Here is a look of just some of the
statements and events that have helped shaped us as a country throughout our
history, and I continue to ring this bell for you to pay attention to your
surroundings because the government is attempting to take your life hostage.
BY
PRESIDENTS
Thomas
Jefferson (1799)
“Of all the doctrines, which have ever been
broached by the federal government, the novel one, of the common law being in
force & cognizable as an existing law in their courts, is to me the most
formidable. All their other assumptions of un-given powers have been in the
detail. The bank law, the treaty doctrine, the sedition act, alien act . . .
&c., &c., have been solitary, unconsequential [sic], timid things, in
comparison with the audacious, barefaced and sweeping pretension to a system of
law for the U S, without the adoption of their legislature, and so infinitely
beyond their power to adopt.” (SOURCE: Letter from President Thomas Jefferson
to Edmund Randolph, Aug. 18, 1799, in Thomas Jefferson: Writings 1066 (Library of
America 1984) (Merrill D. Peterson, ed) (P. 36). In commenting on this passage,
Professor LaCroix of University of Chicago Law writes, “August 1799, Jefferson
had confided his fears about the expansion of the federal government – in
particular, the federal judiciary – in a letter to Edmund Randolph.
Specifically, Jefferson worried that the growth of federal
courts’
jurisdiction would lead to a body of federal common law separate from state law
that
would become a tool of federal oppression. Jefferson’s use of pronouns to refer
to the
government
– and thus to the Federalists – is particularly illuminating.” LaCroix, Alison
L.,
The New Wheel in the Federal Machine: From Sovereignty to Jurisdiction in the
Early
Republic,
(Working Paper for SUPREME COURT REVIEW) (Jan. 2008), available at
http://ssrn.com/abstract_id=1085378.
)
Thomas
Jefferson (1819)
“The
constitution on this hypothesis, is a mere thing of wax in the hands of the
judiciary, which they may twist and shape into any form they please. It should
be remembered, as an axiom of eternal truth in politics, that whatever power in
any government is independent, is absolute also; in theory only, at first,
while the spirit of the people is up, but in practice, as fast as that relaxes.
Independence can be trusted nowhere but with the people in mass. They are
inherently independent of all but moral law.” (SOURCE; Letter from Thomas
Jefferson to Judge Spencer Roane, September 6, 1819. “The writings of Thomas
Jefferson,” edited by Andrew A. Lipscomb, vol. 15, p. 213 (1904))
Thomas
Jefferson (1820)
“To consider the judges as the ultimate
arbiters of all constitutional questions is a very dangerous doctrine indeed,
and one which would place us under the despotism of an oligarchy.” (SOURCE:
Letter from Thomas Jefferson to William C. Jarvis, September 28, 1820)
Thomas
Jefferson (1821)
“The great object of my fear is the federal
judiciary. That body, like gravity, ever acting, with
noiseless
foot, and unalarming advance, gaining ground step by step, and holding what it
gains, is engulfing insidiously the special governments into the jaws of that
which feeds them.” (SOURCE: Letter from Thomas Jefferson to Spencer Roane,
1821, in the Jeffersonian Cyclopedia (Funk and Wagnall's 1900) (P. 842)) -1
Andrew
Jackson (1832)
“John Marshall has made his decision; let him
enforce it now if he can.” (SOURCE: Andrew
Jackson,
as quoted by Horace Greeley, registering his disagreement with the Marshall
Supreme
Court’s decision in Worcester v. Georgia (1832). Meacham, Jon., American Lion:
Andrew
Jackson in the White House. (Random House 2009) (P. 204))
Andrew
Jackson (1832)
“It is maintained by the advocates of the
bank that its constitutionality in all its features ought to be considered as
settled by precedent and by the decision of the Supreme Court. To this
conclusion I cannot assent. Mere precedent is a dangerous source of authority,
and should not be regarded as deciding questions of constitutional power except
where the acquiescence of the people and the States can be considered as well
settled. So far from this being the case on this subject, an argument against
the bank might be based on precedent...
If the opinion of the Supreme Court covered
the whole ground of this act, it ought not to control the coordinate
authorities of this Government. The Congress, the Executive, and the Court must
each for itself be guided by its own opinion of the Constitution. Each public
officer who takes an oath to support the Constitution swears that he will
support it as he understands it, and not as it is understood by others. It is
as much the duty of the House of Representatives, of the Senate, and of the
President to decide upon the constitutionality of any bill or resolution which
may be presented to them for passage or approval as it is of the supreme judges
when it may be brought before them for judicial decision. The opinion of the
judges has no more authority over Congress than the opinion of Congress has
over the judges, and on that point the President is independent of both. The
authority of the Supreme Court must not, therefore, be permitted to control the
Congress or the Executive when acting in their legislative capacities, but to
have only such influence as the force of their reasoning may deserve.” (SOURCE:
President Jackson’s Veto Message Regarding the Bank of the United States, July
10, 1832, in which he disagrees with proponents of the Bank who cite Supreme
Court precedent as reason that the Bank is constitutional, from A Compilation
of the Messages and Papers of the Presidents Prepared under the direction of
the Joint Committee on printing, of the House and Senate Pursuant to an Act of
the Fifty-Second Congress of the United States. (Bureau of National Literature,
Inc. (1897))
Abraham
Lincoln (1857)
If this important decision had been made by
the unanimous concurrence of the judges, and
without
any apparent partisan bias, and in accordance with legal public expectation and
with the steady practice of the departments throughout our history, and had
been in no part based on assumed historical facts which are not really true;
or, if wanting in some of these, it had been before the court more than once,
and had there been affirmed and reaffirmed through a course of years, it then
might be, perhaps would be, factious, nay, even revolutionary, not to acquiesce
in it as a precedent. But when, as is true, we find it wanting in all these
claims to the public confidence, it is not resistance, it is not factious, it
is not even disrespectful, to treat it as not having yet quite established a
settled doctrine for the country. But Judge Douglas considers this view
awful. (SOURCE: Lincoln speech at
Springfield, IL on Dred Scott decision, June 26, 1857, in Nicolay, John and
John Hay, The Complete Works of Abraham Lincoln, Volume I (Lincoln Memorial
University 1894) (P 315))
Abraham
Lincoln (1858)
“If I were in Congress and a vote should come
up on a question whether slavery should be
prohibited
in a new territory, in spite of the Dred Scott decision, I would vote that it
should . . .
