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Packing the Court in Sober Perspective

08.07.2007


Recently, a fallacious argument has been presented in favor of packing the court. Whereas manipulating the size of the court is a legitimate means of checking power, any proposal to do so must be grounded in sound understanding of our constitutional framework and justified with specific grievance. In the July 26 issue of the New York Times, Jean Edward Smith has succeeded in demonstrating the historical legitimacy of the maneuver, but has utterly failed in supplying just cause for his proposal. Mr. Smith states: "there is nothing sacrosanct about having nine justices on the Supreme Court... If the current five-man majority persists in thumbing its nose at popular values, the election of a Democratic president and Congress could provide a corrective. It requires only a majority vote in both houses to add a justice or two."

 

The primary purpose of the judiciary is to facilitate a mechanism for politically impartial administration of the law. In the case of the federal judiciary these duties are augmented with the supreme objective being to implement impartial clarification of constitutional intent. Improving upon the parliamentary systems of the past, the patriarchs of the constitution were particularly concerned that the power charged with enforcing the law be distinguished from the power verifying violation. Extension of judiciary duties outside the intended structure generally disrupts the attuned separation of power at the root of our constitutional order, and depending on application, may usurp the power of the legislature or the executive. The primary harms of such action include an entanglement of power jurisdiction, and a corresponding suppression of the people’s representation.


Historically, there have been several concedable reasons, girded by a popular understanding of the American political order, granting just cause for judiciary adjustment. First, to check the power of the court itself, as a correction for entanglement in political matters. Second, to shore up the executive in times of war. Third, in an attempt to check the power of a third branch, though this is difficult considering the remaining branches bear instrumental involvement in the action. And fourth, to correct a court that is disregarding general understanding of the limitations and responsibilities of the federal government, as expressed by popular representation. More subtle court oscillations are best achieved through the standard presidential nomination and senatorial approval process.

 

Judicial transformation is inherently the most gradually evolving mechanism within our existing political order. Our constitutional framework is often abstracted as a system of checks and balances. The House, being elected most often and by the greatest width, is checked by the Senate, which represents narrower power and overturns more slowly. Likewise, the House checks the Senate's power through rapid adaptation. The court, by design, affords justices lifetime term limits within the practice of good behavior. The natural term limit acts as a check on the power of the House, the Senate, and the Executive. Deriving from this maturity, the court manifests a multi-generational interpretation of constitutional understanding, and buffers against temporal flights of fancy from the electorate as well as high power institutional organs.


A commonly cited example of court manipulation absent just cause is Franklin Delano Roosevelt's attempt to "pack the court" with justices favorable to his social policies. This endeavor was widely viewed as an imperial attempt to press forward his policy agenda against a multitude of objections. Despite achieving a significant portion of his platform, FDR failed to secure unprecedented policies specifically ruled unlawful by the federal court. Annoyed by the inconvenience of the democratic process, FDR devised a plan to elude the constitutional roadblock. With control of both chambers of congress, President Roosevelt presented a measure to commission an additional six justices to indulge his interests. By expanding the number of justices to fifteen, he’d attempt to skirt the constitutional restrictions by reconstructing the mind of law.


When FDR made public his intentions he was immediately faced with significant resistance. Unfortunately for him, the criticism was not only from the Republican opposition, as even essential allies in his own party withdrew support in disgust. As an obvious infringement upon the liberty of the people, the citizens stood in vehement disapproval.  His intentions were referred to by the senate judiciary committee as "a needless, futile, and utterly dangerous abandonment of constitutional principle..."


Despite Mr. Smith's intention to frame his prescribed policy as a plausible solution to a "five man majority", common sense renders his casual proposal adding "a justice or two" a feeble attempt to rationalize court packing for political gain. Reminiscent of FDR's attempt, Smith's plan would directly threaten the liberty of all citizens and undermine the founding principles of our civil balance. In 1937, the popular discourse of the era referred to FDR's methods as akin to those of the tyrant contemporaneously consolidating power across the Atlantic. Mr. Smith's proposal would rightfully suffer a similar fate. As Montesquieu observed in "Spirit of Laws", "there is no liberty, if the power of judging be not separate from the legislative and executive powers." Hamilton furthered the argument: "as liberty can have nothing to fear from the judiciary alone, but would have everything to fear from its union with the other departments... from the natural feebleness of the judiciary, it is in continual jeopardy of being overpowered, awed, or influenced by its co-ordinate branches."


