If you are a student of the history of the United States ,
particularly of its founding, and if you are in addition a constitutional
scholar, including some experience reading the writings of the writers of the
Constitution, you can take some solace in knowing that your second answer used
to be right. It was right for most of
the first 100 years of the history of the United States , and remained right
for another 50 years or so after that, although things were already changing in
the late 1800s.
In the latter part of the 1800s the Progressive movement,
and its fellow travelers the Positivist legal scholars, asserted its voice in America with
the notion that law was not at all really connected to natural law as the
Founders believed and intended. In the
Progressive/Positivist view, law was whatever lawmakers wanted it to be, and
that extended to how the Constitution was to be interpreted. The Constitution was a collection of written
words, words whose meanings were to be interpreted by the new supreme legislature,
the Supreme Court, to accommodate the Progressive/Positivist agenda.
The whole idea of a constitution is that there are some
fundamental, basic laws that do not change, or that change only by the specific
decision and action of super majorities of the population (super majorities to
ensure that the rights of minorities are safeguarded). To preserve their integrity those fundamental
laws are written down and taught and embraced from generation to
generation. In the United States ,
it was on the basis of written constitutions that our nation came together,
first the Articles of Confederation, and later the Constitution.
The Constitution of the United States begins with the
words, “We the People”. All of these
were new, exceptional ideas. The approach
at the time in the rest of the world was, “You the People”, with a despot,
monarch, or some small group of people governing the rest of the
population. In America things
were different, and the Founders sought to enshrine and perpetuate that
difference within strong bands of a written constitution and the division of
governmental power prescribed and
preserved by the Constitution.
It does not seem so different or exceptional anymore. It seems that today the law, constitutional
or otherwise, can be changed or written by five out of nine unelected people in
black robes issuing their decrees from a Greek temple in Washington, D.C. The rest of the 313 million who make up We
the People have no more say about it.
That is tolerable, and even desirable if these nine, or the five of the
nine, limit themselves to enforcing the laws and Constitution that the people
themselves have established through constitutional process. It becomes intolerable when they just make it
up, as they have been increasingly doing since the 1930s. That is not law. It is tyrannical lawlessness.
This is very real to the 313 million who are expected to
follow the dictates of this tiny legislature.
Under the influence of the lawless behavior of the members of the
Supreme Court and their failure to uphold the Constitution, lawlessness and
lack of respect for the Constitution are spreading throughout the American
system of government. In very recent
years we have witnessed a narrow majority in the Congress, violating its own
procedures, pass legislation that obviously violated the Constitution. The executive branch, suspected by the
nation’s Founders as ever prone to plans to oppress the people, has exerted an
increasingly cavalier attitude toward the Constitution.
These lawless acts themselves are not trivial. They were explicitly designed to restrict the
freedoms of the people, whether with regard to their healthcare choices, how
they conduct their financial affairs, or how they find, develop, and use energy—all
pretty fundamental to the way that the people live their daily lives. Under the rule of law we would look to the
courts (among other places) to uphold the law and turn back unconstitutional
and thus lawless efforts to take away the rights of the people. Too often lately we look to the courts in
vain. It is far from a sure thing these
days that the Court will come to the rescue of the Constitution and the
freedoms it was written to protect, witness the suspense that precedes each new decision.
The recent Obamacare decision is the latest and most painful
insult to “We the People” yet to come from the Supreme Legislature. For now, the Five have said that the Commerce
Clause of the Constitution cannot be used to force Americans to buy health
insurance. No need. The Five decided that the taxing authority can
be used to force people to do whatever our leaders in Washington want us to do—although they
failed to indicate which taxing authority was used.
The Founders were chary with the taxing authority that they
extended to Washington ,
putting strong walls and tight rules around its exercise. Remember, it took an amendment to the Constitution
to allow an income tax. Obamacare is not
an income tax, or any of the other constitutionally allowed taxes. Yet a tax it is, now decreed by the five of
the nine Justices, that can be applied to anyone—and the anyone is mostly
younger adults—who choose in the future not to buy health insurance. The Five did not say what we might next be forced by taxes to do: that is
just a blank that they have left for people in Washington to fill.
In the days when the Constitution was the highest law of the
land one of its great defenders, Daniel Webster, declared in a pleading before
the Supreme Court that, “The power to tax is the power to destroy.” The Chief Justice of that Court, John
Marshall, quoted and enshrined that thought in his ruling, McCulloch v. Maryland. Today
that power is now available, at the will of the Five, to destroy the freedoms
of the people, freedoms that the Constitution and the earliest Courts served to
protect.
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