So What About Kavanaugh?
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2018-07-11 07:00 by Karl Denninger
in Editorial , 599 references Ignore this thread
So What About Kavanaugh? *
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Can you stop the caterwauling already?

Look folks, just cut the crap.  Seriously.  There's nothing legitimate about SCOTUS at the present time.  Nothing.

And no, neither left or right did that to the SCOTUS -- not Bush, not Obama, not Clinton and certainly not Trump.  The SCOTUS did that to itself, and we the people then ratified it -- and it happened a long time ago.

To make the example and underline the point I shall go back to the root of the problem we have today with the Judiciary, with the SCOTUS and with the Federal Government generally: The 17th Amendment, proposed on 5/12/1912 and ratified less than a year later on 4/8/1913.

Following that came Wickard .v. Filburn, 317 US 111, decided in 1942.  That decision was unanimous.

I bring this up because I was sent the following on Kavanaugh, which is a decision he filed a dissent on related to Obamacare, known as Seven-Sky .v. Holder.

Kavanaugh has been "credited" with giving Roberts the idea that he could "recast" Obamacare as a tax, and by doing so providing him the means to "save" Obamacare.  Nonsense.  Kavanaugh argued in his dissent that the Anti-Injunction Act prohibited the court from granting relief and never reached the merits at all.

This is important because, if you remember, Roberts didn't just recast the "penalty" (impermissible) as a tax -- he recast it as a Direct Tax, which is constitutionally impermissible on its face and has been since the founding of the nation except on a capitated basis.

In other words it is Constitutional to lay a $10 per-person direct tax -- but you can't condition or vary it.

There were multiple attempts to lay an income tax and every one was struck down as a violation of the Constitution, leading to the 16th Amendment, which permitted same.  But the 16th Amendment only authorized taxes on income; it did not override the general prohibition on non-capitated direct taxes in the Constitution.

That is, Roberts re-wrote an unconstitutional "penalty" into an Unconstitutional Tax -- a black letter unconstitutional tax that was unconstitutional in 1789 and remains so today -- and yet nobody has done a damned thing about it.

This is, I remind you, despite the Congressional Record from the time of the crafting of the PPACA containing evidence that Congress knew they couldn't define the "penalty" to be a tax as they knew that was a facially-unconstitutional direct tax so they intentionally worded it as a penalty to try to get around that infirmity!

I bring all this up, especially the elements of Wickard .v. Filburn, because if you read the above linked opinion -- not Kavanaugh's dissent but the opinion that was issued -- you will in fact find myriad references to Filburn as controlling precedent.

But Wickard .v. Filburn was nothing less than a complete re-write of the Constitution so as to remove the separation of power between the Federal Government and the States!

The decision held that a farmer who grew a crop for his own internal consumption -- that of his family and his animals on said farm, never entering one grain of same into commerce, was nonetheless subject to federal regulation on how much of said crop he could grow or whether he could grow it at all.

The claim was that because his act of growing same would mean he wouldn't need to buy as much, or none at all, of the same product or something that provided the same benefit (e.g. was food and thus sustained life) that affected interstate commerce.

By this decision the Supreme Court completely tore up the entire Constitution; it rendered literally no subject matter beyond federal regulation.  You can, under this premise, have a federal law passed making it illegal for you to have a toilet in your house with the intended effect of forcing you to go down the street and pay $1 to take a crap each time.  Why?  Because if you have a toilet you will not need to use the public one at $1 for each use as much, or even at all.  Since the pipe (for the water!) might travel in interstate commerce this affects same, and thus federal regulation attaches.

So given that precedent, and that the correct and immediate response to that decision was not taken by the States (specifically, to immediately secede and call up their National Guard units to enforce same until and unless the Constitution was restored as the contract with the States had been breached egregiously and without any possibility of recovery through peaceful means) what do you think was going to happen with Obamacare?

Here lies the problem with Kavanaugh -- and all the rest of these black-robed bastards: They know good and goddamn well the Constitution prohibits nearly everything in Federal Law today and they don't give a shit.

More to the point neither do you so long as the violations are to your liking!  Nowhere is the Federal Government empowered to regulate public schools.  There is no Federal Constitutional right to an education -- of any sort.  Yet there is title after title bearing on exactly this, forcing expense down the states' throats.  The States have constitutional guarantees at the state level for a public educational system but nothing allows federal reach into same.

THE SUPREME COURT DOES NOT HAVE THE POWER TO REWRITE THE CONSTITUTION YET IT ROUTINELY HAS DONE EXACTLY THAT.

The Founders were very specific on creation of a weak federal government and strong states.  They did it for the specific reason that they fully expected and anticipated exactly the sort of schism between the people we have today.  They expected and designed the federalist system so that 13 (now 50) political laboratories would be empowered to each come up with their own set of rules, regulations, taxes and benefits.

