By Alan
Caruba
Perhaps
the stupidest idea given an airing in a recent edition of The New York Times is
Prof. Louis Michael Seidman’s opinion,
“Let’s Give Up on the Constitution.”
According to his commentary, Prof.
Seidman has “taught constitutional law for almost 40 years” and he was “ashamed”
it took him that long to conclude that it was an outdated, “bizarre” document.
Apparently President Obama, who was a
lecturer in constitutional law at the University of Chicago Law School, arrived
at that conclusion more swiftly. His disregard for the Constitution recently got
a slap down from the courts that ruled his recess appointments to the labor
relations board were unconstitutional insofar as the Senate was not in
recess.
I am
not a constitutional scholar, but it should be self-evident that the oldest
living constitution in the world has served to create and maintain the greatest
republic in the world. Prof. Seidman asserts that Americans have “an obsession”
with the Constitution and that is a very good thing indeed. Without it, we would
likely have fallen prey to tyranny.
The
framers of the Constitution did not spring it on their fellow citizens as a fait
accompli, but rather as a new instrument of governance to replace the failed
Articles of Confederation. A literate population was able to read the Federal
Papers that argued for its various elements. It was submitted to the
legislatures of the states for ratification.
We can
thank those legislatures for the Bill of Rights because they insisted on
amendments that would protect the right of free speech, freedom of the press,
freedom of religion, the right to bear arms, and other elements that protect the
individual against abuses of power that we take for granted, but which exist
throughout the world. It can be argued that the Arab Spring that overthrew a
number of Middle Eastern despots are a reflection of those rights as understood
by citizens in nations that have never enjoyed them.
We tend
to forget that many nations even today are ruled by monarchs and others
exercising power that denies their citizens any definition of freedom. The
Founding Fathers, having fought a long war against the English monarch and his
parliament, were particularly sensitive to that, creating an instrument of
governance that deliberately created a system of checks and balances to ensure
that no President or Congress could act in a manner contrary to the intent of
the Constitution.
The
Constitution intended to slow down the process of legislation to ensure it
received a full debate and was not subject to the whims of the times. In a
January 2011 policy analysis published by the Cato Institute, Marcus E. Ethridge
noted that “In the wake of the 2010 elections, President Obama declared that
voters did not give a mandate to gridlock. His statement reflects over a century
of Progressive hostility to the inefficient and slow system of government
created by the American Framers,” adding that “A large and growing body of
evidence makes it clear that the public interest is most secure when government
institutions are inefficient decision makers.”
The
most recent example of this was the 2,000-plus page Patient Protection and
Affordable Care Act (Obamacare). At the time, then Speaker of the House, Nancy
Pelosi, famously said that “We have to pass the bill so that you can find out
what’s in it.” That’s the opposite of what the Framers had in mind and
is an example of what happens when a political party acts in a tyrannical
manner. We are already finding out that Obamacare is causing healthcare
insurance rates to increase and will deny healthcare to older Americans and
others deemed by bureaucrats to be a burden on the system.
Even
so, the Supreme Court which is supposed to protect Americans from abuses of the
Constitution, deemed Obamacare to be a “tax” and thus legal. The Obama
administration had argued that it was not a tax until it got in front of the
Court. The Court had long since dropped the ball, allowing the Commerce Clause
to be stretched beyond its intent to permit Congress to justify all manner of
legislation and regulation of the nation’s economy.
The
Framers had to compromise on the issue of slavery, in effect “kicking the can
down the street” in order to get assent from the Southern States. The Supreme
Court exacerbated this with the Dred Scott decision that ruled that blacks were
property no matter where they were. The result was the Civil
War.
The
argument that the Constitution is an outdated document ignores the fact that it
has been amended twenty-seven times and remains the gold standard of law in
America.
There
are many enemies of freedom and Prof. Seidman’s opinion is just one example, a
reflection of the way some intellectuals hold the rest of us in contempt.
One of
the greatest plagues on mankind was the notion of communism, the product of Karl
Marx’s hatred of private property—the keystone of the Constitution—and the view
that people should be seen as a collective, not as individuals. The Constitution
affirms that the power of government resides in “the people” who, as
individuals, determine who shall “represent” them and are to be protected
against the arrogance of power that spawns the inclination to “rule” rather than
represent.
The
Framers of the Constitution understood this. It is the only thing that stands
between us and a tyrannical government run by Progressives, Liberals, and
Marxists.
© Alan
Caruba, 2013
Liberals need the stability & tolerance created by Conservatives. Liberal attacks on conservatism is sawing the branch upon which they stand.
ReplyDelete