Land of the Lawless

Posted By Victor Davis Hanson On May 30, 2011 

When the Law Does Not Pay

I do not think in California there is much law these days. We are regressing
to the days of my grandfather's stories. He used to relate to me a wild
Central Valley circa 1900, when the sheriff was a day away. A neighbor down
the road is now openly violating county zoning regulations by simply moving
in immobile Winnebagos and creating a sort of ad hoc mobile home park - with
jerry-rigged electricity, sewage, and water. "Restaurants" pop up around my
farm along the side of the road, exempt from state and local inspection,
apparently by parking a canteen, plopping down some plastic chairs, an
awning, a porta-potty, a hose - and, presto, we have an eatery, with signs
no less.

There are no dumping laws enforced in rural California: stopping the guy who
throws out his garbage and a sofa is a money-loser; finding the guy in the
Mercedes who uses his cell phone is a money-winner.

Yet most state lawlessness out here is predicated on priorities of
enforcement and driven by public employee unions who see us the people in
terms of "fees" and "fines" to feed their salaries, perhaps in the way the
Thanksgiving chef eyes the roasting turkey amid hungry mouths.

AWOL in Washington

The new lawlessness at the federal level, however, is far more serious,
because it is predicated on "social justice": those deemed "in need" shall
be exempt from the law; those "not in need" shall not.

The War Powers Resolution, like it or not, is the law of the land. It
requires the president to notify Congress within 48 hours of committing
armed forces to military action. Without an authorization of the use of
military force or a declaration of war, the military cannot remain in combat
abroad. That's why George W. Bush went to Congress to authorize the
Afghanistan and Iraq wars. During the heated rhetoric over the Iranian
missile controversy, presidential and vice-presidential candidates Obama and
Biden both expressed support for the resolution - apparently outraged that
Bush might unilaterally bomb Iran without notifying a Senator like
themselves.

So when we recently passed the 60-day limit after the initial and continual
use of armed forces in Libya, why did not Obama seek permission from
Congress?

Here the question is not the usual Obama hypocrisy that has seen him
demagogue and damn Guantanamo, preventative detention, tribunals,
renditions, the Patriot Act (just signed by a former critic via computerized
autopen
<http://washingtonexaminer.com/blogs/beltway-confidential/2011/05/congressme
n-dont-have-read-bills-so-what-makes-you-think-presiden>  [1] from the UK no
less), and Predators - only to expand or embrace them all. Rather, the
problem is a question of legality itself.

Is the War Powers Resolution the law of the land or not? Or are we to assume
a progressive president is complying with both UN resolutions and an Arab
League mandate, and therefore, as the good internationalist and Nobel
laureate, sees no reason to consult, as American law requires, his own
elected U.S. Congress - the latter a more suspect and reactionary body that
does not enjoy the moral stature of the UN or the Arab League?

This disregard reminds us of the shake-down of BP, when the administration
more or less declared by fiat that the demonized corporation had to cough up
a $20 billion contingency clean-up fund - reminiscent of someone in the
classical Athenian ekklesia <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ecclesia>  [2] or
late 18th-century French assembly going after the better off by mere
proclamation.

In that regard, an administration is sworn to uphold the established law;
why, then, was the Defense of Marriage Act arbitrarily rendered null and
void without legislative appeal, simply because it was considered illiberal
by those now with executive power? Can President Obama and Attorney General
Holder de facto declare a law unconstitutional and then not enforce it?
Could a renegade conservative counterpart likewise declare Roe vs. Wade
unconstitutional, and go after abortionists because it deemed them too
liberal?

Or perhaps a better example is the bailout to Chrysler
<http://pajamasmedia.com/eddriscoll/2009/05/26/sopranonomics/>  [3] that was
contingent upon reversing the contractual order of creditors, putting union
members and retirees, contrary to law, to the front of the line, and those
who held Chrysler debt to the rear. Was the logic something like the
following spread-the-wealth notion: Bondholders are wealthier anyway and so
have enough money already; union members - and Democratic stalwarts -
actually do the work, and so have a moral claim to the money that trumps the
superfluous legal right of the wealthy and powerful?

Or we might ponder the administrative decision by bureaucratic decree to
stop a company like Boeing from opening a new airline production line in
South Carolina
<http://hotair.com/archives/2011/04/21/nlrb-dictates-boeing-operational-plan
s/>  [4], purportedly because it is a red, right-to-work state. Again, the
logic is that companies cannot open factories where they wish, since they
have moral obligations that must stand above a mere legal notion of freedom
of commerce and association.

