I didn't see it linked anywhere else, so I thought I should post here: http://www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/09pdf/08-1521.pdf
I recommend that you at least read through the majority opinion, it's important stuff.
bstrawse wrote:The NY Times editorial board has a few thoughts:
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/06/29/opini ... e1.html?hp
Mr. White wrote:This is an interesting role-reversal for conservatives and liberals... lefties clamoring for states' rights and righties begging for an expanded federal reach. This is certainly the right result, it is just amazing what can happen when you add guns to the equation.
This isn't conservatives looking to extend the federal power...it's conservatives asking that the Constitution be applied to the states. Big difference between the Constitution and federal code.
Mr. White wrote:This isn't conservatives looking to extend the federal power...it's conservatives asking that the Constitution be applied to the states. Big difference between the Constitution and federal code.
Just because there isn't a statute doesn't mean that there isn't an expanded federal reach. Righties (and I) wanted the U.S. Constitution to apply to an area that it previously hadn't (viz. state gun laws). That, by any measure, is an expansion. If you look at this as a zero-sum game, federal authority got bigger and state autonomy got smaller. This is a great result, let's just be honest about what the consequences are.
I don't think this put anything in place that wasn't supposed to be there in the first place.
incorporation of the Second Amendment right will to some extent limit the legislative freedom of the States, but this is always true when a Bill of Rights provision is incorporated. Incorporation always restricts experimentation and local variations, but that has not stopped the Court from incorporating virtually every other provision of the Bill of Rights. “[T]he enshrinement of constitutional rights necessarily takes certain policy choices off the table.” Heller, 554 U. S., at __ (slip op., at 64). This conclusion is no more remarkable with respect to the Second Amendment than it is with respect to all the other limitations on state power found in the Constitution.
Mr. White wrote: My point here is that most conservatives consistently extoll the virtues of states' rights and condemn any encroachment upon them; yet they view this opinion as a resounding victory... all I was doing was pointing out that inconsistency.
I know the Incorporation history, my college education is in Constitutional Law. I've got a better grasp of the case law and intent surrounding this than most. Doesn't make my opinions any more right, but believe me, I've done my research many times over
Either come up with a solution, or this is a pointless debate.
So to those saying that this decision is hypocrisy in action...WHAT DO YOU SUGGEST?
Mr. White wrote:
I suggest recognizing the occasional value in the fed telling states what it cannot do... whether it be the Civil Rights Act, sodomy laws or "gun control." Take your pick. I also applaud the "can't beat 'em, join 'em" approach. Incorporation is not going away. There is a lot of stare decisis behind the concept, you might as well federalize your values while you have the chance![]()
But seriously, I should get back to work...
mrokern wrote:So to those saying that this decision is hypocrisy in action...WHAT DO YOU SUGGEST?
jgalt wrote:mrokern wrote:So to those saying that this decision is hypocrisy in action...WHAT DO YOU SUGGEST?
To state that a given action is hypocritical to, or inconsistent with, the actor's stated principles & beliefs does not mean that said actor had any other choice given their situation. That is clearly the case here.
I haven't seen it written anywhere, but based on their stated principles, I suspect that could Scalia or Thomas (and possible Roberts & Alito) go back to 1787-91, they would have argued strenuously against the adoption of the Bill of Rights. Recognizing & accepting the changes that have occurred over the past 219 years makes their votes pragmatic, and the only real option they had left to them, but that doesn't change the fact that the vote was inconsistent with what they actually believe.
To be more clear, I am beginning to feel that the existence of the Bill of Rights may in fact be the "fatal flaw" in the Constitutional process, and I most certainly would have done everything I could to prevent its adoption. But had I been on the Supreme Court this past session, I would have voted with the majority. This might make me a hypocrite, and it certainly is inconsistent with my principles, but what it really points out is that the Constitution is now a dead letter. The rule of law is gone, and all that is left is the rule of man. Thank goodness there are still a few principled people on the SCOTUS - God save us when we lose that majority...
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