The Dangerous Supreme Court
by
Kevin R. C. Gutzman
Previously
by Kevin R. C. Gutzman: The
Vision of the Founders: Dead and Gone
The schoolboy
version of the American system of government centers on the three-branch
structure of the Federal Government established by the ratification
of the Constitution in 1788. Integral to that structure are a system
of checks and balances among those three branches and the division
of powers between the Federal Government and the states. The Tenth
Amendment makes that federalism principle explicit.
The dirty little
secrets, however, are that the division of powers disappeared long
ago, and the checks and balances do not work. Instead of a decentralized,
republican system in which the Federal Government bears responsibility
for only a few issues, then, Americans now groan under an unlimited
central government whose taxing, spending, borrowing, and printing
seemingly know no limits either of law or of sense.
In light of
their distended significance, Supreme Court justices now occasionally
bless the rest of us with their ruminations. The latest specimen
of the genre is John Stevens’ Five
Chiefs: A Supreme Court Memoir.
To read through
this tome is to be struck by the unalloyed banality of both Stevens’
writing and his mind. Stevens spent thirty-four years on the Court,
and yet the 282 pages in his book include a 32-page Appendix reproducing
the Constitution, the signatures affixed to the Constitution, and
the amendments, two pages of acknowledgements, and several blank
pages. In addition, he gives thirty pages over to an extremely shallow
account of the history of the Supreme Court up to the middle of
the twentieth century.
An impressive
intellect might have turned the excursion through the Court’s early
history to good effect. Stevens, on the other hand, seems not to
recognize the ways in which events he glosses over laid the groundwork
for his own career.
For example,
Stevens’ account of Chief Justice Roger B. Taney’s tenure as chief
justice is notably brief. Its one paragraph merely summarizes the
Court’s outrageous decision in Dred Scott v. Sandford (1857)
and says that, "The only good thing that can be said about
that case is that Abraham Lincoln’s criticism of it in his famous
debates with Stephen Douglas received nationwide attention and helped
get him elected president." (p. 20)
Yet, Stevens
actually based much of his performance as an associate justice on
the foundation of Dred Scott. It was after all in Dred
Scott that the Court invented the idea of what scholars and
judges alike now call "substantive due process." That
idea is that the Fifth Amendment’s statement that, "nor shall
any person … be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without
due process of law" did more than guarantee that before one
could be punished, he must first be afforded all of the incidents
of the traditional Anglo-American adversarial process.
No, the Fifth
Amendment’s Due Process Clause was used in Dred Scott as
an empty vessel into which seven entirely partisan Democratic justices
could pour their desired partisan outcome: a holding that Congress
could not bar slavery from the western territories. Far from merely
procedural, as it seemed to be (and had always been thought to be),
the Due Process Clause was substantive.
When in the
1860s Congress came to draft the Fourteenth Amendment, it inserted
a clause nearly identical to the Fifth Amendment’s Due Process Clause,
this time applying the requirement to the states. Beginning in the
early 20th century, federal judges used this provision
as an empty vessel into which they could pour all of their favorite
policy outcomes, this time making them enforceable against the states.
Stevens in
the slim portion of the book on his own career trumpets various
rights-creating lines of the Court’s recent product, such as the
cases in which the justices invented various sexual rights enforceable
against the states, various religious rights enforceable against
the states, etc. He calls some of these outcomes "correct"
without ever saying how one can know which outcome is correct.
Stevens makes
clear what he does not mean: that the outcome is consistent
with the intention of the people in adopting a particular legal
or constitutional provision. He provides only the assertion that
one must not be guided by any such intention.
Here we find
the fundamental theoretical shortcoming of the current American
regime: that no one ever consented to it. As I showed in The
Politically Incorrect Guide to the Constitution, federal
judges long ago abandoned the notion that constitutional interpretation
was about, well, interpretation. Instead, Taney-like, they use constitutional
cases – and, when it comes to enforcing made-up individual rights
against state governments, Taney’s Dred Scott doctrine of
substantive due process – as opportunities to impose their will.
This problem
was uniquely grievous in the case of Justice Stevens. As the sole
Supreme Court appointee of President Gerald Ford, Stevens was the
sole justice appointed by a man who had never been elected either
president or vice president. Even if one accepted the legitimacy
of substantive due process as a way for people indirectly elected
to enforce their superior wisdom on the rest of us, then, it would
still be hard to see how Ford’s appointment of Stevens could justify
wide-ranging legislative behavior by Stevens.
Stevens blithely
accepts that the Supreme Court is a kind of super-legislature. Indeed,
Five Chiefs gives not the slightest indication that Stevens
has ever considered this matter. One might wonder whether he has
thought about the Constitution much at all. For example, I am certain
that every student in my recently concluded undergraduate course
in American Constitutional History knows that the Bill of Rights
is the first ten amendments to the US Constitution. Stevens, on
the other hand, refers to "the first eight amendments to the
Constitution, commonly described as the Bill of Rights." (p.
19)
No, this doubtless
is not a typographical or editorial mistake. Rather, it reflects
the Hamiltonian approach to federal power taken by virtually all
of our ruling elite today. As
James Madison and his fellows explained the Constitution, it was
to create a few islets of federal power in a sea of liberty.
The Bill of Rights’ purpose was to ensure that the limits on the
Federal Government’s power were respected, and thus to help
preserve the principle of subsidiarity so integral to the Constitution’s
original structure.
Thus, the Ninth
Amendment said that the list of rights earlier in the Constitution
was not exclusive, and the Tenth said that all powers not given
to the Federal Government by the Constitution or denied by it to
the states were reserved to the states or the people. Clearly, neither
of these amendments serves the purpose of Stevens and the like,
whose goal is to impose their will regardless of petty issues like
popular consent. They have ignored the Ninth and Tenth Amendments
for so long that, like a Trotskyite of old, those amendments no
longer appear in the official photos. Now, the Constitution as they
understand it stands for a few small islets of liberty in a sea
of power.
Stevens’ ideas
thus reflect not some well-considered jurisprudential perspective,
but the Common Wisdom of our Betters. Rather than burdening readers
with discussion of such matters, Stevens devotes more than two pages
of his book – a memoir of thirty-five years on the Supreme Court
– to an explanation of the placement of the conference table in
the room where justices meet to discuss pending cases. (pp. 212-14)
Utter inanity.
Numerous journalists
have spilled lakes of ink describing absurdly low-brow discussion
in American legislative bodies. John Paul Stevens’ memoir shows
why we should not assume that decision-making by unelected, unaccountable,
politically connected lawyers meeting in secret in Washington is
a superior alternative to parliamentary politics. If you have a
low opinion of American legislators, you ought to favor less government,
not government by judiciary. Come to think of it, that was the Constitution’s
bias as well. At least, as it was originally understood.
December
16, 2011
Kevin
R. C. Gutzman, J.D., Ph.D. [send
him mail], Associate Professor of History at Western Connecticut
State University, is the author of Virginia's
American Revolution: From Dominion to Republic, 1776-1840 (newly
available in paperback) and The
Politically Incorrect Guide to the Constitution. He
is also the co-author, with Thomas E. Woods, Jr., of Who
Killed the Constitution? The Fate of American Liberty from World
War I to George W. Bush. His latest book is James
Madison and the Making of America.
Copyright
© 2011 by LewRockwell.com. Permission to reprint in whole or in
part is gladly granted, provided full credit is given.
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