Posted by Ilya Somin:
Why Oliver Wendell Holmes is Grossly Overrated:
http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2009_08_16-2009_08_22.shtml#1250779650


   In my view, Oliver Wendell Holmes is one of the most overrated
   justices ever to sit on the Supreme Court, and [1]H.L. Mencken's
   contemporary critique of Holmes, [2]linked by co-blogger David
   Bernstein, is a good explanation of why. As Mencken put it, Holmes was
   no "advocate of the rights of man," but rather "an advocate of the
   rights of lawmakers." With rare exceptions, he ruled that legislators
   could do almost anything they wanted, even if it contrasted the plain
   text of the Constitution, or the original meaning. Mencken accurately
   points out that under Holmes' judicial philosophy, "there would be
   scarcely any brake at all upon lawmaking, and the Bill of Rights would
   have no more significance than the Code of Manu."

   Progressive contemporaries and modern liberals defended Holmes because
   he upheld economic regulations against challenges under the Fourteenth
   Amendment. But he also deferred to the legislature in upholding
   forcible sterilization in [3]Buck v. Bell (the famous "three
   generations of imbeciles is enough" case), and also dissented in
   landmark civil rights cases such as [4]the peonage cases (which helped
   prevent southern blacks from being dragooned back into a forced labor
   system), and [5]Buchanan v. Warley, the crucial 1917 decision that
   struck down racially restrictive zoning. As Mencken points out, Holmes
   also upheld fairly egregious restrictions of First Amendment rights
   during World War I and at other times. His reputation as a free speech
   civil libertarian mostly rests on a few instances where he deviated
   from his general pattern.

   Perhaps Holmes' ultradeferential jurisprudence could be defended if it
   were compelled by the text or original meaning of the Constitution. In
   reality, however, many of his decisions went directly against the text
   and purpose of the constitutional provision in question. For example,
   he voted to uphold racially restrictive zoning and peonage laws
   despite the fact that the Fourteenth Amendment was clearly intended to
   forbid government-mandated racial discrimination in property and
   contract rights, and voted to uphold peonage laws despite the plain
   text of the Thirteenth Amendment, which unequivocally forbids
   "involuntary servitude."

   One could also defend Holmes on the ground that he was merely a
   product of his times. On many of these issues, however, he was
   actually in dissent, which suggests that he wasn't merely reflecting
   the consensus view of the day.

   Finally, one could respect Holmes more if he upheld these abhorrent
   laws despite his personal distaste for them. In many of these cases,
   however, he either approved of the laws in question or was indifferent
   to them. His enthusiasm for mandatory sterilization in Buck v. Bell is
   well-known. But he was also indifferent to or mildly supportive of
   even very extreme segregation laws, and various harsh restrictions on
   freedom of speech and press. More generally, Holmes was a kind of
   Social Darwinist of the political process who [6]believed that
   majority rule was a force of nature that must almost always be
   deferred to.

   It is understandable that early 20th century Progressives admired
   Holmes. In addition to supporting expanded government control of the
   economy, [7]many of them also supported eugenics, restrictions on
   civil liberties, and government-mandated segregation (seen as a way of
   promoting social order and preventing the white race from being
   swamped by "inferior" groups). Even those inclined to be sympathetic
   to African-American rights or freedom of speech tended to subordinate
   these causes to what they considered to be the more important
   objectives of increasing government economic regulation and
   strengthening the power of labor unions. It is far more difficult to
   justify the admiration for Holmes that persists today among modern
   liberals, and some conservatives.

References

   1. http://www.io.com/gibbonsb/mencken/holmes.html
   2. http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2009_08_16-2009_08_22.shtml#1250696237
   3. 
http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/cgi-bin/getcase.pl?court=us&vol=274&invol=200
   4. http://law.jrank.org/pages/13452/Bailey-v-Alabama.html
   5. http://www.law.cornell.edu/supct/html/historics/USSC_CR_0245_0060_ZS.html
   6. http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1280201
   7. http://www.princeton.edu/~tleonard/papers/Myth.pdf

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