Townhall.com, Where Your Opinion Counts
Talk Radio:   Bill Bennett   Mike Gallagher   Dennis Prager   Michael Medved   Hugh Hewitt   
TOP NEWS   LeftArrow - Townhall.com   RightArrow - Townhall.com  
Columns, funnies & more in your inbox!

Monday, May 19, 2008
California, here we come…
Posted by: Fred Thompson at 9:50 AM

Nowadays everyone feels entitled to their Andy Warhol-esque “15 minutes of fame.” Fairly normal people will bust a gut to get a few seconds on television. Physical harm is likely for anyone standing between a camera and blow-hard politicians desirous of hawking legislation they and everyone else know will never be enacted. The rich and vacuous, seeking to make a difference, weigh in against the world’s problems to great fanfare amidst black ties and eco-talk press conferences.

And all of them seem to be making lots and lots of money.

Now, consider the plight of the poor jurist in all this, especially appellate judges. Often a lot smarter and making a fraction of the money than the lawyers who appear before them, they labor in obscurity with only their clerks and a handful of others in the legal community appreciating their brilliance and understanding how truly important they are.

Picture them as they retire to their chambers to study some obscure point of law that nobody cares about but the litigious ingrates in the case before them. His Honor has little opportunity for grand gestures or heroic initiatives.

The judge’s job is simply to apply to the circumstances of the cases that are brought to their court the laws that have been written by lesser mortals. The job requires restraint, modesty, and reverence for the established rules of society. The judge is obliged to uphold the status quo until the people decide to change it. Where is the glory in that, for Pete’s sake?

Then, like manna from Heaven, “The Case” comes before his court – the case that can change his ignominious plight. With a few of his like-minded colleagues, he can, in effect, reshape the legal landscape, become a leader of a great cause, get the publicity equivalent to the cover of Rolling Stone, and be hailed be the mainstream press. It dawns on him that he and his buddies on the court can do things that those politicians could never achieve – things that the unenlightened, unwashed herd, otherwise known as “the people” would probably never choose to do.

Now that’s real power! That’s delivering “change we deserve.” All he and a few of his colleagues have to do is discover in their constitution a right previously unknown that has been hiding there in plain sight for about 150 years.

Ladies and gentleman, I give you the California supreme court majority and their recent opinion in the same-sex marriage complaints filed by multiple San Francisco gay couples.

On a more serious note, this decision follows “judicial lawmaking” on the subject by courts in Massachusetts, New Jersey, Vermont, and Iowa (though many other state courts have heeded their limitations), and causes supporters of the rule of law and the will of the people to rally in response. Those in California say that they will fight for a constitutional amendment. This response highlights the invidious effects of this kind of judicial activism, which reverses the way things are supposed to work in our legal system. These courts, with the stroke of a pen, are now, in effect, amending their constitutions and placing the burden of changing it back (usually a very difficult task), on the people.

Nationally, as a result of this case, there will undoubtedly be renewed calls for a federal constitutional amendment outlawing same-sex marriage. Conservatives should resist the temptation to support such a remedy. States must solve this problem for themselves. They cannot and should not be saved from themselves or absolved of the responsibility that they have, a responsibility protected against federal intrusion by the Tenth Amendment.

In the first place, playing the game of judicial activists, and leaping to the federal-constitutional-amendment remedy every time judges misread the constitution and change the law, is a fool’s errand. Passing two-thirds of both houses of Congress and three-quarters of the state legislatures has proven to be an impossible hurdle for the marriage amendment and many other proposed constitutional amendments, even when Republicans controlled Congress.

More fundamentally, the issue presented is not whether conservatives will get their way on the issue of same-sex marriage. The issue is, in our system of government, determining the appropriate place for this issue to be decided. For over 200 years marriage and related issues have been the province of state, not federal law. That is where it should remain. States, acting within their appropriate and constitutionally vested realm, should be free to have laws that even you and I disagree with as long as they do not violate established constitutional principles.

