Needless to say, I vehemently disagree with parts of the following  essay.
There may well be a surfeit of Leftism in the Wall Street protests,
but it is crucial to recognize that the uprising is also  
anti-establishment.
And the Democratic establishment is almost as much joined at the hip
with Goldman-Sachs et. al. as is the GOP. The protestors are
anti-Goldman Sachs in the Democratic Party as well as in
the Republican Party. And for me, High Finance has virtually
made itself into High Treason. 
 
In so many words, it is time to kick Wall Street in the  gonads.
Really hard, so it hurts.
 
The "establishment" is the enemy, whether the men in gray flannel  suits
vote Republican or Democratic. But GOP leaders are wedded to 
Wall Street and simply "don't get it," any more then they "got"
what the Tea Party is all about  --which, ironically for me to  say,
is largely libertarian in character. Usually I think libertarianism
is strictly off-the-deep-end stuff. But in this case it has shown
how it can be most useful and good.
 
Anyway, it is interesting that NRO is now giving serious page space
to Newt's candidacy.  Not sure what to read into this, but the  article
is anything but lukewarm.
 
Billy
 
=================================================
 
 
 
 
_NATIONAL  REVIEW  ONLINE_ (http://www.nationalreview.com/)          Andrew 
 C. McCarthy  
 
 
 
     


 
October 8, 2011 4:00  A.M.The  Root-and-Branch Candidate 
Gingrich doesn’t  want to beat just Obama, but statism, too.


 
 
