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Tuesday, December 05, 2006
David Limbaugh :: Townhall.com Columnist
Justice Breyer's dangerous jurisprudence
by David Limbaugh
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Will the Dems' health care Christmas Present to America be an improvement or detriment to our health care system?


Who can reasonably deny that Breyer's approach diminishes the predictability and reliability of the law and the rule of law? It makes Breyer, in effect, a policy maker -- an arrogant, unelected and unaccountable one, at that -- rather than a judge.

If the Ten Commandments cases don't rock your boat, consider the real life application of Breyer's judicial philosophy to free speech -- a liberty every red-blooded American purports to cherish.

Breyer admits that he voted to uphold the McCain-Feingold campaign finance reform bill, though he acknowledges that regulating campaign expenditures amounts to regulating speech "because no one can run for office and have his message heard without money. So the First Amendment is involved."

But looking at consequences again, Breyer concludes he doesn't want the rich donors' speech to "drown out everybody else's. So maybe we have to do something to make that playing field a little more level in terms of money."

In other words, Breyer consciously suppresses speech selectively to ensure that all speech is equally projected. Breyer is simply imposing his political views through constitutional interpretation, seeking -- as liberals do -- to guarantee equality of outcomes rather than opportunities.

If you're still not alarmed, just think how Breyer's reasoning could be applied in other cases. We all know that liberals -- longing for the days of the liberal media monopoly -- have been frustrated over their inability to compete in the marketplace of ideas via talk radio. Especially with the failure of "Air America" to mitigate conservative dominance and level the talk show playing field, liberals are salivating at the prospect of reinstituting the "Fairness Doctrine" to emasculate conservative talk through the coercive power of government in a way the free market stubbornly refuses to do.

Though I have long been aware of the liberals' dark conspiracy to resurrect the Fairness Doctrine to shut up their political opponents -- just read leftist websites if you don't believe me -- I didn't fear the scheme, believing it couldn't pass constitutional muster.

But after reading Breyer's spooky thought processes on constitutional jurisprudence, I realize I was way too sanguine. Conservatives must never underestimate how important the composition of the courts is to the preservation of the Constitution and our liberties.

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About The Author
David Limbaugh, brother of radio talk-show host Rush Limbaugh, is an expert in law and politics and author of Bankrupt: The Intellectual and Moral Bankruptcy of Today's Democratic Party.
 
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To Benl
You are being short-sighted. Yes, you keep in office whom you may think is incompetent if the alternative is dangerous, especialy since such important matters as national security and judicial appointments (which have been handled well by President Bush) will be adversely affected.

Hey BS Detector & General Patton
BS Detector: maybe I'm missing something but it seems like you left out a very important piece of the puzzle. And that would be the numbers of those who voted for a 3rd party candidate. From what I see it does look like many R voters stayed at home. But many protest voted for either a D or 3rd party candidate which would account for the spike up under the D votes. And the spike down under the R. Any way to find out the numbers of those who did vote for 3rd party candidates? And I really appreciate you digging up these numbers for us. Must've been some work.

General Patton: Dude I wish I could write like you. You ought to create a townhall blog if you haven't. My opinion.Its easy. Go to the home page at the top. They walk you through it. Its simple. You painted a great picture of Sen. Frist. Best I've seen. DD
http://streetlevel.townhall.com
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