Do we remember the voter intimidation case dropped against the Black
Panthers - on the supposition that, given the history of the poll tax and
Jim Crow voter discrimination, a little minor pushback is small potatoes?

Then we come to federal immigration law, or rather the deliberate effort to
undermine it - in a fashion that goes well beyond the neglect of the law
shown by previous administrations. The Obama administration is going to
court, along with Mexico, to sue the state of Arizona that is trying to find
ways to bolster a federal law that the administration will not enforce.

But it gets worse: the Obama administration tries to subvert states that
wish to follow its own laws, but ignores cities that deliberately flaunt
them by declaring themselves "sanctuary cities." And consider entire states
like California, whose Assembly just passed its own version of the "Dream
Act" to provide millions in state funds to support illegal aliens at the
state-run colleges and universities (at a time when the state is $15 billion
short in balancing its annual budget, and, due to such a shortage of funds,
must release 40,000 prisoners
<http://blogs.the-american-interest.com/wrm/2011/05/27/scotus-makes-it-offic
ial-california-a-failed-state/>  [5] because of an inability to comply with
a court order addressing overcrowding).

By now we know the accustomed logic
<http://www.powerlineblog.com/archives/2011/05/029128.php>  [6]. Demonize
those who would seek to obey the law (e.g., they wish to arrest kids on
their way to ice cream, they want alligators and moats in the Rio Grande,
they are "enemies" that Latinos should "punish," they have already
"basically" finished their fence) and apotheosize those who break it (e.g.,
no mention of the 20,000-30,000 illegal alien felons in the California penal
system).

A Slippery Slope

I find all this quite frightening for a variety of reasons. Once the moral
high ground is claimed, then legality is constructed as some sort of
reactionary impediment in the way of egalitarian "fairness." The process
works geometrically: each time the federal government rules by fiat instead
of following the law - for reasons of humanitarianism abroad, ecological
responsibility, worker fairness, gay rights, or empathy for the alien - it
becomes a little bolder the next time.

The Left simply disregards its former purported role as guardians of
constitutional law, and grows quiet, again on the apparent logic that the
rare progressive presidency is simply too precious a commodity to endanger
by maintaining any consistent criticism in the manner it once went after the
Bush administration.

Imagine the reaction of the New York Times, NPR, or a Senator Obama had a
President Palin decided to bomb Iran off and on for 70 days without
congressional consultation, or had she decided to throw open the U.S. border
to any from Europe who could fly in, or had she violated union contracts to
favor junior Wall Street creditors, or had she demanded that an Al Gore
organization plop down several million in a contingency fund for the damage
it had done oil workers by obstructing efforts of companies to gain oil
leases.

Where does this end, this effort by Ivy League lawyers and civil
libertarians to substitute supposedly enlightened progressivism for
purported reactionary law? We easily and rightly condemn the crime when the
Right tries to overthrow legality in the cases of a Franco, Hitler, Greek
colonels, or Pinochet, who are easily identified as autocrats and dictators
openly subverting constitutional government. But the assault from the Left
is more insidious, given that the miscreants do it in self-declared
high-minded fashion for "us." I think here of the frightening trial of
Socrates in ancient Athens, the ascendency of the Jacobins during the French
Revolution, or Hugo Chavez's thuggery in Venezuela - not coups as much as
overdue punishment of "them."

Without the law, there is nothing.

  _____  

Article printed from Works and Days:
http://pajamasmedia.com/victordavishanson

URL to article:
http://pajamasmedia.com/victordavishanson/land-of-the-lawless-2/

URLs in this post: 

[1] via computerized autopen:
http://washingtonexaminer.com/blogs/beltway-confidential/2011/05/congressmen
-dont-have-read-bills-so-what-makes-you-think-presiden

[2] ekklesia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ecclesia

[3] the bailout to Chrysler:
http://pajamasmedia.com/eddriscoll/2009/05/26/sopranonomics/

[4] in South Carolina:
http://hotair.com/archives/2011/04/21/nlrb-dictates-boeing-operational-plans
/

[5] must release 40,000 prisoners:
http://blogs.the-american-interest.com/wrm/2011/05/27/scotus-makes-it-offici
al-california-a-failed-state/

[6] the accustomed logic:
http://www.powerlineblog.com/archives/2011/05/029128.php

 



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