Christian Post
 
SCOTUS Has Put an 'Air Hammer' to America's  Foundations

 
 
By Wallace Henley
June 29,  2015

 
Many still remember the stunned expression on the face of President George 
W.  Bush on September 11, 2001, as his chat with schoolchildren was 
interrupted  suddenly by an aide telling him of the assault on the New York 
World 
Trade  Center. 
Bush was mocked by some, but the event was so catastrophic that it took him 
a  moment to assimilate the full implications. 
 
 



So there is a stunned silence in the immediate aftermath of the Supreme 
Court  of the United States' assault on the Constitution inherent in its ruling 
on  same-sex marriage — even though most knew it was coming. 
Nevertheless, let us now pause and consider the enormity of the decision. 
1. A large portion of the America faith community — Christian,  Orthodox Je
wish, Muslim, and others — has now been potentially  criminalized. 
I have written in previous pieces that, with respect to biblically (rather  
than culturally) based churches, the left-progressive agenda has aimed at  
marginalization, caricaturization, vilification, criminalization,  
elimination. 
"By imposing its own views on the entire country, the majority facilitates  
the marginalization of the many Americans who have traditional ideas," 
wrote  Justice Samuel Alito. 
Any religious institution — Christian or otherwise — and its clergy 
refusing  to perform weddings for couples simply because they are homosexual 
presumably  could be prosecuted for denial of constitutional rights. 
2. The federal government, through SCOTUS, has now dictated to  religious 
bodies how they must interpret and apply — or even set aside — some of  
their sacred doctrines. 
The five Justices constituting the SCOTUS majority have issued a secular  
encyclical, daring to place themselves in the position of "high priest,"  
imposing their mandates on doctrines regarding gender and marriage held sacred  
by millions. 
"In our society, marriage is not simply a governmental institution; it is a 
 religious institution as well," said Justice Clarence Thomas. "Today's 
decision  might change the former, but it cannot change the latter. It appears 
almost  inevitable that the two will come into conflict, particularly as 
individuals and  churches are confronted with demands to participate in and 
endorse civil  marriages between same-sex couples," wrote Justice Thomas. 
3. SCOTUS' ruling on the Obamacare mandate and marriage reveals that  its 
majority has embraced subjectivist "living Constitution" theory and rejected  
objective original intent interpretation. 
Justice Thomas declared that the majority opinion is "at odds not only with 
 the Constitution, but with the principles upon which our nation was 
built." 
Justice Scalia was referring to the subjectivist interpretation when, with  
respect to the Court's most recent ruling on Obamacare mandates, he said 
that  the majority, including Chief Justice John Roberts, had engaged in 
"interpretive  jiggery-pokery" and "somersaults of statutory interpretation" in 
which "words  have no meaning."
Roberts dissented on same-sex marriage, and also noted the  subjective 
element when he and the other dissenters termed the majority's  decision "an 
act 
of the will, not legal judgment." 
Justice Samuel Alito, also part of the dissenting minority, had 
subjectivism  in mind when he said that "the Justices in the majority claim the 
authority to  confer constitutional protection upon (the right of same-sex 
marriage) simply  because they believe it is fundamental." 
If subjectivism becomes a basis for making law, then anything becomes  
possible. "At present, no one —including social scientists, philosophers, and  
historians — can predict with any certainty what the long-term ramifications 
of  widespread acceptance of same-sex marriage will be," said Justice Alito, 
adding  that "judges are certainly not equipped to make such an 
assessment." 
The majority found in the Fourteenth Amendment a "'fundamental right'  
overlooked by every person alive at the time of ratification, and almost  
everyone else in the time sense," wrote Justice Scalia. 
The majority decision, said Justice Thomas, "rejects the idea — captured in 
 our Declaration of Independence — that human dignity is innate and 
suggests that  it comes from the Government. This distortion of our 
Constitution 
not only  ignores the text, it inverts the relationship between the individual 
and the  state." 
Further, he wrote, liberty has "long been understood as individual freedom  
from government action, not as a right to a particular government  
entitlement." 
4. SCOTUS has indirectly ratified the decisions of lower courts  nullifying 
legitimate votes of the people.
To those  who take seriously the idea of a government "of the people, by 
the people, for  the people" earlier decisions by lower courts that nullified 
voters' favoring of  marriage to be defined as being between a man and woman 
constituted a  shocker. 
SCOTUS' sweeping decision June 26 indirectly ratifies the power of lower  
courts to cancel electoral outcomes not in alignment with their opinions. The 
 implications are deeply troubling, which is why Justice Scalia described 
the  SCOTUS majority's decision as a "judicial Putsch" and outright "threat 
to  American democracy." 
Justice Clarence Thomas wrote that the majority decision "will likely cause 
 collateral damage to other aspects of our constitutional order that 
protect  liberty." Justice Thomas also expressed concern that the SCOTUS ruling 
enshrines  within the Constitution a marriage definition that places it 
"beyond the reach  of the normal democratic process for the entire nation." 
Justice Scalia wrote that "Until the courts put a stop to it, public debate 
 over same-sex marriage displayed American democracy at its best. But the 
Court  ends this debate, in an opinion lacking even the veneer of law." 
5. SCOTUS, in the marriage decision, has disempowered the  states. 
The arrow of the SCOTUS ruling is aimed at the heart of the power of the 14 
 states banning same-sex marriage. 
Several states have passed laws in an attempt to protect clergy and 
business  owners whose religious convictions prevent them from performing 
same-sex  
marriages or providing their services to same-sex couples. Clearly, these  
protections are seriously threatened by the SCOTUS decision. "States are 
free to  adopt whatever laws they like, even those that offend the esteemed 
Justices'  'reasoned judgment,'" said Justice Scalia. 
Long ago, a Scottish writer wrote of the dissolution of his society. "Bit 
by  bit, you will chip away at what makes Scotland Scotland until nothing is 
left,"  he said. The SCOTUS decision on marriage has put an air hammer to 
America's  foundations

-- 
-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to