For years, legal critics clamored for federal tort reform, which for most of them meant the overriding of state law. After years of unsuccessful efforts by reformers, states finally started accepting their responsibility. State after state passed tort-reform legislation, and maintained their rights to fashion their reform measures as they saw fit with the happy byproduct of lower insurance rates and an influx of new businesses. Those states which do not act, or act unwisely, face a competitive disadvantage with other states …as they should. This is called – say it all together – federalism. It is an important part of our constitutional framework, based upon our founders’ abhorrence of too much centralized power.

So, more power to the people of California in their uphill battle for an amendment to their state constitution. But the real, long-term solution in the future for supporters of the rule of law is ensuring the selection and election of good judges, judges who know their role in a constitutional republic, in the first place, and holding them – and the politicians who appoint and confirm them – accountable.





FEATURES FEATURES

Barack "Makes One Thing Perfectly Clear"

Posted by: Michael Medved
7/8/2008

Hey, You Can't Post There!

Posted by: Michele Bachmann
7/8/2008

"What He Did to Get That Money"

Posted by: Michael Medved
7/8/2008

Your Blog Postings:
Last updated 47 Minutes 1 Seconds Ago
Last updated 1 Hours 8 Minutes 51 Seconds Ago
Last updated 1 Hours 10 Minutes 12 Seconds Ago
Last updated 1 Hours 12 Minutes 12 Seconds Ago
Last updated 1 Hours 14 Minutes 19 Seconds Ago
 

Archives Archives

Blog Search



Townhall Blogs Townhall Blogs
Columns Columns
Your Blogs Your Blogs
By Month
 July 2008
 June 2008
 May 2008
 April 2008
 March 2008
 February 2008
 January 2008
 December 2007
 November 2007
 October 2007
 September 2007
 August 2007
 July 2007
 June 2007
 May 2007
 April 2007
 March 2007
 February 2007
By Issue
 A Culture of Life
 Budget & Government
 Campaigns & Elections
 Education
 Energy & Environment
 Faith & Family
 Foreign Affairs
 Health Care
 Immigration
 Jobs & Economy
 Judges & Courts
 Media & Culture
 Property Rights
 Safety & Security
 Science & Technology
 Second Amendment
 Social Security
 Tax Relief
Advertisement

Comments Comments

Me too
 Re: The Obamas' Critique of You, Americans
  By daledog
What's a Christian?
 Re: Why aren't Obama supporters PATRIOTIC?
  By hambones
Problem Understood, What's The Solution?
 Re: Now, If the GOP Only Had a Message
  By founding_papa
paddy & Neocopscum
 Re: The Two Campaigns At Summer's Start
  By Elizabeth
Sheesh People
 Re: Three GOP VP Lists to Choose From ...
  By mariesgofer
hmm, so that working group Obama
 Re: Barack "Makes One Thing Perfectly Clear"
  By Ana Mus
row
 Re: Convention Fight on the Right?
  By MaineConservative
MaryS...Amen !
 Re: Iran, Obama and The Gathering Storm
  By NeoConScum
McCain's VP Who cares?
 Re: Three GOP VP Lists to Choose From ...
  By Don
The Libraries
 Re: "What He Did to Get That Money"
  By Kathleen
Good question!
 Re: Why aren't Obama supporters PATRIOTIC?
  By My Pet Goat
Highlights
 Re: Greta vs. Anderson
  By My Pet Goat
Pro
 Re: "Romney Tops McCain Veep List"
  By PC
K.G, - right on
 Re: "Romney Tops McCain Veep List"
  By PC
Shelby - Heck, I don't know
 Re: Three GOP VP Lists to Choose From ...
  By PC
Mormonism's voting relevence, pt. 2
 Re: "Romney Tops McCain Veep List"
  By Pro
PC - ditto that
 Re: Three GOP VP Lists to Choose From ...
  By Shelby
You suck Paulo
 Re: Iran, Obama and The Gathering Storm
  By arch
Sorry KG
 Re: Barack "Makes One Thing Perfectly Clear"
  By King Liberal
Salty Alaskan
 Re: Iran, Obama and The Gathering Storm
  By arch

The Latest on Town HallThe Latest on Town Hall


Blog Roll Blog Roll