Somebody
has to reverse that decision, since it is made, and we mean to reverse it, and
we mean to do it peaceably.” (SOURCE: Lincoln speech at Chicago, IL, in
response to Stephen Douglas, July 10, 1858, in Haines, Charles Grove, The American
Doctrine of Judicial Supremacy (Macmillan 1914) (P. 266))
Abraham
Lincoln (1858)
“Now, as to the Dred Scott decision; for upon
that [Stephen Douglas] makes his last point at me. He boldly takes ground in
favor of that decision. This is one-half the onslaught, and one-third of the
entire plan of the campaign. I am opposed to that decision in a certain sense,
but not in the sense which he puts on it. I say that in so far as it decided in
favor of Dred Scott’s master and against Dred Scott and his family, I do not
propose to disturb or resist the decision. I never have proposed to do any such
thing. I think, that in respect for judicial authority, my humble history would
not suffer in a comparison with that of Judge Douglas. He would have the citizen
conform his vote to that decision; the member of Congress, his; the President,
his use of the veto power. He would make it a rule of political action for the
people and all the departments of the government. I would not. By resisting it
as a political rule, I disturb no right of property, create no disorder, excite
no mobs.” (SOURCE: Lincoln Speech in Reply to Stephen Douglas at Springfield,
July 17, 1858, in The Complete Lincoln-Douglas debates of 1858 (Paul McClelland
Angle, ed.) (University of Chicago Press 1958) (P. 78))
Abraham
Lincoln (1861)
I do not forget the position assumed by some
that constitutional questions are to be decided by the Supreme Court, nor do I
deny that such decisions must be binding in any case upon the parties to a suit
as to the object of that suit, while they are also entitled to very high
respect and consideration in all parallel cases by other departments of the
government. And while it is obviously possible that such decision may be
erroneous in any given case, still the evil effect following it, being limited
to that particular case, with the chance that it may be overruled and never
become a precedent for other cases, can better be borne than could the evils of
a different practice. At the same time, the candid citizen must confess that if
the policy of the government upon vital questions affecting the whole people is
to be irrevocably fixed by decisions of the Supreme Court, the instant they are
made in ordinary litigation between parties in personal actions, the people
will have ceased to be their own rulers, having to that extent practically
resigned their government into the hands of that eminent tribunal.” (SOURCE:
Lincoln’s First Inaugural Address, March 4, 1861)
Franklin
Delano Roosevelt (1937)
“… I described the American form of
government as a three-horse team provided by the Constitution to the American people so that
their field might be plowed. The three horses are, of course, the three
branches of government -the Congress, the executive, and the courts. Two of the
horses, the Congress and the executive, are pulling in unison today; the third
is not. Those who have intimated that the president of the United States is
trying to drive that team, overlook the simple fact that the presidents, as
chief executive, is himself one of the three horses. It is the American people
themselves who are in the driver’s seat. It is the American people themselves
who want the furrow plowed. It is the American people themselves who expect the
third horse to fall in unison with the other two.
In the last four years the sound rule of
giving statutes the benefit of all reasonable doubt has been cast aside. The
Court has been acting not as a judicial body, but as a policymaking body. I
want as all Americans want an independent judiciary as proposed by the framers
of the Constitution. That means a Supreme Court that will enforce the
Constitution as written, that will refuse to amend the Constitution by the
arbitrary exercise of judicial power in other words by judicial say-so. It does
not mean a judiciary so independent that it can deny the existence of facts,
which are universally recognized…
“During
the past half-century the balance of power between the three great branches of
the
federal
government has been tipped out of balance by the courts in direct contradiction
of the high purposes of the framers of the Constitution. It is my purpose to
restore that balance. You who know me will accept my solemn assurance that in a
world in which democracy is under attack, I seek to make American democracy
succeed. You and I will do our part.” (SOURCE: Roosevelt’s Fireside Chat on the
Reorganization of the Judiciary, March 9, 1937, available at Franklin Delano
Roosevelt Presidential Library, http://docs.fdrlibrary.marist.edu/030937.html)
BY
SUPREME COURT JUSTICES
Justice
Stephen Johnson Field (1893)
“The
independence of the states, legislative and judicial, on all matters within
their cognizance is as essential to the existence and harmonious workings of
our federal system as is the legislative and judicial supremacy of the federal
government in all matters of national concern. Nothing can be more disturbing
and irritating to the states than an attempted enforcement upon its people of a
supposed unwritten law of the United States, under the designation of the
general law of the country, to which they have never assented, and which has no
existence except in the brain of the federal judges in their conceptions of
what the law of the states should be on the subjects considered.” (SOURCE:
Baltimore & O.R. Co. v. Baugh, 149 U.S. 368 (1893) (Field, dissenting)
(dissenting on the grounds that the plaintiff, a locomotive fireman, should
have been compensated by his employer for an accident on the job).
