly Donor)
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To: shrinkermd
is clear what is being asked is not to give homosexuals a particular right but to give them an unequivocal proof that their homosexuality is "normal."

And the corollary is that homosexuals also want us to "believe" and even "testify" that same sex acts, in addition to being "normal" are also RIGHT and morally proper. This is the foundation of hate speech laws, sensitivity training, Freshman Orientation weeks including "gay" training, on and on ad infinitum.

If they continue to hold sway legally and politically, we will not be allowed to think or state that same sex acts are abnormal, unhealthy, or wrong.

But even if the homoexual activists succeed, the voice in their hearts will still be there, telling them: "What you are doing is wrong, unhealthy, and abnormal."

17 posted on 09/08/2003 8:10:09 AM PDT by First Amendment
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Comment #18 Removed by Moderator

Comment #19 Removed by Moderator

To: upright_citizen
"My basic point is, the judiciary is the only branch of government that is not directly liable to the masses; furthermore, this is vital to the balance of power.

There's no way you and I are going to agree on the role of the Judiciary in today's government. Let me say that this isn't the 1700's, and the intended role of the Judiciary at that time wasn't as a law making body, nor did it usurp power from the Legislature.

Times have changed and with it the role of the Judiciary. Any cursory inspection of the Founders writing will show they never meant for the High Court to be unaccountable to the people, or to be a law making body superior to the Congress. The People once had access to the Judiciary via their representatives in Congress. That is no longer the case. No Judicial committee from either the House or Senate has held hearings on, or investigations into, the Supreme Courts judicial activism, making the Congress equally liable for the Courts excesses. There is no action that cn be taken against the Court aside from Congress, and with the "shield" of Congress taken from them the people are naked before the Court and without recourse.

The judiciary's purpose is to prevent "tyranny of the majority,"

You're forgetting the tyranny of the Judiciary. An old, but true, maxim: "Power corrupts; Absolute power corrupts absolutely." Common sense must tell you that any politician who has no accountablity, can make law with impunity, and is unremovable from office will in time abuse the trust, and authority, given to him. This is human nature. A review of the High Court's past rulings reveals it to be exceeding its Constitutional authority, and no longer does its vow to protect and defend the Constitution ring true.

What you're trying to defend is pure Republicanism as the Founders saw it and that's admirable, but leaving the High Court to wreak further havoc on this nation would be foolheardy. The Founders gave the People the means to change their government should one branch amass too much power. They thought it would be the Executive branch, not the Judiciary, but they put controls on the Judiciary as well which the Congress doesn't use.

As I said in the opening of this post: "There's no way you and I are going to agree..." But, consider this: without changing any Judicial structure from the way it is now, Congress can at any time of its choosing hold hearings to investigate the rational, precedents, and logic behind recent High Court decisions affecting American society. A perfect example would be the expected upcoming case involving the Alabama Ten Commandments that's winding its way slowly toward the Supreme Court. Because that case will involve basic First Amendment law the Congressional Judiciary Committees should be gearing up for hearings on the outcome no matter which way it goes.

But, the Congress is doing nothing. There will be no hearings, although Congress is mandated to regulate the Judiciary. There will be no investigations either.

If the "majority" very strongly objects to a decision by the courts, there are then recourses they can take to 1) amend constitutions and 2) impeach judges.

It takes Congress to do that, and as I've said Congress will do nothing .

Since the objection to Lawrence by the masses doesn't approach unanimity, congress won't use it as a reason to amend the constitution ...

How does anyone know if unanimity has been reached or not? What has Congress done to find out?

All of this produces a "smell" that leaves the people with no congressional champion, and no way to hold the High Court accountable through the Congress.
20 posted on 09/09/2003 4:20:45 PM PDT by Noachian (Freedom belongs to the vigilant, the suspicious and the paranoid.)
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