Jean Edward Smith's "popular values" must be referring to the values embraced by New York and Hollywood elite. For those of us submerged in common society, the "popular values" presented in today’s media often differ from the values of American families, their peers, and local communities. His scholarly work may be well regarded, but perhaps due to a poor comprehension of the current pulse of American society, Smith's appeal to "popular values" emerges as an attempt to persuade citizens that a majority supports his doctrine of ideals, when in fact they do not. Smith fails to appreciate the current disconnect between a self-appointed, condescending, elite ruling class, and the average American. If Mr. Smith wishes to present just cause for packing the court, he needs to define the "popular values" to which he refers, as well as demonstrate the corrective relevance of the action. Until he does so, how are we to distinguish Mr. Smith’s proposal from FDR's?


~Silence DoBetter


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Borders, Bureaucracies, and Turn Coat Officials


                                                                                                                                                                              07.26.2007


Establishing the grounds for independence, the drafters of The Declaration reiterated a fundamental truth: The ideation of State power must be bound to consensual enforcement of the Will of the People. Achieving State accountability is an onerous task even in theory, and in practice governance forever falls short of our best intentions. While we accept that imperfection is inherent to any endeavor of man, there is a level of dysfunction beyond which the affairs of the State may not pass, for in so doing, the State itself relinquishes its very purpose for existing.

We are approaching that horizon of dysfunction. Congress and the Executive have undeniably ignored their core responsibilities to the people, and indulged themselves in an orgy of self-serving spending, nepotism, and outright fraud.


Non-binding resolutions, Pork and waste.

Cash in the freezer, Corporate gravy to taste.

Bridges to NoWhere, Unfunded mandate.

Federal overreach, The People they hate.

Tax them forever, and undermine their fate.


Recently witnessing similar tactics and manipulation in the defective amnesty bill, it is time we held accountable those who participated in this act of cynicism. It is in our best interest to propose a border bill which holds our elected bound to common intent, and excludes any alternative which bears dishonorable temptation, forcing our representatives to vote with honesty. It is truly unfortunate that a matter so great has been incorporated with legislative bribes intended to overrule the will of The People.

The legislation shall have no sign of monies allotted to any appended purpose other than effectively erecting a partition, and without augmented measure supplementary to the appropriated requirements therein. The proposal must embrace a rigid schedule asserting segments of the partition are completed and reviewed to be satisfactory. A clean bill encompassing strict financial discipline will place our representatives in a position of voting solely with or against The People, a position from which there is no contention from pork or divergent elements distorting congressional focus and loyalties. Forced to vote in such a manner, our elected officials have the opportunity to distinguish themselves as representatives of The People, or mere parasites upon the body politic. We may then reassess the need for the services of any representative with loyalties to employers other than their constituents.

Dwelling in its current bureaucracy, the border patrol is forced to compromise the necessary attention required to combat human trafficking and numerous security risks facing our nation. Their focus must be uncompromisable, and their service must be deliberate and loyal to National Security. Within its current anatomy, the agency is in proximate relationship with US Customs. Though appearing logical at first glance, this dependency inevitably skews focus and creates an unacceptable conflict of interest. International intellectual property rights enforcement, the purview of Customs, carries such enormous mercantile value, and imbues such a powerful lobbying force, that National Security interests take a back seat to intercepting the next shipment of pirated wares. The sovereignty of the Nation must not be compromised by the entanglement of special interests.

The actions of our representatives are contemptible. Their persistent obstinance in these matters has pressed the people to the bounds of their tolerance. Our voice has resounded a single recurring concern  which can only be dispelled through securing the border. In these times requiring exacting security for the citizens, we are growing alarmed by the charades in congress. Our prescribed policy is intended to unveil the vermin within the halls of
Washington and to focus a crucial line of defense in National Security. By focusing on security first, these policies will answer The People's demands, while inflicting accountability upon those disloyal to the ideals of  Self-Governance. So be it that we may protect and preserve our Liberty and the Sovereignty of this Nation.


~Silence DoBetter
   
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Our Hands at the Helm

07.04.2007 


While the opinion of any faction must be given just consideration, justice requires that the will of the majority carries commensurate measure. Conscious of core enumerated functions necessary for the maintenance of Liberty, the interests of the vast majority demand the State's subservience to common intent. Denial of such interests is nothing more than a reversion to the methods employed by kings of old.

