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Lessons From the Kelo Decision
by
Rep. Ron Paul,
MD
by Rep. Ron Paul, MD
One
week after the Kelo decision by the Supreme Court, Americans are
still reeling from the shock of having our nations highest
tribunal endorse using government power to condemn private homes
to benefit a property developer. Even as we celebrate our independence
from England this July 4th, we find ourselves increasingly enslaved
by petty bureaucrats at every level of government. The anger engendered
by the Kelo case certainly resonates on this holiday based on rebellion
against government.
The
City of New London, Connecticut essentially acted as a strongman
by seizing private property from one group of people for the benefit
of a more powerful private interest. For its services, the city
will be paid a tribute in the form of greater taxes from the new
development. In any other context, whats happening in Connecticut
properly would be described as criminal. However, the individuals
losing their homes understand that stealing is stealing, even if
the people responsible are government officials. The silver lining
in the Kelo case may be that the veneer of government benevolence
is being challenged.
Kelo
has several important lessons for all of us. We are witnessing the
destruction of any last remnants of the separation of powers doctrine,
a doctrine our founders considered critical to freedom. The notion
that the judicial branch of government serves as a watchdog to curb
legislative and executive abuses has been entirely exposed as an
illusion. Judges not only fail to defend our freedoms, they actively
infringe upon them by acting as de facto legislators. Thus Kelo
serves as a stark reminder that we cannot rely on judges to protect
our freedoms.
It
is folly to believe we will regain lost freedoms if only the right
individuals are appointed to the Supreme Court. Republican presidents,
including conservative icon Ronald Reagan, have appointed some of
our very worst Supreme Court Justices. In todays political
context, it frankly matters very little whom President Bush appoints
to replace Justice OConnor. Even the most promising jurist
can change radically over the course of a lifetime appointment.
We are supposed to be a nation of laws, not men, and the fixation
on individuals as saviors of our freedoms is misplaced. America
will regain lost freedoms only when her citizens wake up and reclaim
a national sense of self-reliance, individualism, and limited government.
A handful of judges cannot save a nation from itself.
The
Kelo case also demonstrates that local government can be as tyrannical
as centralized government. Decentralized power is always preferable,
of course, since its easier to fight city hall than Congress.
But government power is ever and always dangerous, and must be zealously
guarded against. Most people in New London, Connecticut, like most
people in America, would rather not involve themselves in politics.
The reality is that politics involves itself with us whether we
like it or not. We can bury our heads in the sand and hope that
things dont get too bad, or we can fight back when government
treats us as its servant rather than its master.
If
anything, the Supreme Court should have refused to hear the Kelo
case on the grounds that the 5th amendment does not apply to states.
If constitutional purists hope to maintain credibility, we must
reject the phony incorporation doctrine in all cases not
only when it serves our interests. The issue in the Kelo case is
the legality of the eminent domain action under Connecticut law,
not federal law. Congress can and should act to prevent the federal
government from seizing private property, but the fight against
local eminent domain actions must take place at the local level.
The people of New London, Connecticut could start by removing from
office the local officials who created the problem in the first
place.
July
5, 2005
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
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