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  • Demonic by Ann Coulter
    October 17, 2011 | 10:37 pm

    I just recently finished Ann Coulter‘s “Demonic: How the Liberal Mob Is Endangering America” and highly recommend it. It’s amazingly ironic that it came out just prior to “Occupy Wall Street” because that movement more than anything that could be said affirms the content of the book. After reading Gustave Le Bon Ann realized how [...]

  • History, The Federalist and Progressive Expansion
    June 18, 2011 | 10:40 pm

    I believe your understanding of the founding documents and the history of this country is proportional to your despair, discontent and anger at what you see happening today. The Nation’s 2010 Report Card for Civics show only 12% of 12th graders are proficient at a 12th grade level. To give you an idea of how [...]

  • Primetime Propaganda: who’da thunk
    June 12, 2011 | 12:29 am

    He went to Harvard, he’s Jewish and he’s wearing a Harvard Law baseball cap. He must be a liberal, right? That’s what Hollywood execs thought when they sat down with Ben Shapiro. The inside story of how the most powerful medium of mass communication in human history has become a propaganda tool for the Left [...]

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Law and Justice with Antonin Scalia

Antonin Scalia, U.S. Supreme Court justice.
Image via Wikipedia

From Uncommon Knowledge with Peter Robinson
Justice Antonin Scalia, my favorite justice, explains why he believes the Constitution “is not living, but dead.”

View Video Here

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1 comment to Law and Justice with Antonin Scalia

  • This is a fascinating and enlightening interview.

    Regarding the activist Constitution interpretation, Justice Scalia explained:

    “Much of the harm that has been done in recent years by activist constitution interpretation is made possible by a theory which says that unlike an ordinary law which doesn’t change – it means what it meant when it was enacted and will always mean that – the Constitution changes from decade to decade to comport with the “evolving standards of decency” that mark the progress of a maturing society. In other words we have a morphing constitution. And of course it is up to the court to decide when it morphs and how it morphs. That’s generally paraded as the “living constitution” and unfortunately that philosophy has made enormous headway with lawyers and judges but even with John Q Public.”

    Elaborating on his earlier statement that “devotees of The Living Constitution do not seek to facilitate social change but to prevent it” (Scalia & Gutmann, 1998), Justice Scalia said:

    “To make things change you don’t need a constitution. The function of a Constitution is to rigidify, to ossify, NOT to facilitate change. You want change? All you need is a legislature and a ballot box. Things will change as fast as you like. My Constitution, very flexible changing on you. You want right to abortion? Persuade your fellow citizens that it is a good idea, and pass a law. And then you find out, the results are worst than we ever thought, you can repeal the law. That’s flexibility. The reason people want the Supreme Court to declare that abortion is a constitutional right is precisely to rigidify that right, it means it sweeps across all fifty states and it is a law now and forever or until the Supreme Court changes its mind. That’s not flexibility.”

    “By trying to make the Constitution do everything that needs doing from age to age, we shall have caused it to do nothing at all.”

    (Scalia & Gutmann, 1998)

    Source(s):
    Scalia, A., & Gutmann, A. (1998). A Matter of Interpretation: Federal Courts and the Law. Princeton University Press.

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