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Thursday, December 14, 2006
Thomas Sowell :: Townhall.com Columnist
Supreme Farce: Part II
by Thomas Sowell
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From time to time, the Supreme Court of the United States makes a decision that causes anger or outrage, but that reaction usually passes with time, especially since there is nothing the public can do about it -- either to change the decision or to remove from the bench those who made it.

This has emboldened many federal judges at all levels to take advantage of their lifetime appointments to make rulings that impose their own personal views and call it law. Some have even added insult to injury by rationalizing such judicial activism.

In a recent interview, Justice Stephen Breyer claimed that laws are "not clear," so that judges are forced to base their decisions on the "values" they see behind the laws, rather than the specific words in those laws.

"Not clear" is an old ploy and "values" are a blank check.

Most of the controversial Supreme Court decisions that have outraged and polarized the country have not involved laws or facts that were "not clear." Everybody knows what an abortion is and what the death penalty is.

Everybody knows the difference between government's power to seize private property for "public use," like building a reservoir or a bridge, and allowing politicians to grab people's homes willy-nilly, in order to turn the property over to some other private parties, such as owners of casinos, hotels or shopping malls.

"Not clear"? Even the most crystal-clear law in the world can be twisted by clever lawyers and clever judges to seem unclear, if that is all it takes to give them the power to impose their own notions as the law of the land.

To people who want to see judges impose their own views instead of applying the laws as written, "not clear" is a magic phrase like "open sesame," opening the floodgates to unbridled judicial power.

The people who use this foolish argument are not fools themselves, though they may well regard the rest of us as fools enough to buy some pretty words, at the cost of losing the right of free people to govern themselves through the democratic process.

Very often both headstrong judges and those who support them in the media and in academia act as if these elites have both the right and the duty to impose their superior wisdom and virtue on the rest of us.

Many are unduly impressed by their superiority to others within some narrow band out of the vast spectrum of human concerns. From the fact that they know so much more than the average person, at least within that narrow band, they assume that they have more knowledge than all the millions of average people put together, across the whole spectrum of concerns involved in decisions. Continued...

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About The Author
Thomas Sowell is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institute and author of Basic Economics: A Citizen's Guide to the Economy.
 
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Subject: gunner
Certainly activist judges are a problem. So far I haven't seen too many of Breyer's opinions that makes me think he is activist. However, your description of activism particularly applies to Scalia's dissent in Lawrence v. Texas. Interestingly I wouldn't call Thomas an activist (just Scalia).

doublespeak example
An appropriate example of the supreme court's doublespeak is as follows: When black kids were bussed past the local neighborhood school, it was called segregation. When my white kid is bussed past the local neighborhood school, it is called integration.
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