Justice
Lewis Powell (1974)
“The
separation of powers was designed to provide, not for judicial supremacy, but
for checks and balances.” (SOURCE: National R.R. Passenger Corp. V. National
Ass’n of R.R.
Passengers,
414 U.S. 453, 472 (1974) (Powell, dissenting) (dissenting on the grounds that the
aggrieved Amtrak passengers had standing).)
Justice
Antonin Scalia (1988)
“Evidently,
the governing standard is to be what might be called the unfettered wisdom of a
majority
of this Court, revealed to an obedient people on a case-by-case basis. This is
not only not the government of laws that the Constitution established; it is
not a government at all.” (SOURCE: Morrison v. Olson, 487 US 654, 712 (1988)
(Scalia, dissenting) (dissenting on the grounds that the executive’s powers
were usurped by the appointment of independent
counsel
under the Independent Counsel Act).)
Chief
Justice John Roberts (2007)
“There
was a time when this Court presumed to make such binding judgments for society,
under the guise of interpreting the Due Process Clause. See Lochner v. New
York, 198 U.S. 45, 25 S.Ct. 539, 49 L.Ed. 937 (1905). We should not seek to
reclaim that ground for judicial
supremacy
under the banner of the dormant Commerce Clause.” (SOURCE: United Haulers
Ass’n,
Inc. v. Oneida-Herkmer, 550 U.S. 330, 347 (2007) (Roberts, for the majority)
(striking
down
a statute under the Commerce Clause requiring waste haulers to bring waste to
facilities
owned by a state-created public benefit corporation.))
Chief
Justice John Roberts (2008)
“One
cannot help but think, after surveying the modest practical results of the
majority’s
ambitious
opinion that this decision is not really about the detainees at all, but about
control of federal policy regarding enemy combatants… All that today’s opinion
has done is shift
responsibility
for those sensitive foreign policy and national security decisions from the
elected branches to the Federal Judiciary.” (SOURCE: Boumediene v. Bush, 553
U.S. 723 (2008) (Roberts, dissenting) (dissenting on the grounds that the
military tribunal system for
Guantanamo
detainees that the political branches constructed does adequately protect any
constitutional
rights aliens captured abroad and detained as enemy combatants may
enjoy.)
Supreme Court Judge Judge Brian Lindsay
"There is no system ever devised by mankind that is guaranteed to rip husband and wife or father, mother and child apart so bitterly than our present Family Court System." Supreme Court Judge, New York, New York
Superior Court Judge Watson L. White
"There is something bad happening to our children in family courts today that is causing them more harm than drugs, more harm than crime and even more harm than child molestation." Superior Court Judge, Cobb County, Georgia
"There is no crueler tyranny than that which is exercised under color or law, and with the colors of justice." -United States v. Janotti, 673 F.2d 578, 614 (3d Cir. 1982) (Aldisert, J., dissenting) (quoting Montesquieu, Del‘Esprit des Lois (1748)
BY
OTHER COMMENTATORS
William
Blackstone (1765)
“Were
[the judicial power] joined with the legislative, the life, liberty, and
property, of the
subject
would be in the hands of arbitrary judges, whose decisions would be then
regulated only by their own opinions, and not by any fundamental principles of
law; which, though legislators may depart from, yet judges are bound to
observe.” (SOURCE: William Blackstone, Commentaries 1:149--51, 259—60)
Robert
Bork (1971)
“If the judiciary really is supreme, able to
rule when and as it sees fit, the society is not
democratic.”
(SOURCE: Robert H. Bork, “Neutral Principles and Some First Amendment
Problems,”
47 IND. L.J. 1-11 (1971)) “The requirement that the Court be principled arises
from the resolution of the seeming anomaly of judicial supremacy in a democratic
society. . . The anomaly is dissipated, however by the model of government
embodied in the structure of the Constitution, a model upon which popular
consent to limited government by the Supreme Court also rests.” (SOURCE: Robert
H. Bork, “Neutral Principles and Some First Amendment Problems,” 47 IND. L.J.
1-11 (1971))
Edwin
Meese (1986)
“…I would like to consider a distinction that
is essential to maintaining our limited form of
government.
This is the necessary distinction between the Constitution and constitutional
law. The two are not synonymous. What, then, is this distinction?
The constitution is—to put it simply but one
hopes not simplistically—the Constitution. It is a
document
of our most fundamental law...The Constitution is, in brief, the instrument by
which
the
consent of the governed—the fundamental requirement of any legitimate
government—is transformed into a government complete with the powers to act and
a structure designed to make it act wisely or responsibly…
Constitutional law, on the other hand, is
that body of law that has resulted from the Supreme Court’s adjudications
involving disputes over constitutional provisions or doctrines. To put it a bit
more simply, constitutional law is what the Supreme Court says about the
Constitution in its decisions resolving the cases and controversies that come
before it.” (SOURCE: Meese speech at Tulane University, October 21, 1986, in
Calabresi, Steven, Originalism: A Quarter Century of Debate (Regnery 2007) (P.
