Death Penalty Defense Atty, Chief Public Defender's Office, CT
President Bush has assured the nation that Ms. Miers will handle this problem by sticking to a "strict construction" of the Constitution. She will not "legislate" from the bench. Now this may sound perfectly clear to many Americans, especially those who have been frustrated by the direction the Court has taken in recent times, but there's just one problem: The idea of "strict construction" is a myth.
The complex truth about the U.S. Constitution is that many of its most important concepts are written in ambiguous terms. We are all guaranteed the freedom from "unreasonable" searches. "Equal Protection" and "Due Process" are among our most cherished rights. Yet while we may all agree that these protections are laudable, we often have considerable difficulty deciding exactly what these terms should mean. The Constitution surely means what it says, but very often it falls short of saying what it means. How are we to know what "process" is "due?" When will we be able to tell that "protection" is "equal?" What kind of searches are "reasonable" and what kinds are not? No, the idea of "strict construction" doesn't get you very far when it comes to figuring out what these words, among the most important in our law, are to mean.
Constitutional scholars will tell you that there are numerous theories about how judges should go about filling in these blanks. Justice Scalia calls himself an "originalist." He looks for what the founding fathers would have meant by the term when they adopted it, and that's the meaning he tries to give it. Yet this approach is also beset with at least two major problems. First, figuring out what a group of men meant 200 years ago is not always easy. Where records exist at all, they are often far from clear and frequently contradictory. The Founders were a spirited bunch and they often disagreed about the meaning of what they were writing. Second, deferring to the intent of a handful of long-dead men from a different century doesn't seem a great deal more "democratic" than deferring to a group of judges on the bench today. Is legislating from the grave really better than legislating from the bench?
"Non-Originalists" take a whole different approach. Scholars and judges who subscribe to this school take many forms, but generally tend to see the ambiguity of clauses like "due process" and "equal protection" as a good thing. To their way of thinking, the vagueness of these terms is part of the genius of our Constitution because it invites the Constitution to evolve over time, incorporating changing notions about our most basic principles. Current perceptions of equality would never tolerate making African Americans sit at the back of a bus. Fairness in this era means we do things like make sure people have a lawyer before we attempt to take away their freedom. "Non-Originalists" believe it is right and good to interpret the Constitution's ambiguities according to modern realities, even if those realities are in themselves sometimes ambiguous or at odds with the way the Founders might have done things.
This is but a glance at a subject that has consumed some of our greatest legal minds since the principle of judicial review was first established in Marbury v. Madison in 1803. It's important and it is not simple. Neither Harriet Miers nor anyone else who might serve on the Court will be able to "strictly construe" the U.S. Constitution. To suggest that this is possible is to perpetuate a myth upon the American public. Harriet Miers, like all Justices, will need to find the meaning of the Constitution's ambiguous but critical guarantees elsewhere. The "elsewhere" she finds will not derive from any simplistic absolute about how the Constitution should be interpreted. It will derive from who she is as a person and whether or how she might evolve as a person over time. That's the nature of our Constitutional beast, and it is exactly as simple or complex as the person who is wearing the robe.
What really gets me is how anxious all these congressmen are to grandstand on the issue. After years of rolling over and closing their eyes while swallowing the administration's blatant lies about little matters like war and poisoning the environment, these guys act like they've just been paroled and are finally out to save the world. For all the righteous indignation generated in these hearings you'd think these guys had just discovered there were no weapons of mass destruction.
Yep, the most astonishing thing about the high octane level of these hearings is how roundly it damns the lack of it when things really matter.
NOTE TO DEMS: Your participation in this circus may be unavoidable, but
FLIP
The Party has been strongest and most true to its roots when it has been the party of progressive populism. We are the party that wins when it fights to improve the lives of regular Americans. We are the party of workplace safety, fair labor, Social Security, Medicare/Medicaid, equal treatment for all, and keeping the environment safe from greedy corporate polluters.
We are the Party that looks out for the little guy.
This bankruptcy bill is a sop to rich corporate interests at the expense of all those common folks that Democrats have traditionally attempted to champion. For any Democrat to do anything but vigorously oppose it is for them to essentially label themselves a DINO.
At a time when every Democrat bemoans our lack of direction and purpose the answer is obvious. We are and must return to our roots as "The Party of the People."
VOICEOVER: You know, the President wants you to take the word of a child when it comes to privatizing Social Security. Now we admit, he's pretty impressive, but we thought you might want to hear from someone else..."
Fade into headshot of an wise looking articulate elderly man looking into the camera...
"When I was nine my dad lost everything we had in the stock market crash that started the great depression. We had to live off friends and family. It was humiliating. My Social Security check makes sure that no matter what happens, I'll be able to keep my basic human dignity. Sometimes it takes a lifetime to appreciate what you've got."
Fade to still-frame close-up of Noah McCullough.
Fade to black with Caption: "Call your Senators and Congressperson today and ask them to oppose the President's reckless scheme to privatize Social Security."
My sense from following this story as its emerged on the blogs is that everyone here understands that it's the propaganda and inside access to Plame stuff that's most important, and that the hotmilitarystuds angle is an interesting sidelight, relevant primarilly for showcasing Gannon's hypocracy. It's news in the same way that televangist affairs are news. They debunk the "holier than thou" self-righteousness that these guys sell like popcorn, but they really don't have a lot of societal impact.
Now, as this story gathers steam and gets further into the MSM, it strikes me that we need to be thinking about how to counteract the WH spin machine and get the information out there accurately.
flip it
"Now my granddaughter's lost her job and can't afford her blood pressure medicine."
"Maybe next time, I'll vote on a different set of values"
Screen fades to black. "Vote Democratic. The Real Party of Values."
For more like this go to: http://www.attackadoftheday.blogspot.com
VOICEOVER: "It looks like Sally's in the black."
Fades to black with the words 2025. Then into a picture of a grown up Sally, working as a janitor sweeping an institutional-style hallway.
VOICEOVER: "Not Anymore."
Fade to black with the words. "Sally's share of the national debt: $36,000 dollars. Courtesy the Republicans in Congress, the Senate and the White House."
Fade through black with the words: "Fight the Birth Tax. Vote Democratic. "
"Clink. Clink. Clink."
Fades into Rumsfeld at Congress, "2003" superimposed.
Rummy says,"The cost of this war will be borne by Iraqi people who have huge oil reserves."
"Clink. Clink. Clink."
Fade into Rummy at Congress again, "2004" superimposed.
Rummy says, "This appropriation of 87 Billion is necessary to assure the liberation of Iraq."
"Clink. Clink. Clink."
Fade to grainy picture of Rummy."February 7, 2005" superimposed.
Fade to superimposed QUOTE FROM A.P., "Congress has already approved another $25 billion for this year."
FADE TO BLACK WITH "February 9, 2005" superimposed.
FADE TO SUPERIMPOSED HEADLINE FROM Chicago Tribune,"Red-Ink Budget Doesn't Include Costs of War."
Sound of thousands of coins falling and bouncing around all at once.
RATE THIS AD IN THE POLL BELOW THE FLIP...
For more go to: http://www.attackadoftheday.blogspot.com/.
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