The Federal Government's role was to (1) prevent invasion whether by stealth or force (gee, they're doing that today, right?), (2) to prevent states from trying to rig the outcome of their political experiments by laying what amount to tariffs on goods and services crossing state lines and (3) to protect against infringement of individual rights (all of which pre-exist government and are not granted by same) such as the right to speak, the right to freedom of worship, the right to self-defense (thus the Second Amendment) and the various collection of due process rights such as the right to a trial by jury, to confront one's accuser and to be free from searches and seizures except upon issuance of a warrant containing the specifics of probable cause, and strictly limiting what was to be searched for, and where.

To the extent a state wished to enact a tax and spending program that issued welfare they could.  But they couldn't compel any other state to go along with it or pay for it as absolute control of the upper house -- the Senate -- rested in STATE LEGISLATURES.  In other words the people had their proportional representation (in the US House) and the State Legislatures had theirs (in the Senate.)

To pass a federal law, say much less a Constitutional Amendment, you needed concurrence of both.

The 17th Amendment ended that.  The State Legislatures were permanently stripped of the foundation of their power at the Federal Level -- the requirement that they concur through the Senate before any Federal Law could be passed.

Further, let me point out that at the time of Wickard, and indeed continually both before and since, the US Congress could have constrained the power of the US Supreme Court.  Congress has the power to establish tribunals inferior to the Supreme Court (and over which it has appellate jurisdiction), and has (Article I, Sec 8)

But the Constitution also says this in Article 3 Section 2 about Congressional Regulation of the Supremes:

2: In all Cases affecting Ambassadors, other public Ministers and Consuls, and those in which a State shall be Party, the supreme Court shall have original Jurisdiction. In all the other Cases before mentioned, the supreme Court shall have appellate Jurisdiction, both as to Law and Fact, with such Exceptions, and under such Regulations as the Congress shall make.

Congress can control the boundaries of any appeal, for instance.  And while Congress cannot prevent any case in which Original Jurisdiction rests these are a tiny, in fact vanishingly small, percentage of the whole of what the Supreme Court hears.

But it hasn't.

So what about Kavanaugh personally?  Well, he's opined that assault weapon bans are unconstitutional.  He's right -- they are and so are all other federal gun laws except those bearing on interstate commerce.  Laws banning or regulating, including licensing or permitting, the "keeping and bearing" of arms are black-letter unconstitutional.  Period.

But he's also opined that the President is immune from indictment.  Uh, no.  That's not in the Constitution; I know how he reaches that viewpoint but it simply isn't in the enumerated powers and with good reason.  A primary principle of statutory and Constitutional construction is that words that are present mean what they say and those that are omitted cannot be added in; the writers are presumed to have omitted the words you might imagine you'd like to see on purpose.  Indeed the founding principle of this nation is that all are created equal.  One cannot be equal if one is immune from the legal strictures that apply to anyone else as a consequence of being elected or appointed to a political office.  Finally the Constitution is a negative document not just by inference but by actual word in the 10th Amendment; that which is not specifically delegated as a power does not exist at the federal level -- including for federal office holders!

Does Kavanaugh have an excellent intellectual background and ability to reason?  Absolutely.  But is that the test?  It ought not be yet the usual pablum of "obeying the written Constitution" was trotted out by him at the lectern (it is not a podium folks -- learn the difference Mr. President!  You stand on a podium, and you speak behind a lectern!) -- which is an utterly common yet blatant and outrageous lie uttered by all Supreme Court nominees.

When you wind it all up what you have here is a nominated man who has the very same idea of making the Constitution read the way he wants it to that Sotomayer and Kagen have -- along with others before them and plenty of robe-wearers right now.  Nor can you point to Scalia, who once again "found" things that simply never existed.  They simply have a different idea of how they want the Constitution to read.

Yes, it is a fact that actually obeying the dictates of the Constitution means that a huge percentage of the alleged laws on the books -- like 80% of them or more -- simply go "poof" like a fart in a Church.  That's how it's supposed to work.  Nearly the entire federal gun law set, for example, is unconstitutional.  Ditto for the "scheduling" of drugs; Congress knew damn well they had to pass an amendment to ban alcohol.  Alcohol is a drug, and a drug of abuse.  Well?

Then there's Roe.  If you haven't read the actual opinion you should; it has a quite-full exposition on the history of abortion included in it.  It's an extraordinarily well documented piece of judicial reasoning, whether you agree with the conclusion (and its limitations; there was no blanket right to abortion contained in the opinion) or not.  But Roe, in the end, turns on whether you have an individual right to privacy, which the justices found.  Well, if you do and it vests in the Due Process clause of the 14th Amendment, how come it hasn't been applied to anything else?  Why can a private entity collect all manner of private data and sell it to anyone who they want including the government, without a warrant?  Why can the government use a DNA database without a warrant?  Why can the government (and it does, by the way, in many if not all states by now) collect DNA from all newborn children and catalog that?

In short how do you have a constitutional right to privacy if you can't actually enforce it anywhere except in the abortion doctor's office?

Cut the bullshit folks.  Those screaming on both sides of the aisle are simply demanding that the government put its boot on your neck as they want it to, and not as the other side wants.

NOBODY is arguing for a return to the boundaries of the Constitution, never mind that pesky 17th Amendment we can't get rid of without a revolution.

With that said I predict Kavanaugh will be confirmed -- before the election.

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