101-102))
Edwin
Meese (1986)
“Once we understand the distinction between
constitutional law and the Constitution, once we see that constitutional
decisions need not be seen as the last words in constitutional construction,
once we comprehend that these decisions do not necessarily determine future
public policy, once we see all of this, we can grasp a correlative point:
constitutional interpretation is not the business of the Court only, but also
properly the business of all branches of government.” (SOURCE: Meese speech at
Tulane University, October 21, 1986, in Calabresi, Steven, Originalism: A
Quarter Century of Debate (Regnery 2007) (P. 105))
Larry
Kramer (2004)
In 1958...all nine Justices signed an
extraordinary opinion in Cooper v. Aaron insisting that
Marbury
[Marbury v. Madison] had “declared the basic principle that the federal
judiciary is
supreme
in the exposition of the law of the Constitution” and that this idea “has ever
since been respected by this Court and the Country as a permanent and
indispensable feature of our constitutional system.” This was, of course, just
bluster and puff. As we have seen, Marbury said no such thing, and judicial
supremacy was not cheerfully embraced in the years after Marbury was decided.
The Justices in Cooper were not reporting a fact so much as trying to
manufacture one...the declaration of judicial interpretive supremacy evoked
considerable skepticism at the time. But here is the striking thing: after
Cooper v. Aaron, the idea of judicial supremacy seemed gradually, at long last,
to find wide public acceptance. (SOURCE: Kramer, Larry. The People Themselves:
Popular Constitutionalism and Judicial Review (Oxford University Press 2006)
(P. 221)) Charles Warren “[h]owever the Court may interpret the provisions of
the Constitution, it is still the Constitution which is the law and not the
decisions of the Court.” (SOURCE: Legal historian Warren, as cited by Meese in
speech at Tulane University, October 21, 1986, in Calabresi, Steven,
Originalism: A Quarter Century of Debate (Regnery 2007) (P. 105))
BY
THE AUTHORS OF THE FEDERALIST PAPERS:
Alexander
Hamilton (1788)
“Whoever attentively considers the different
departments of power must perceive, that, in a
government
in which they are separated from each other, the judiciary, from the nature of
its
functions,
will always be the least dangerous to the political rights of the Constitution;
because it will be least in a capacity to annoy or injure them. The Executive
not only dispenses the honors, but holds the sword of the community. The
legislature not only commands the purse, but prescribes the rules by which the
duties and rights of every citizen are to be regulated. The judiciary, on the
contrary, has no influence over either the sword or the purse; no direction
either of the strength or of the wealth of the society; and can take no active
resolution whatever. It may truly be said to have neither FORCE nor WILL, but
merely judgment; and must ultimately depend upon the aid of the executive arm
even for the efficacy of its judgments.” (SOURCE: Federalist Paper No. 78:
Hamilton, June 14, 1788)
Alexander
Hamilton (1788)
“This simple view of the matter suggests
several important consequences. It proves
incontestably,
that the judiciary is beyond comparison the weakest of the three departments of
power1; that it can never attack with success either of the other two; and that
all-possible care is requisite to enable it to defend itself against their
attacks. It equally proves, that though individual oppression may now and then proceed
from the courts of justice, the general liberty of the people can never be
endangered from that quarter; I mean so long as the judiciary remains truly
distinct from both the legislature and the Executive. For I agree, that
"there is no liberty, if the power of judging be not separated from the
legislative and executive powers."1And it proves, in the last place, that
as liberty can have nothing to fear from the judiciary alone, but would have
every thing to fear from its union with either of the other departments; that
as all the effects of such a union must ensue from a dependence of the former
on the latter, notwithstanding a nominal and apparent separation; that as, from
the natural feebleness of the judiciary, it is in continual jeopardy of being overpowered,
awed, or influenced by its co-ordinate branches; and that as nothing can
contribute so much to its firmness and independence as permanency in office,
this quality may therefore be justly regarded as an indispensable ingredient in
its constitution, and, in a great measure, as the citadel of the public justice
and the public security.” (SOURCE: Federalist Paper No. 78: Hamilton, June 14,
1788. Footnote 1: The celebrated Montesquieu, speaking of them, says: "Of
the three powers above mentioned, the judiciary is next to nothing."
"Spirit of Laws." vol. i., page 186.)
Alexander
Hamilton (1788)
“Some perplexity respecting the rights of the
courts to pronounce legislative acts void, because contrary to the
Constitution, has arisen from an imagination that the doctrine would imply a
superiority of the judiciary to the legislative power. It is urged that the
authority which can declare the acts of another void, must necessarily be
superior to the one whose acts may be declared void. As this doctrine is of
great importance in all the American constitutions, a brief discussion of the
ground on which it rests cannot be unacceptable.” (SOURCE: Federalist Paper No.