The question is simple but profound: Will the 2012  presidential-election 
campaign be about big ideas? Ideas like whether the  American people are 
still masters of their own destiny or instead have  resigned themselves to a 
rule of lawyers advertising itself as “the rule  of law”? 
To push these fundamentals to the fore is the rationale of Newt  Gingrich’s 
candidacy. If ever there were a big-ideas guy, it’s the former  House 
speaker. Ideas seem to churn out of him faster than the Treasury  churns out 
greenbacks for “green energy.” But do we want to think about  them? Newt 
believes we do — perhaps not so much that we want  to but that we have to think 
about them, if we are to remain  an America that is worth preserving. He is 
also a historian uniquely  sensitive to a unique historical moment. 
The Obama years have pushed the accelerator on what had been a long,  
inching slide into the progressive abyss. For three-quarters of a century,  
statism was a Fabian project. It was reminiscent of what Jefferson,  explaining 
his fear of the federal judiciary’s gradual imperialism,  described as “
working like gravity by night and day, gaining a little  today and a little 
tomorrow, and advancing its noiseless step like a  thief, over the field of 
jurisdiction, until all shall be usurped from the  States, and the government 
of 
all consolidated into one.” 
Bucking this trend, President Obama has leapt way ahead to the endgame:  a 
blizzard of unaccountable czars, nationalized sectors, suffocating  
regulations, and redistributed trillions. The result is economic stasis,  
massive 
unemployment, crony socialism, and the hovering prospect of  punishing taxes, 
crippled productivity, mounting social unrest, and a loss  of liberty so 
dramatic one actually notices that it is happening.  Americans have now seen 
the future, and, in growing numbers, they are  horrified by it. 
In addition, after three years of watching congressional Democrats  
slavishly toe the line — watching spectacles such as majority leader Harry  
Reid’s 
decision to blow up time-honored Senate parliamentary rules just to  avoid 
taking a vote that would embarrass the president — Americans are  also 
grasping that what makes Obama and his Occupy Wall Street base  “radical” is 
mainly their impatience. They want — right now — the  end of history that the 
progressive establishment has heretofore been  content to crawl toward, inch 
by cautious inch. 
One of the few virtues of Obama’s pedal-to-the-metal approach is that  it 
forced Democrats to choose sides. They’ve chosen him over a public that  
repeatedly shows it does not want what he’s redistributing. In the 2010  
elections, that choice proved catastrophic for Democrats, but the rout  hasn’t 
mattered. They’re still with him, because they accept his premises  even if 
they’
re not crazy about his pace. That illustrates that the  trajectory we’ve 
been on since the 1930s leads inexorably to where the  Obama Left wants to go. 
There is a reason why Bill Buckley yelled, “Stop!”  — not “Slow down!” — 
as he stood athwart history. 
So here is the dilemma: We have a moment in time in which it is  possible 
to demonstrate, starkly, that statism does not work, and  therefore that it 
ought to be removed root and branch. That argues not  only for dumping Obama 
but also for rolling back the tide of which Obama  is merely the most 
destructive wave. On the other hand, Obama is  uniquely destructive. Therefore, 
the GOP Beltway Bible instructs, our  priority is to come up with a safe 
candidate — one who is smooth enough to  fade into the woodwork and make the 
election solely about the president.  This is no time to scare people, the pros 
tell us. Let’s not get  independents fretting about some conservative 
counterrevolution. 
Newt Gingrich has a wealth of GOP establishment ties, but he is not the  
GOP establishment guy. He knows how to play the game, but he has always  had 
his own very strong ideas about how it ought to be played — and he has  been 
the smartest guy in the room enough times to realize  counterrevolutions are 
not impossible, even if the conventional wisdom  says so. Yes, ideas do 
pour out of him prolifically, and — law of averages  being what it is — every 
now and then they are clunkers. But while such  dalliances on health care 
and climate change make conservatives wince, we  also should realize that, 
most of the time, nobody does it better.  Certainly no American politician says 
the things that need to be said more  convincingly. 
Newt will never be the safe candidate. But he could be the  root-and-branch 
candidate. And the branch he is currently targeting for  deracination is 
the federal judiciary. In his “21st Century Contract with  America,” a bold 
action item is: “Bringing the courts back under the  Constitution and the 
rule of law.” 
And bold it is. For more than a half-century, it has been monotonously  
proclaimed that the judges are the last word on what the law is, and,  
therefore, that not only the litigants in the case but the whole of  society 
must 
yield to their decisions. It has become easy to forget — or  to have never 
known — that it was not always this way. As Gingrich argues  in a position 
paper he rolled out with a speech on Friday, there is  nothing in the 
Constitution that stands for this proposition. It is a  promotion the Warren 
court 
gave itself in 1958, in a gambit Stanford Law  School dean Larry Kramer aptly 
described as “not reporting a fact so much  as trying to manufacture one.” 
In his famous Marbury v. Madison opinion, Chief Justice John  Marshall 
reasoned that it was the task of judges to say what the law is.  This was not, 
however, the declaration of “the basic principle that the  federal judiciary 
is supreme in the exposition of the law of the  Constitution” — the lavish 
gloss the Warren court put on it in Cooper  v. Aaron. Indeed, Jefferson was 
far from alone in concluding that “to  consider the judges as the ultimate 
arbiters of all constitutional  questions” was “a very dangerous doctrine” 
that “would place us under the  despotism of an oligarchy.” Lincoln, too, 
perceived the peril to popular  sovereignty: “If the policy of the government 
upon vital questions  affecting the whole people is to be irrevocably fixed 
by decisions of the  Supreme Court,” he pointed out, “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.” 
The framers believed neither that the courts were supreme nor that the  
political branches accountable to voters were somehow relieved of the  
obligation to consider the constitutionality of government action. They  
thought the 
judiciary would be the least dangerous branch because its only  asset was 
judgment — it had no capacity to enforce its own rulings, and it  was 
beholden to Congress, which could place severe limits on its  jurisdiction and 
disestablish any lower courts it had chosen to create.  Because the three 
branches were taken to be coequals, it was thought  obvious that two joining 
together could undo the excesses of one. 
It was thus never meant to be the case, Gingrich contends, that  outrageous 
Supreme Court rulings could be reversed only by amending the  Constitution. 
He makes a stark case that the very notion is absurd. The  arduous 
amendment process requires the approval of supermajorities of  Congress and the 
states. Yet a Supreme Court ruling that cannot be  overcome because of these 
daunting democratic hurdles can be reversed, in  the bat of an eye, by a later 
Supreme Court ruling — by the vote of a  single, politically unaccountable 
justice in a 5–4 decision. 
If he were elected president, Gingrich promises, he would pursue a  series 
of concrete steps to reestablish the original balance of  constitutional 
power — the balance designed to ensure that Americans  decided important 
affairs of state democratically rather than having  decisions imposed on them 
by 
unelected lawyers. In passing laws, the  political branches would make use of 
Congress’s constitutional authority  to deny courts jurisdiction to hear 
categories of cases, something about  which progressives will no doubt shriek 
. . . at least  until someone catalogues the provisions to avoid judicial 
review that are  written into the Obamacare statute. 
Following the example of President Jefferson and the early 19th century  
Congress, Gingrich foresees the political branches’ eliminating courts  that 
consistently attempt to rewrite the laws and impose their personal  
predilections. In particularly egregious cases, judges could be impeached  for 
ignoring the Constitution and failing to heed the legitimate  prerogatives of 
the 
political branches. Congress could use its power of  the purse to defund 
enforcement of lawless rulings, and the political  branches could ignore them — 
as they did in the Civil War era with respect  to aspects of the notorious 
Dred Scott decision. We could go back  to the Lincoln formulation, which 
conceded the binding nature of judicial  rulings on private litigants in a 
particular case but denied that these  rulings operated as precedents binding 
on 
the American people and their  elected representatives. 
It is an interesting, provocative argument — one that makes you think  
things do not have to be the way they are if we have the will to make them  the 
way they were intended to be. That is to say, it is Gingrich at his  best. 
His best is a force to be reckoned with. Here’s hoping that the safe  
candidates will be asked to reckon with his big  ideas







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