| ||||
:: welcome to NINOMANIA:: A constitutional law blog by Scalia/Thomas fan David M. Wagner, M.A., J.D., Research Fellow, National Legal Foundation, and Teacher, Veritas Preparatory Academy. Opinions expressed here are those of the author and do not reflect those of the NLF or Veritas. :: bloghome | E-mail me :: | ||||
:: Thursday, March 30, 2006 ::
:: David M. Wagner 10:59 AM [+] :: ... :: David M. Wagner 12:59 PM [+] :: ... To the Editor: :: David M. Wagner 12:51 PM [+] :: ... According to The Washington Post: Scalia reportedly said it was "crazy" to suggest that combatants captured fighting the United States should receive a "full jury trial," and dismissed suggestions that the Geneva Conventions might apply to detainees at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.In his dissent in Rasul v. Bush, Justice Scalia wrote: Today’s opinion, and today’s opinion alone, overrules Eisentrager; today’s opinion, and today’s opinion alone, extends the habeas statute, for the first time, to aliens held beyond the sovereign territory of the United States and beyond the territorial jurisdiction of its courts. No reasons are given for this result; no acknowledgment of its consequences made. By spurious reliance on Braden the Court evades explaining why stare decisis can be disregarded, and why Eisentrager was wrong. Normally, we consider the interests of those who have relied on our decisions. Today, the Court springs a trap on the Executive, subjecting Guantanamo Bay to the oversight of the federal courts even though it has never before been thought to be within their jurisdiction–and thus making it a foolish place to have housed alien wartime detainees.The Freiburg remarks are hardly a surprise. Nor are they are comment on the Hamdan case as such, as his Knights of Columbus remarks a few years back were a comment on the Newdow case. :: David M. Wagner 9:45 PM [+] :: ... :: David M. Wagner 7:19 PM [+] :: ... There is nothing new or surprising in the proposition that our unchanging Constitution refers to other bodies of law that might themselves change. The Fifth Amendment provides, for instance, that “private property” shall not “be taken for public use, without just compensation”; but it does not purport to define property rights. We have consistently held that “the existence of a property interest is determined by reference to ‘existing rules or understandings that stem from an independent source such as state law.’ ”.... This reference to changeable law presents no problem for the originalist. No one supposes that the meaning of the Constitution changes as States expand and contract property rights. If it is indeed true, therefore, that a wife in 1791 could not authorize the search of her husband’s house, the fact that current property law provides otherwise is no more troublesome for the originalist than the well established fact that a State must compensate its takings of even those property rights that did not exist at the time of the Founding.... :: David M. Wagner 11:54 AM [+] :: ... :: David M. Wagner 10:00 AM [+] :: ... I do enjoy the professoriat not quite understanding how they've ended up where they are. I mean, using federal funding to suck universities into conforming to a nationally-dictated agenda seemed like such a good idea from 1964 to 1994. Remember how cool it was when all those yahoo schools had to dump their wrestling teams and give thefunding to women's ultimate frisbee instead? Good times. :: David M. Wagner 2:40 PM [+] :: ... :: David M. Wagner 1:14 PM [+] :: ... Good news: where the "compelling state interest" test applies, it actually requires a compelling state interest! This apparently obvious yet historically doubtful point seems to be the main lesson of Gonzales v. O Centro Espirita Beneficteuniao do Vegetal, in which Chief Justice Roberts, yet again, produced unanimity on a potentially controversial issue. (What on earth are we going to call this case? I'll go with "Centro Espirita" for now.) Roberts has also waved his unanimity wand in another abortion-related case, bringing to an end NOW's 20-year campaign to bankrupt Joe Scheidler and intimidate pro-life protestors with RICO treble damages. In another unanimous opinion, delivered by Justice Breyer, the Court says, nope, the whole thing was a mistake, because it turns out the Hobbs Act, on which NOW was relying as a predicate felony for its RICO suit, does not forbid violent conduct unrelated to extortion or robbery. Just about everybody got to deliver a unanimous opinion this week. (Unanimous meaning 8-0, because these cases were argued before Justice Alito was confirmed.) Justice Thomas did an antitrust opinion, something he had excelled in on the D.C. Circuit. Even the opinions with dissents produced atypical splits. Thomas dissented from a Scalia opinion on the applicability of federal arbitration rules to state proceedings, and from a Kennedy opinion on the Federal Tort Claims Act in which Scalia joined. Roberts several times joined the majority when only Scalia and Thomas were in dissent, but then, Rehnquist often did that too. Before anyone starts writing "strange new respect" op-eds, remember that Roberts joined the Scalia dissent in Gonzales v. Oregon, a decision that could conceivably have been rightly decided but was not rightly reasoned. (It was actually a nondelegation case, and as such, should have been an easy one for the U.S. under Whitman v. American Trucking.) :: David M. Wagner 12:03 PM [+] :: ... |
||||
|