78: Hamilton, June 14, 1788)
Alexander
Hamilton (1788)
“There is no position which depends on
clearer principles, than that every act of a delegated authority, contrary to
the tenor of the commission under which it is exercised, is void. No
legislative act, therefore, contrary to the Constitution, can be valid. To deny
this, would be to affirm, that the deputy is greater than his principal; that
the servant is above his master; that the representatives of the people are
superior to the people themselves; that men acting by virtue of powers, may do
not only what their powers do not authorize, but what they forbid.” (SOURCE:
Federalist Paper No. 78: Hamilton, June 14, 1788)
Alexander
Hamilton (1788)
“If it be said that the legislative body are
themselves the constitutional judges of their own
powers,
and that the construction they put upon them is conclusive upon the other
departments, it may be answered, that this cannot be the natural presumption,
where it is not to be collected from any particular provisions in the
Constitution. It is not otherwise to be supposed, that the Constitution could
intend to enable the representatives of the people to substitute their WILL to
that of their constituents. It is far more rational to suppose, that the courts
were designed to be an intermediate body between the people and the
legislature, in order, among other things, to keep the latter within the limits
assigned to their authority. The interpretation of the laws is the proper and
peculiar province of the courts. A constitution is, in fact, and must be
regarded by the judges, as a fundamental law. It therefore belongs to them to
ascertain its meaning, as well as the meaning of any particular act proceeding
from the legislative body. If there should happen to be an irreconcilable
variance between the two, that which has the superior obligation and validity
ought, of course, to be preferred; or, in other words, the Constitution ought
to be preferred to the statute, the intention of the people to the intention of
their agents.” (SOURCE: Federalist Paper No. 78: Hamilton, June 14, 1788)
Alexander
Hamilton (1788)
“Nor does this conclusion by any means
suppose a superiority of the judicial to the legislative power. It only
supposes that the power of the people is superior to both; and that where the
will of the legislature, declared in its statutes, stands in opposition to that
of the people, declared in the Constitution, the judges ought to be governed by
the latter rather than the former. They ought to regulate their decisions by
the fundamental laws, rather than by those which are not fundamental.” (SOURCE:
Federalist Paper No. 78: Hamilton, June 14, 1788)
Alexander
Hamilton (1788)
“…the national legislature will have ample
authority to make such exceptions, and to prescribe such regulations as will be
calculated to obviate or remove these inconveniences.” (SOURCE: Federalist
Paper No. 80: Hamilton, June 21, 1788)
Alexander
Hamilton (1788)
“In the first place, there is not a syllable
in the plan under consideration which DIRECTLY
empowers
the national courts to construe the laws according to the spirit of the
Constitution, or which gives them any greater latitude in this respect than may
be claimed by the courts of every State. I admit, however, that the
Constitution ought to be the standard of construction for the laws, and that
wherever there is an evident opposition, the laws ought to give place to the
Constitution. But this doctrine is not deducible from any circumstance peculiar
to the plan of the convention, but from the general theory of a limited
Constitution; and as far as it is true, is equally applicable to most, if not
to all the State governments. There can be no objection, therefore, on this
account, to the federal judicature which will not lie against the local
judicatures in general, and which will not serve to condemn every constitution
that attempts to set bounds to legislative discretion.” (SOURCE: Federalist
Paper No. 81: Hamilton, May 28, 1788)
Alexander
Hamilton (1788)
“But perhaps the force of the objection may
be thought to consist in the particular organization of the Supreme Court; in
its being composed of a distinct body of magistrates, instead of being one of
the branches of the legislature, as in the government of Great Britain and that
of the State. To insist upon this point, the authors of the objection must renounce
the meaning they have labored to annex to the celebrated maxim, requiring a
separation of the departments of power. It shall, nevertheless, be conceded to
them, agreeably to the interpretation given to that maxim in the course of
these papers, that it is not violated by vesting the ultimate power of judging
in a PART of the legislative body.” (SOURCE: Federalist Paper No. 81: Hamilton,
June 25, 1788)
Alexander
Hamilton (1788)
“It may in the last place be observed that
the supposed danger of judiciary encroachments on the legislative authority,
which has been upon many occasions reiterated, is in reality a phantom.
Particular misconstructions and contraventions of the will of the legislature
may now and then happen; but they can never be so extensive as to amount to an
inconvenience, or in any sensible degree to affect the order of the political
system. This may be inferred with certainty, from the general nature of the
judicial power, from the objects to which it relates, from the manner in which it
is exercised, from its comparative weakness, and from its total incapacity to
support its usurpations by force. And the inference is greatly fortified by the
consideration of the important constitutional check which the power of
instituting impeachments in one part of the legislative body, and of
determining upon them in the other, would give to that body upon the members of
the judicial department. This is alone a complete security. There never can be
danger that the judges, by a series of deliberate usurpations on the authority
of the legislature, would hazard the united resentment of the body entrusted
with it, while this body was possessed of the means of punishing their
presumption, by degrading them from their stations. While this ought to remove
all apprehensions on the subject, it affords, at the same time, a cogent
argument for constituting the Senate a court for the trial of impeachments.”
