This needed to be said.

http://www.salon.com/2016/02/18/scalia_was_an_intellectual_phony_can_we_please_stop_calling_him_a_brilliant_jurist/
----------------------snip
George Orwell once noted that when an English politician dies “his worst
enemies will stand up on the floor of the House and utter pious lies in his
honour.”  Antonin Scalia was neither English, nor technically speaking a
politician, but a similar tradition can be witnessed in the form of the
praise now being heaped on him.

[...]

One of Scalia’s many obnoxious qualities as a jurist was his remarkably
pompous, pedantic, and obsessive insistence that the legal principles he
(supposedly) preferred – textualism in statutory interpretation,
originalism when reading the Constitution, and judicial restraint when
dealing with democratically-enacted legal rules – were not merely his
preferences, but simply “the law.”
[...]

But this kind of question-begging nonsense was the least of Scalia’s
judicial faults.  For the truth is that, far more than the average judge,
Scalia had no real fidelity to the legal principles he claimed were
synonymous with a faithful interpretation of the law.  Over and over during
Scalia’s three decades on the Supreme Court, if one of his cherished
interpretive principles got in the way of his political preferences, that
principle got thrown overboard in a New York minute.

I will give just three out of many possible examples.  In affirmative
action cases, Scalia insisted over and over again that the 14th Amendment
required the government to follow color-blind policies.  There is no basis
for this claim in either the text or history of the amendment.  Indeed
Scalia simply ignored a rich historical record that reveals, among other
things, that at the time the amendment was ratified, the federal government
passed several laws granting special benefits to African-Americans, and
only African-Americans.

No honest originalist reading
<http://prospect.org/article/scalia-and-thomas-originalist-sinners> of the
Constitution would conclude that it prohibits affirmative action programs,
but Justice Scalia was only interested in originalism to the extent that it
advanced his political preferences.

Similarly, the men who drafted and ratified the First Amendment would, it’s
safe to say, been shocked out of their wits
<http://www.law.harvard.edu/programs/olin_center/papers/pdf/Strine_812.pdf> if
someone had told them they were granting the same free speech rights to
corporations they were giving to persons.   Again as a historical matter,
this idea is an almost wholly modern invention: indeed it would be hard to
come up with a purer example of treating the Constitution as a “living
document,” the meaning of which changes as social circumstances change.  In
other words, it would be difficult to formulate a clearer violation of
Scalia’s claim that the Constitution should be treated as if it is “dead
dead dead.”
<http://www.msnbc.com/the-last-word/justice-scalia-constitution-dead>
Finally, and most disgracefully, Justice Scalia played a key role in the
judicial theft of the 2000 presidential election.  He was one of five
justices who didn’t bother to come up with something resembling a coherent
legal argument for intervening in Florida’s electoral process.  A bare
majority of the Court handed the election to George W. Bush, and the judges
making up that majority did so while trampling on the precise legal
principles
<http://www.yale.edu/lawweb/jbalkin/articles/essayonbushvgore.pdf> Justice
Scalia, in particular, claimed to hold so dear: judicial restraint,
originalist interpretation, and respect for states’ rights.

These examples are not rare deviations from an otherwise principled
adherence to Scalia’s own conception of the rule of law: they were the
standard operating procedure for the most over-rated justice in the history
of the United States Supreme Court.
_______________________________________________
pen-l mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/pen-l

Reply via email to