The Politically Incorrect Guide to the Constitution
by Thomas E. Woods, Jr.
by Thomas E. Woods, Jr.
DIGG THIS
As
we read
on this site yesterday, Kevin R.C. Gutzman has just released
The
Politically Incorrect Guide to the Constitution. For what
my opinion is worth, this is one of the most important books of
the past 25 years. There is absolutely nothing like it, anywhere.
The Politically
Incorrect Guide to the Constitution is not another of the toothless
and forgettable laments about the death of the Constitution at the
hands of activist judges that we read from time to time from the
right-wing pundit class, though of course Gutzman decries both of
these things. This is a far more sweeping, much more fundamentally
devastating indictment of the Supreme Court, of the "legal
training" that raises up ever more people to perpetuate its
record of dishonesty and usurpation, and of the American regime
at large – which rests on the legal fictions Gutzman shreds in his
book.
To those who
weep over the Constitution’s neglect these past 50 or 100 years,
Gutzman shows that defiance of that document has gone on from the
beginning, starting in the 1790s. An expert on colonial and early
republican Virginia, Gutzman knows the Virginia ratifying convention
inside and out. He knows the promises made to the people, and the
assurances that Virginia’s ratifiers inserted into that state’s
ratification instrument. And he shows that Jefferson and his allies
were faithful to those principles and promises, and that the so-called
Federalists and their present-day apologists (which includes just
about everybody) were not.
The five or
ten lines from The
Federalist that Straussians and other centralizers cite
on behalf of their nationalist reading of the Constitution are also
dealt with. Gutzman, in fact, is the Straussians’ worst nightmare.
Their interpretation of the nature of the American union does not
survive Gutzman’s study. (You’ll also read about the true influence
– which, contrary to popular belief, was actually very slight –
of The Federalist.)
John Marshall,
Chief Justice of the United States from 1801 to 1835, comes in for
some serious scholarly thrashing as well. Marshall is all too typically
held up as an idol before conservatives and even libertarians, and
he remains a central icon of early American history. For Gutzman,
Marshall is an outright opponent – and a dishonest one at that –
of the legal principles on which the people of the states were promised
their new government would be based. Where else can you find such
an iconoclastic portrayal? (The inconsistent James Madison, too,
winds up with his share of bruises.)
Gutzman also
treats a great many politically incorrect subjects from a constitutional
perspective. I won’t spoil the surprise by giving everything away,
but if you happen to have a thing for being told the truth rather
than lies, you’ll read and cheer.
It’s going
to be fun to watch the so-called constitutional lawyers try to attack
Gutzman’s book. And try they will – of that you can be sure. But
Gutzman, who holds a law degree as well as a Ph.D. in history, is
uniquely positioned to parry any such attacks: unlike his opponents
he actually knows early American history, not just a string of unfounded
Supreme Court decisions purporting to be "constitutional law."
An expert on
both history and law, Gutzman has some choice words for the way
law is taught today:
Legal education
today is much different from what it was in John Marshall’s day,
or even early in the twentieth century. When Thomas Jefferson
and Edmund Randolph, John Marshall and Patrick Henry studied law,
they did so by reading treatises in what was called the science
of law. Common-law study was in its nature historical and theoretical,
and familiarity with the history of England was essential to it.
Now, however,
American law students are almost universally subjected to the
case method. Their texts are collections of judicial opinions,
or in a few cases of statutes, with absolutely no historical context….
In short, if the judges make a particular false assertion about
the Constitution in numerous cases, students reading those opinions
have no way of recognizing that assertion’s falsity. They are
provided no tools for analyzing judges’ claims – only with scads
of the opinions incorporating those claims.
This is one
reason, Gutzman says, that "legal training should not be confused
with an education."
Now there will
always be some libertarians who – missing the point – will insist
that they do not care about the Constitution, and by extension about
a groundbreaking book like this. All they care about is liberty,
regardless of the words of any Constitution, which they do not consider
binding anyway.
My purpose
is not to disparage this point of view, which in large measure I
myself share. I simply happen to find it significant that from the
very beginning, politicians and judges, in order to justify their
departure from the understanding of the Constitution that was peddled
to the people at ratification time, employed arguments that were
exactly the opposite of what they themselves had
told Americans in order to get them to ratify the Constitution.
This is obviously an important proselytizing point for libertarians,
since it shows how governments and their "constitutions"
really end up working. Gutzman’s book also provides a fascinating
glimpse at how the state transforms institutional restraints
on its growth into mandates for that growth. (Bertrand de
Jouvenel did something similar for European history in his book
On
Power.) And it asks, if only implicitly, whether in the
long run any piece of paper can really be a match for the state’s
predatory instincts. I can hardly imagine a libertarian or a serious
conservative who wouldn’t find these questions worth asking.
Although I
was revisiting much familiar ground as I read this book, even I
was shocked at how dishonest the federal courts have been over the
years. And Gutzman just eviscerates all of it, slashing and burning
everything in sight, and holding up the ludicrous series of fictions
that pass for "constitutional law" to hilarious derision.
Gutzman isn’t
supposed to do any of this, of course, since the continuation of
the racket depends on popular ignorance. To the legal establishment
he is like the man who shouts out in the middle of the show how
the magician is really sawing the woman in half.
Thankfully
for him, it is impossible to dig up anything insensitive that Gutzman
wrote a dozen years ago and, in the typical manner of commie agitprop,
pretend it’s relevant to assessing the merits of his book. Google
searches reveal only that he’s been published in top academic journals
like the William and Mary Quarterly, the Journal of the
Early Republic, the Journal of Southern History, the
Journal of Politics, the Virginia Magazine of History
and Biography – and the list goes on, for quite a while. The
crazies might actually have to listen to what he’s saying and address
him on the merits of his case. That’ll be a first.
No
such radically Jeffersonian overview of American constitutional
history, from its colonial and revolutionary antecedents all the
way to the present, has ever been written. Every American needs
the information in this book. Naturally, the guardians of fashionable
opinion certainly don’t want them to have it, and neither does anyone
in the political establishment.
So what are
you waiting for?
June
12, 2007
Thomas E. Woods, Jr. [view
his website;
send
him mail] is
senior fellow in American history at the Ludwig
von Mises Institute. His
books include How
the Catholic Church Built Western Civilization (get a free chapter
here),
The
Church and the Market: A Catholic Defense of the Free Economy
(first-place winner in the 2006
Templeton Enterprise Awards), and the New York Times
bestseller The
Politically Incorrect Guide to American History.
Copyright
© 2007 Thomas E. Woods, Jr.
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