(SOURCE: Federalist Paper No. 81: Hamilton, June 25, 1788)
Alexander
Hamilton (1788)
“The arguments, or rather suggestions, upon
which this charge is founded, are to this effect: "The authority of the
proposed Supreme Court of the United States, which is to be a separate and
independent body, will be superior to that of the legislature. The power of construing
the laws according to the SPIRIT of the Constitution, will enable that court to
mould them into whatever shape it may think proper; especially as its decisions
will not be in any manner subject to the revision or correction of the
legislative body. This is as unprecedented as it is dangerous. In Britain, the
judicial power, in the last resort, resides in the House of Lords, which is a
branch of the legislature; and this part of the British government has been
imitated in the State constitutions in general. The Parliament of Great
Britain, and the legislatures of the several States, can at any time rectify,
by law, the exceptionable decisions of their respective courts. But the errors
and usurpations of the Supreme Court of the United States will be uncontrollable
and remediless." This, upon examination, will be found to be made up
altogether of false reasoning upon misconceived fact.” (SOURCE: Federalist
Paper No. 81: Hamilton, June 25, 1788)
James
Madison (1788)
“One of the principal objections inculcated
by the more respectable adversaries to the
Constitution,
is its supposed violation of the political maxim, that the legislative,
executive, and judiciary departments ought to be separate and distinct.”
(SOURCE: Federalist Paper No. 47: Madison, January 30, 1788)
James
Madison (1788)
“No political truth is certainly of greater
intrinsic value, or is stamped with the authority of more enlightened patrons
of liberty, than that on, which the objection is founded. The accumulation of
all powers, legislative, executive, and judiciary, in the same hands, whether
of one, a few, or many, and whether hereditary, self appointed, or elective,
may justly be pronounced the very definition of tyranny. Were the federal
Constitution, therefore, really chargeable with the accumulation of power, or
with a mixture of powers, having a dangerous tendency to such an accumulation,
no further arguments would be necessary to inspire a universal reprobation of
the system.” (SOURCE: Federalist Paper No. 47: Madison, January 30, 1788)
James
Madison (1788)
“…the sense in which the preservation of
liberty requires that the three great departments of power should be separate
and distinct. The oracle who is always consulted and cited on this subject is
the celebrated Montesquieu. If he be not the author of this invaluable precept
in the science of politics, he has the merit at least of displaying and
recommending it most effectually to the attention of mankind. Let us endeavor,
in the first place, to ascertain his meaning on this point.” (SOURCE:
Federalist Paper No. 47: Madison, January 30, 1788)
James
Madison (1788)
“The judges can exercise no executive
prerogative, though they are shoots from the executive stock; nor any
legislative function, though they may be advised with by the legislative
councils. The entire legislature can perform no judiciary act, though by the
joint act of two of its branches the judges may be removed from their offices,
and though one of its branches is possessed of the judicial power in the last
resort.” (SOURCE: Federalist Paper No. 47: Madison, January 30, 1788)
James
Madison (1788)
“Again: ‘Were the power of judging joined
with the legislative, the life and liberty of the subject would be exposed to
arbitrary control, for THE JUDGE would then be THE LEGISLATOR. Were it joined
to the executive power, THE JUDGE might behave with all the violence of AN
OPPRESSOR.’” (SOURCE: Federalist Paper No. 47: Madison, January 30, 1788)
James
Madison (1788)
“I shall undertake, in the next place, to
show that unless these departments be so far connected and blended as to give
to each a constitutional control over the others, the degree of separation
which the maxim requires, as essential to a free government, can never in
practice be duly maintained. It is agreed on all sides, that the powers
properly belonging to one of the departments ought not to be directly and
completely administered by either of the other departments. It is equally
evident, that none of them ought to possess, directly or indirectly, an
overruling influence over the others, in the administration of their respective
powers. It will not be denied, that power is of an encroaching nature, and that
it ought to be effectually restrained from passing the limits assigned to it.
After discriminating, therefore, in theory, the several classes of power, as
they may in their nature be legislative, executive, or judiciary, the next and
most difficult task is to provide some practical security for each, against the
invasion of the others. What this security ought to be, is the great problem to
be solved.” (SOURCE: Federalist Paper No. 48: Madison February 1, 1788)
James
Madison (1788)
“The legislative department derives a
superiority in our governments from other circumstances. Its constitutional
powers being at once more extensive, and less susceptible of precise limits, it
can, with the greater facility, mask, under complicated and indirect measures,
the encroachments which it makes on the co-ordinate departments.” (SOURCE:
Federalist Paper No. 48: Madison, February 1, 1788)
James
Madison (1788)
“We have seen that the tendency of republican
governments is to an aggrandizement of the legislative at the expense of the
other departments. The appeals to the people, therefore, would usually be made
by the executive and judiciary departments.” (SOURCE: Federalist Paper No. 49:
Madison, February 2, 1788)
James
Madison (1788)
“TO WHAT expedient, then, shall we finally
resort, for maintaining in practice the necessary
partition
of power among the several departments, as laid down in the Constitution? The
only
answer
that can be given is, that as all these exterior provisions are found to be
inadequate, the defect must be supplied, by so contriving the interior
structure of the government as that its several constituent parts may, by their
mutual relations, be the means of keeping each other in their proper places.
Without presuming to undertake a full development of this important idea, I
will hazard a few general observations, which may perhaps place it in a clearer
light, and enable us to form a more correct judgment of the principles and
structure of the government planned by the convention.
In order to lay a due foundation for that
separate and distinct exercise of the different powers of government, which to
a certain extent is admitted on all hands to be essential to the preservation
of liberty, it is evident that each department should have a will of its own;
and consequently should be so constituted that the members of each should have
as little agency as possible in the appointment of the members of the others.”
