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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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Many conservatives reportedly chose not to vote in November to protest the Republican Party's abandonment of conservative principles. One potential consequence of that boycott could be a forfeiture of the chance to finally secure a majority of "originalist" justices on the Supreme Court.

Granted, it was going to be tough enough for President Bush to win confirmation for another conservative nominee to the court in the face of a militant minority should a vacancy occur, but now that the Democrats have control it will be virtually impossible.

This is something disgruntled conservatives should contemplate before sitting the next one out. It is also something Republicans should consider before abandoning conservative principles to the point of alienating their base.

Chris Wallace's "Fox News Sunday" interview of Justice Stephen Breyer is a sobering reminder of the impact of the elections on the judiciary. Wallace asked Breyer about his book, "Active Liberty," released a year ago in which Breyer supposedly defended his practice of rejecting "originalism" in constitutional interpretation.

In the book Breyer wrote, "Since law is connected to life, judges, in applying a test in light of its purpose, should look to consequences including contemporary conditions, social, industrial and political, of the community to be affected."

In my book, I noted that Breyer admitted he frequently makes decisions about a law's constitutionality using standards other than merely interpreting the text of the Constitution or the Framers' intent.

Breyer said, "I tend to emphasize purpose and consequences. Others emphasize language, a more literal reading of the text, history, and tradition -- believing that those help you reach a more objective answer."

I documented how Breyer's judicial approach plays out in his decisions. For example, he defended supporting patently inconsistent rulings in two separate cases involving Ten Commandments displays in front of courthouses in Kentucky and Texas based on the likely consequences of the Court's rulings.

Because the Texas monument had been on display for many years without incident he voted that it was constitutional. But the display before the Kentucky courthouse was much newer and likely to cause religious conflict, so he voted that it was unconstitutional.

It doesn't take a rocket scientist with a law degree to recognize that Breyer usurps legislative authority in rendering judicial decisions on such a basis. It is the prerogative of legislators, not judges, to weigh a law's impact on the community.

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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Rule of Law?
What Justice Breyer is advocating is the entithesis of the Constitution; a rule of men vs. a rule of law. In his case, the rule of men is that of five Justices who can muster a majority on any given subject based on their own personal preferences.

The mere fact that there are so many 5 to 4 decisions is evidence enough that adherence to the rule of law is gone. The very close nature of so many decisions is enough evidence that the Justices are making decisions based on their own views or that that laws are hopelessly vague. In either case, it leaves the public adrift trying to be in compliance with whatever whim strikes the Supreme Court.

Breyer's hallucinatory jurisprudence
This column is spot on. The Left has been salivating to find a way to suppress conservative talk radio. This is a very frightening thought. My guess is that most people don't think that it is possible; many of us were not adults when the doctrine was enacted. And then came Rush, he was Right, and the rest is history.

I cannot imagine a more provocative act, though, then suppressing the speech that millions of libertarian conservatives have grown to expect to hear on radio/TV. The obvious sleaziness of the act will impel action, lawsuits, etc.

Breyer's "Jurisprudence" Is Misconceived
David Limbaugh is correct to point out one unhappy consequences of not electing Republicans to the Senate: the likelihood of more liberal judges such as Justice Breyer on the federal bench.

Justice Breyer's "jurisprudence" is misconceived. Unlike the President and members of Congress, federal judges are not elected; adherence to the Article III role of the judiciary means adherence to the judicial role of applying law to cases and controversies properly before a federal court. If federal judges feel free, as Justice Breyer does, to look at purpose and consequence and not be focused on the text, then you have invariably judges legislating from the bench. As Justice Scalia explains ably, it is the text of a statute or the Constitution that has gone through the democratic process, and it is the text that is law. Justice Breyer's approach inescapably ends up substituting his personal views on matters before the Court.

One example of Justice Breyer's "jurisprudence" is his opinion for the Court striking down the Nebraska ban on partial birth abortion. The opinion goes on at length about abortion rules that are entirely judge-made and nowhere to be found in the text of the Constitution that restrains the state from taking life, liberty or property without due process of law. The consequence is perverse in that case: a method of infanticide is ruled constitutionally protected.

Substituting personal views
Phil Byler

Breyer and his ilk not only substitute their personal politics for the constitutionally determined policies of the legislature, they also presume to predict the future and pass judgment on that.

The court's abortion rulings have been incompetent ever since Blackmun's chickensh*t opinion in Roe vs. Wade.

In order to rule in favor of legalized abortion in Roe, Blackmun had to convince himself that that abortion laws were designed to protect the mother's health and not to protect "prenatal life." He actually states that the court's concern in abortion cases was only to protect the mother and that the "state" has never had or even attempting to have any concern for the life of the unborn child.