As we celebrate the anniversary of our independence we may benefit by considering the principles of our founding. We have reasserted our belief in the primary position of The People in our constitutional order, reflecting the ideal that the power of the State is justified only by the consent of the governed. Ensuing due diligence has temporarily prevented an eclipse of our rights. We must be wary of leaving this event as an illusion of victory, for to do so we risk dismissing our immediate obligations. It is our duty to ensure our elected representatives proceed with the proper course of action regarding recent matters. The expression of the ideals of our founding dictates not only that oppression by the few shall be averted, but that the will of The People shall be enforced.

The Senate abiding by the will of The People should not be an aberration. We will accept no less than that our elected public servants perform, in real, meaningful action, the bidding of We who they represent. We must hold accountable those elected representatives who dismissed the voice of The People for the purpose of serving themselves and an elite ruling class. Though justice trumped their vote, we must not forget their selfish transgressions. In these times our resolve must emerge ever more vigilant in defense of principled government by The People, and let us never forget that We are the hands that shape our nations destiny.

--Silence DoBetter

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Borderless Super State

06.25.2007 



It is the citizens first right to open and exercise lines of communication amongst one another. To gather and converse, to sift through the divisional tactics of those who would have us lay silent:

We have reached a point in our history where those in power have abdicated their responsibility to our nation’s citizens. Working in the shadows, they sculpt a future hidden under veil, knowing that We the People have not approved of its form. That form can no longer be hidden. The objectives of our political class are clear to any who wish to see. Our elite ruling class is intent on undermining the Liberty of the American People for the purpose of creating a North American Super State. To accomplish this task they must impose upon the people a bill which secures their vision, a bill that displays the illusion of border security and ignores the core of the problem facing our nation.

The construction of a North American Super Highway is in sight. Within several months a snake will emerge and make its way through the heartland, using this nation as a link between our continental neighbors. It has already consumed the land, farms, and homes of our fellow citizens that lay within its path. This physical destruction is only the beginning, as there is more to be devoured along the carefully plotted course. Deliberately avoiding our cities, it preys on rural America to minimize opposition. Those in Texas that lay in its wake have gone unnoticed, their plight ignored by an elite media that is part of the problem. Forced to rely on the internet, their voice is being drowned as the next phase in the North American Super State is implemented.

America must remain her own. We must not bend to those in high power who would have us trade Liberty for the merging of nations. As we witness the second phase of the dismantling of our Liberty, we must stop the first. Surely construction of this highway has been delayed until the opposed immigration bill has been forced upon the citizens. Yet another tactic to prevent the people from connecting the DOTs.

The immigration bill is a high power tour de force. Border security will remain an illusion. National Security will not improve. Foreign big business will continue to import skilled labor at the expense of our own educated workers. Blue collar wages will continue to be repressed. The population of the United States will expand from 300 million to over 400 million within the next twenty years. Our environmental laws and regulations will be subverted. Our labor laws will be subverted. Mexicans will be prevented from gaining control over their own state, just as we lose control over our own.

In this crucial time we are to decide the future of this nation. We must look past our current divisions and halt the momentum of the powers that want this country for their own. Those who hold no regard for Liberty intend to steal from this nation and its citizens the blessings our forefathers fought and died to secure.

With our nation's future in the balance, this bill must be stopped. Our elected officials must not ignore our voice and leave us to the vipers that engage our political elite. Until we are heard we must not rest. Until they listen we must not consent. In the days to come we will discover if our elected will stand by their nation or will leave us to the vile transnational agenda.

There are those who wish to see Government of the People, By the People, and For the People perish from the Earth. They must be stopped.

--Silence DoBetter

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Our Neighbors in Liberty

06.19.2007 


Recently familiar with the ills of repession, the framers of the constitution were keenly aware of the mechanisms used for oppression of the human spirt. Having a general high regard of their fellow human beings, they sought to create a form of government that would secure Liberty for themselves and their neighbors. The structure of Government that they created, and duly approved by the people, while not perfect, has proven to be the most enduring protector of Liberty in human history.

The most difficult task in securing a free people is not preventing neighbor from oppressing neighbor, but preventing those in high power from dividing neighbor from neighbor. This tactic of division is used by the unscrupulous to cement their own positions of unchecked power. By ignoring their sworn duties, they may undermine not only the Liberty of the People, but also the security of each citizen. This same tactic serves the dual purpose of preventing the Mexican Citizens from achieving control of their own State and securing their prosperity.

There are now, as there have always been, those who would subvert the ideals we hold in common for the purpose of enslaving their fellow man. Occassionally we disagree on the best mechanisms to ensure our continued freedom. But there is one function of the state upon which we may not disagree, for to do so would prevent us from protecting all we have in common.

There is no Liberty without a sovereign, secure border.

--Silence DoBetter

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