(SOURCE: Federalist Paper No. 51: Madison February 6, 1788)
James
Madison (1788)
“But the great security against a gradual
concentration of the several powers in the same
department,
consists in giving to those who administer each department the necessary
constitutional
means and personal motives to resist encroachments of the others. The provision
for defense must in this, as in all other cases, be made commensurate to the
danger of attack. Ambition must be made to counteract ambition. The interest of
the man must be connected with the constitutional rights of the place. It may
be a reflection on human nature, that such devices should be necessary to
control the abuses of government. But what is government itself, but the
greatest of all reflections on human nature? If men were angels, no government
would be necessary. If angels were to govern men, neither external nor internal
controls on government would be necessary. In framing a government which is to
be administered by men over men, the great difficulty lies in this: you must
first enable the government to control the governed; and in the next place
oblige it to control itself. A dependence on the people is, no doubt, the
primary control on the government; but experience has taught mankind the
necessity of auxiliary precautions.” (SOURCE: Federalist Paper No. 51: Madison,
February 6, 1788)
James
Madison (1788)
“But it is not possible to give to each
department an equal power of self-defense. In republican government, the
legislative authority necessarily predominates. The remedy for this
inconveniency is to divide the legislature into different branches; and to
render them, by different modes of election and different principles of action,
as little connected with each other as the nature of their common functions and
their common dependence on the society will admit. It may even be necessary to
guard against dangerous encroachments by still further precautions. As the
weight of the legislative authority requires that it should be thus divided,
the weakness of the executive may require, on the other hand, that it should be
fortified. An absolute negative on the legislature appears, at first view, to
be the natural defense with which the executive magistrate should be armed. But
perhaps it would be neither altogether safe nor alone sufficient. On ordinary
occasions it might not be exerted with the requisite firmness, and on
extraordinary occasions it might be perfidiously abused. May not this defect of
an absolute negative be supplied by some qualified connection between this
weaker department and the weaker branch of the stronger department, by which
the latter may be led to support the constitutional rights of the former,
without being too much detached from the rights of its own department?”
(SOURCE: Federalist Paper No. 51: Madison, February 6, 1788)
Cases Affecting the Definition of Marriage
In 1996, Speaker Newt Gingrich and the House
of Representatives passed the Defense of
Marriage
Act (DOMA) by a vote of 342 to 67. The Senate also passed the measure by a vote
of 85-14. It was subsequently signed by President Bill Clinton and enacted into
law.
Given
that there existed in 1996, and continues to exist, vast differences in the
opinions among the people of the several States about how they wish their state
to define marriage, DOMA provided a means that respected the wishes of the
people in each state to determine what legal treatment to accord same sex relationships.
The different outcomes on this issue in the
various states show that the DOMA framework for handling the issue of the legal
status of same sex relationships is being worked out by the people through
democratic and political means, but federal judges threaten to derail this
process and make the decision once and for all by themselves.
The Constitution of the United States has
absolutely nothing to say about a constitutional right to same sex marriage.
Were the federal courts to recognize such a right, it would be completely
without constitutional basis. It would be substituting its own political views
for the political views of the people. The federal courts would be replacing
the right of the people to make such decisions for themselves with the
manufactured authority of the Court to rule in such a case.
The country has been here before. In 1856,
the Supreme Court thought it could settle the issue of slavery once and for all
and impose a judicial solution on the country. In 1973, the issue was abortion
and once again a Supreme Court thought that it could impose a judicial solution
on the country once and for all. Judicial solutions don’t solve contentious
social issues once and for all, especially when they are manufactured without
regard to any constitutional basis. Should the Supreme Court fail to heed the
disastrous lessons if its own history and attempt to impose its will on the
marriage debate in this country, it will bear the burden of igniting a
constitutional crisis of the first order. The political branches of the federal
government, as well as the political branches of the several States, will
surely not passively accept the dictates of the federal judiciary on this
issue. An interventionist approach by the Court on marriage will lead to a
crisis of legitimacy for the federal judiciary from which it may take
generations to recover.
Federal
District Court Judge Orders
the
Censoring of High School Graduation Speech
On June 1, 2011, Fred Biery, Chief Judge of
the United States District Court for the
Western
District of Texas in San Antonio, issued an order in the case of Schultz v.
Medina
Valley Independent School District (Civil Action No.. SA-11-CA-422-FB) to
stop
a high school’s valedictorian from saying a prayer as part of her graduation
speech.
Biery did so in the name of the First
Amendment, which is supposed to prevent
government
prohibitions of the free exercise of religion and protect the freedom of
speech.
Biery ruled in favor of two Medina Valley
parents, noting that their son would “suffer
irreparable
harm” if there was prayer at the ceremony.
Biery explicitly forbade the use of
particular words and phrases, including “join in
prayer,”
“bow their heads,” “amen,” and “prayer.” He ordered that the “invocation” and
“benediction”
be changed to “opening remarks” and “closing remarks.”
The judge threatened dire penalties for
school officials if students or teachers disobeyed
his
ruling, ordering that it be “enforced by incarceration or other sanctions for
contempt
of
Court if not obeyed by District official (sic) and their agents.” After public
outcry from
parents,
students, and even Texas Senator John Cornyn, the Fifth Circuit court stepped
in
to
issue an emergency ruling days later that overturned Biery’s ruling.
Judge Biery’s decision clearly is not about
defending the Constitution. It is the antireligious
judicial
thought police at work here in America.