Constitution for sale!
Well, we might as well put it up for sale, since the Congress and the Supremes essentially said it is no longer relevant in the 1930's and have continued to do so ever since.
The Constitution is written in very plain, simple English, and it details exactly what the federal government is allowed to do and what it is allowed to spend money on. If I were a wagering type, I'd say that at least 25% of all federal laws and statutes over the past 70 years are in direct violation of the Constitution, and the number would go up to 30% for spending. Every item froom LBJ's Great Society and most of FDR's New Deal are unConstitutional, and their effects on American society have been devestating.

My 2 cents worth
I am not sure it was conservatives who abandoned the GOP last November. I think it was independents upset over the war and its conduct, and who, being unable to punish President Bush directly, voted to punish his party.
But, leaving that aside, I agree that the chances are nil in confirming a conservative judge to the USSC now that Patrick Leahy heads the Judiciary Committee. It is a real shame we could not have gotten one more conservative on the court. Right now, the "swing vote" is Kennedy. You have Ginsberg, Stevens, Breyer, and Souter in the leftist camp, while Roberts, Thomas, Scalia, and Alito are in the conservative camp. I hope Kennedy provides the vote necessary for the conservatives to prevail in abolishing the moronic procedure of using a student's race in assigning which school he attends.

I was one of the voters who held my nose
and voted GOP. I knew that the situation we now have was something that we would never want. Now that the GOP is the Minority, and the freaking nuts are running the asylum, God Help US! Breyer is a prime example of Liberal Justices who believe it is their God given right and responsibility to make laws to control us, the ignorant huddled masses. What can we do now? I still wonder what those GOP and independent voters thought they could gain by punishing the conservative interests? Granted the GOP failed to take action, and follow the wishes of the conservatives who elected their sorry rears. Handing the henhouse keys to the wolves, bears, and snakes was not the answer either.
Now we are really in for an unpleasant ride.
Like I said before, God Help Us, Please!

NO, "2 FOR 1" WON'T SELL ME ON BREYERS
This black robed loon is as two faced as his "Texas / Kentucky 10 Commandments decisions".

Combining David's Column, and Sunday's interview on Fox, with Chris Wallace, I have rendered my conclusion that: Buying into any "2 for 1 sale" of this double minded "Supreme [in his own eyes] is no bargain, nor good jurist prudence.

TAPOO1, YOU NAILED IT!
Best nutshell version of the past "sad state of electorate affairs" I've read yet.


It's not just Breyer
The problem with the SCOTUS is more than just Breyer. Ginsberg is probably the worst of a bad lot, being a former American Criminal (There I go again, I meant CIVIL) Liberties Union hack. Souter, and Stevens aren't any better, and wasn't it Justice Kennedy who, in the ruling that someone who murders 20 people as a minor can't be executed, cited the constitution of some African or Caribean nation as a part of the basis for ruling the American law unconstitutional?

Never trust a Kennedy.

Backwards analysis
"This is something disgruntled conservatives should contemplate before sitting the next one out. It is also something Republicans should consider before abandoning conservative principles to the point of alienating their base."

David, you got that backwards. You should have written this as:

"This is something Republicans should consider before abandoning conservative principles to the point of alienating their base. It is also something disgruntled conservatives should contemplate before sitting the next one out."

Republicans abandoning their conservative principles was the root cause of all that has followed. Trying to pin the "consequences" on the voters is quite frankly, VERY insulting! If the Republicans had done their jobs as they SWORE to do, they would have had our support.

The sad thing is that this President and this Congress will likely go down in history as the key enablers of the destruction of the United States of America. If they would have held true to their principles, they could have remained in power and saved the country and the world. They have betrayed more than just the American people. They have betrayed all of the people of the world!!!! If America falls, who will defend freedom and liberty?

Ignorance is highly infectious
Those of us who love liberty and understand where it comes from, naturally disagree with Breyer. In able to follow his convoluted reasoning, one has to start with an specific outcome in mind and no matter how tortuous and nonsensical the path to reach it, the ends will justify the means. This is classical insanity but unfortunately very few schools nowadays teach linear thinking, much less truth based logic.
This liberal control of education, from grade school to the most prestigous universities, produces students who are indoctrinated with a mix of leftist history that denies or distorts the facts and a PC socialist dogma which has been an utter failure worldwide. They hate capitalism and worship the environment. They're impossible to debate, unreasonable and as rabid in their beliefs as the Jihadists, with the same goal: destroying the USA as it now exists. The MSM, Hollywood and the loony left fever swamps spread this infection daily, far outstripping intelligent peoples' ability to innoculate against it.
Because conservatives fail to continually educate, are outshouted and intimidated by false accusations, this fatal malignancy is undermining our very foundations and we're in GRAVE DANGER of losing everything.

