Its been a tough summer for social conservatives,
thanks to our federal courts. From gay rights to affirmative
action to Boy Scouts to the Ten Commandments, federal courts recently
have issued rulings that conflict with both the Constitution and
overwhelming public sentiment. Conservatives and libertarians who
once viewed the judiciary as the final bulwark against government
tyranny must now accept that no branch of government even remotely
performs its constitutional role.
The practice of judicial activism legislating from the bench
is now standard for many federal judges. They dismiss the doctrine
of strict construction as hopelessly outdated, instead treating
the Constitution as fluid and malleable to create a desired outcome
in any given case. For judges who see themselves as social activists,
their vision of justice is more important than the letter of the
laws they are sworn to interpret and uphold. With the federal
judiciary focused more on promoting a social agenda than upholding
the rule of law, Americans find themselves increasingly governed
by men they did not elect and cannot remove from office.
Consider the Lawrence case decided by the Supreme Court
in June. The Court determined that Texas had no right to establish
its own standards for private sexual conduct, because gay sodomy
is somehow protected under the 14th amendment right to privacy.
Ridiculous as sodomy laws may be, there clearly is no right to
privacy nor sodomy found anywhere in the Constitution. There are,
however, states rights rights plainly affirmed
in the Ninth and Tenth amendments. Under those amendments, the
State of Texas has the right to decide for itself how to regulate
social matters like sex, using its own local standards. But rather
than applying the real Constitution and declining jurisdiction
over a properly state matter, the Court decided to apply the imaginary
Constitution and impose its vision on the people of Texas.
Similarly, a federal court judge in San Diego recently ordered
that city to evict the Boy Scouts from a camp they have run in
a city park since the 1950s. A gay couple, with help from the
ACLU, sued the city claiming the Scouts presence was a violation
of the separation of church and state. The judge agreed,
ruling that the Scouts are in essence a religious organization
because they mention God in their recited oath. Never mind that
the land, once privately owned, had been donated to the city for
the express purpose of establishing a Scout camp. Never mind that
the Scouts have made millions of dollars worth of improvements
to the land. The real tragedy is that our founders did not intend
a separation of church and state, and never envisioned a rigidly
secular public life for America. They simply wanted to prevent
Congress from establishing a state religion, as England had. The
First amendment says Congress shall make no law
a phrase that cannot possibly be interpreted to apply to
the city of San Diego. But the phony activist separation
doctrine leads to perverse outcomes like the eviction of Boy Scouts
from city parks.
These are but two recent examples. There are many more, including
the case of Alabama Chief Justice Roy Moore, who was ordered by
a federal court to remove a Ten Commandments monument from Alabama
courthouse property.
The
political left increasingly uses the federal judiciary to do in
court what it cannot do at the ballot box: advance an activist,
secular, multicultural political agenda of which most Americans
disapprove. This is why federal legal precedents in so many areas
do not reflect the consensus of either federal or state legislators.
Whether its gun rights, abortion, taxes, racial quotas,
environmental regulations, gay marriage, or religion, federal
jurists are way out of touch with the American people. As a society
we should reconsider the wisdom of lifetime tenure for federal
judges, while Congress and the President should remember that
the Supreme Court is supreme only over other federal courts
not over the other branches of government. Its time for
the executive and legislative branches to show some backbone,
appoint judges who follow the Constitution, and remove those who
do not.