As a first step toward reining in
out-of-control, anti-religious bigotry on the federal
bench,
Congress can start by impeaching and removing Biery from office. And if that
fails,
Congress can seek to abolish his office.
The American people would be better without a
judge whose anti-religious extremism
leads
him to ban a high school valedictorian from saying even the word “prayer.”
Historical
Grounds for Impeachment of Judges
There are many people who mistakenly believe
that criminal activity is the only grounds for the impeachment of judges. It is
not.
Alexander Hamilton in Federalist 81 could not
be clearer. Impeachment is “the important
constitutional
check” of judges who would repeatedly and deliberately usurp the authority of
the legislature.
It may in the last place be observed that the
supposed danger of judiciary encroachments on the legislative authority, which
has been upon many occasions reiterated, is in reality a phantom. Particular
misconstructions and contraventions of the will of the legislature may now and
then happen; but they can never be so extensive as to amount to an
inconvenience, or in any sensible degree to affect the order of the political
system. This may be inferred with certainty, from the general nature of the
judicial power, from the objects to which it relates, from the manner in which
it is exercised, from its comparative weakness, and from its total incapacity
to support its usurpations by force. And the inference is greatly fortified by
the consideration of the important constitutional check which the power of
instituting impeachments in one part of the legislative body, and of
determining upon them in the other, would give to that body upon the members of
the judicial department. This is alone a complete security.
There never can be danger that the judges, by
a series of deliberate usurpations on the authority of the legislature, would
hazard the united resentment of the body entrusted with it, while this body was
possessed of the means of punishing their presumption, by degrading them from
their stations. (Alexander Hamilton, Federalist No. 81 (1788))
In Federalist 65, Hamilton describes
impeachment as a valid remedy for “injuries done
immediately
to the society itself”. The subjects of
its [impeachment's] jurisdiction are those offenses which proceed from the
misconduct of public men, or, in other words from the abuse or violation of
some public trust. They are of a nature, which with peculiar propriety be
denominated, POLITICAL, as they relate chiefly to injuries done immediately to
the society itself. (Alexander Hamilton, Federalist No. 65 (1788))
In his magisterial Commentaries on the
Constitution of the United States, Supreme Court
Justice
Joseph Story paraphrased and summarized the work of Richard Wooddeson, a
preeminent English jurist who was regularly cited by courts in the young
American republic, who wrote that judges could be impeached if they “mislead
their sovereign by unconstitutional opinions.” Justice Story summarizes
Wooddeson:
In examining the parliamentary history of
impeachments it will be found that many offenses not easily definable by law,
and many of a purely political character, have been deemed high crimes and
misdemeanors worthy of this extraordinary remedy. Thus, lord chancellors and
judges and other magistrates have not only been impeached for bribery, and
acting grossly contrary to the duties of their office, but for misleading their
sovereign by unconstitutional opinions and for attempts to subvert the
fundamental laws, and introduce arbitrary power... (Joseph Story (Supreme Court
Justice from 1811-1845), in his Commentaries on the Constitution of the United
States, 1833)
Justice Story further notes in his
Commentaries that judges are subject to impeachment
for
offenses that are not criminal: “The jurisdiction is to be exercised over
offences, which are committed by public men in violation of their public trust
and duties. Those duties are, in many cases, political; and, indeed, in other
cases, to which the power of impeachment will probably be applied, they will
respect functionaries of a high character, where the remedy would otherwise be
wholly inadequate, and the grievance be incapable of redress. Strictly
speaking, then, the power partakes of a political character, as it respects
injuries to the society in its political character . . . .
Again, there are many offences, purely
political, which have been held to be within the reach of parliamentary
impeachments, not one of which is in the slightest manner alluded to in our
statute book. And, indeed, political offences are of so various and complex a
character, so utterly incapable of being defined, or classified, that the task
of positive legislation would be impracticable, if it were not almost absurd to
attempt it . . . . [N]o one has as yet been bold enough to assert that the
power of impeachment is limited to offences positively defined in the statute
book of the Union, as impeachable high crimes and misdemeanors...” (Joseph
Story, Commentaries on the Constitution of the United States, 1833) Justice
Story also described certain presumptions about the character of legislative
leaders who are responsible for impeachment actions: The Constitution supposes
that men may be trusted with power under reasonable guards. It presumes that
the Senate and the executive will no more conspire to overthrow the government than
the House of Representatives. It supposes the best pledges for fidelity to be
in the character of the individuals, and in the collective wisdom of the people
in the choice of agents. It does not in decency presume that the two-thirds of
the Senate representing the States will corruptly unite with the executive, or
abuse their power. Neither does it suppose that a majority of the House of
Representatives will corruptly refuse to impeach . . ." (Joseph Story,
Commentaries on the Constitution of the United States, 1833). Another remedy to pursue is that if judges are elected,
have them removed or impeached by Quo Warranto. This means that they
have failed in their official, and fiduciary duty as an elected official or
judge. There are certain procedures you have to follow to have them removed
from office. You can even file a civil case to have them removed. Follow your
state statutes for this remedy. Challenge your
intellect and take a serious look, with insight now how the United States Judicial System has totally strayed. Our founders did everything to protect us from them, yet we were lazy or complacent and allowed it to happen. What are you going to do about it - yes YOU??
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