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God finally won
one in the U.S. Supreme Court. He shouldn’t have.
The Court
ruled, 6 to 3, that an upstate New York public school
couldn’t prohibit the Good News Club, a Christian student
group, from meeting on its premises after school. The liberal
(that is, illiberal) position was that this would amount to an
unconstitutional state endorsement of religion; the
conservative view was that the ban "discriminated"
against the group because it was religious.
Both were
wrong. The liberal minority was wrong because the First
Amendment says only that "Congress shall make no law
respecting an establishment of religion"; the states are
free to do so. The conservative majority was wrong because the
federal government has no authority to forbid religious
discrimination by the states.
The purpose of
the Bill of Rights is to limit the power of the federal
government, a fact Justice Clarence Thomas, who wrote the
majority opinion, usually appreciates. This ruling was a case
of conservative activism – imposing a policy preference
under the guise of interpreting the Constitution.
Conservatives
are supposed to resist judicial activism, period. They
aren’t supposed to engage in it themselves. "Strict
construction" of the Constitution means hewing to the
letter, and letting the chips fall where they may.
One could argue
Thomas was only following many liberal judicial precedents,
according to which the federal judiciary may overrule state
and local authorities. But Thomas took an oath to uphold the
U.S. Constitution, not judicial precedents, which, if
mistaken, should be ignored or reversed. Otherwise bad
decisions will accumulate, superseding the Constitution
itself.
Christians will
naturally feel gratified that the Court has taken their side
for once. But the end doesn’t justify the means. The
question at stake was not whether the school’s policy was
right or wrong, but whether the federal government had any say
in the matter – just as in the recent case of the golfer
Casey Martin, who got the Court to intrude in the private
business of the Professional Golfers’ Association. If we
object to Martin’s victory, we should object, however
regretfully, to the victory of the Good News Club on the same
principle.
The Court’s
ruling was an act of arbitrary power. Everyone knows this,
because it’s true of so many Court rulings. Even the
headlines reflected this: "Top Court Gives Religious
Clubs Equal Footing in Grade Schools" (the New York
Times); "After-school Bible study allowed" (Washington
Times). "Gives"? "Allowed"? This is
not the language of freedom or rights, inalienable or
constitutional; it implies that the Court arbitrarily accords
us mere permission to do certain things. We wait upon its
pleasure.
And this is now
the prevailing attitude toward government in general. We no
longer insist upon our rights; we seek permission. We don’t
judge the government by the Constitution; we wait for the
government to tell us what the Constitution means. And we
never know what to expect.
How can the
meaning of the Constitution – the fundamental law – be so
unpredictable? Stability is the essence of the rule of law in
general; unpredictable edicts, flowing from the arbitrary will
of rulers (whether they are called kings, dictators,
presidents, legislators, or judges), are typical of tyranny.
But Americans
today are resigned to being told what to do. They accept
arbitrary, unpredictable rule as normal. In fact much of our
politics consists of organized attempts to manipulate the law
by buying the favor of the rulers. This corruption became so
flagrant during the Clinton years that many people want to
stop it by limiting campaign spending.
But the problem
arises not from campaign donations, but from the very nature
of the government. If it were strictly limited to its
constitutional powers, it couldn’t bestow many favors and
wouldn’t be worth buying. But when its powers are arbitrary
and boundless, the inevitable result is an auction of bribery.
And the more venal the politicians, the more they will pretend
to be public benefactors and philanthropists, feeling our
pain.
Money isn’t
the only payoff. Publicity is another, and the Supreme Court
seems especially sensitive to pressure from the liberal news
media. Notice how many Republican appointees to the Court have
won good press by moving leftward – or, as the media purr,
"growing":
Warren,
Brennan, Blackmun, Stevens, O’Connor, Kennedy, Souter. When
the media beckon, the Constitution tends to be forgotten. |