Don't kid yourself
Wendell Wilkie was a Midwesterner, educated at Indiana University, a corporate lawyer, and a turncoat Democrat. Had he beaten FDR in the 1936 election, the liberals would hate him even worse.

Not just abandonment...
lack of appreciation also.

Rockman has it right. The root cause of last month's electoral disaster was the abandonment of conservatism by Republicans in office. But it wasn't merely abandonment. Republican officeholders failed to appreciate that their conservative base. They took it for granted the way the Democrats take the black vote for granted. They were so busy kissing to hand of Political Correctness it never occured to them that they were losing their base.

Even worse, those who survived have taken exactly the wrong cues from the election results and have begun capitulating and moving even further away from the base. We very badly need a great leader to step forward and slap the rest of them in face. I suggest Duncan Hunter, Mike Pence, or Rick Sessions as possibilities (note these guys are all from the House - I wouldn't give you ten cents for the Republican "leadership" in the Senate). There may be others out there.

perfect example
This is a perfect example of a justice who is going out of his way to confirm everyone's worst opinion of judges in general. Our judicial branch needs to remember that they exist to interpret the laws, our legislators create the laws and the executive enforces them. There is no need for personal opinion or the opinions handed down in other countries to be used in that interpretation.

Thanks Limbaugh...
You say: "It is also something Republicans should consider before abandoning conservative principles to the point of alienating their base."
Glad to hear at least one of the commentators that I respect saying this. Albeit one lonely sentence. The lions share of the blame must rest squarely on the President, Rove, Mehlman and the rest of the RNC strategists and advisers who have absolutely wrecked and trashed our party (see my blog "Finger Pointing Time"). What we don't seem to want to grasp and are in denial about is that its not the Dem's that are our biggest problem but those in our own GOP! Those that have influenced and driven the party off of the 6 lane super highway that we were on in Jan 2005 into a muddy bog. Yet these individuals still don't want to get out of the drivers seat. In other words the loyal "base" as you call it was energized and enthusiastic after the inauguration. Rudy's speech. Arnolds speech. Even McCains! The GOP base was riding high. What happened in 2 short years? Politics 101: You don't disrespect and ignore your most loyal base of supporters. Its Political Suicide!
Now we can't do anything about our President. He's a very lame duck. But Rove, Mehlman and the other so called advisers and "stratergerists" (as your Bro like to call it)need to resign. Should've already resigned.
Respected commentators like yourself need to put the pressure on them to get them to do the right thing. We don't have much time. Do we want Hillary and/or Obama to run this country for 8 years? Sir, the clock is ticking. If we, in the GOP refuse to recognize a problem, how can we solve it? DD
http://streetlevel.townhall.com


Don't get me started on Souter
The fact that he was appointed by Bush I is an embarrassment. What a disappointment he has been. And he was such a nonentity at the time he was appointed. What was Bush thinking? The Kelo decision on eminent domain is dangerous and ridiculous. The fact that states are passing state laws to protect their citizens from an activist Supreme Court says it all.
Breyer is dangerous, but thank God that O'Connor is gone. She is now the Chancellor at my almer mater, William and Mary Law School. Her first act was to have the crucifix removed from the Wren Chapel. Realize that Wm & Mary was established by Anglicans, and the first Chancellors were the Archbishops of Canturbury. Never mind the Constitution and tradition. Her cracked legal reasoning continues. I am so glad that Michigan, after her Gratz decision announcing that we would only need affirmative action another twenty-five years (so we only need to violate the equal protection clause for another quarter century? Where is that in the Constitution? Where is her authority to announce such tripe?) voted to amend the state constitution to make that decision NA in Michigan. I particularly enjoyed the howling of the liberals, the antics of BAMN, and then the announcement of the female president of U of Michigan. Isn't this the same woman who posed with a student dressed up as an Islamic suicide bomber at the Halloween party in her chancellor's mansion? And then claimed that she didn't recognize what his costume represented? She must really think we are all stupid out here in flyover country.
Justice Roberts was like a breath of fresh air when he told all the high powered law schools like Yale to stuff it when they tried a stupid argument about how the military's position on gays violates their right to free speech, so they should be allowed to keep taking federal dollars while they keep the military off campus in direct violation of federal law. Roberts just told them that the Act means what it says. Take the money, accept the strings. Otherwise, get your nose out of the federal trough. Isn't Yale a private university? What do they need with federal dollars anyway? Oh, maybe because they need to subsidize students like the Taliban guy, Hashemi?
Okay, I'll get off my soapbox now. We need another conservative justice!!!!!

I don't think it matters much...
whether Republicans govern from the right, or from the middle.

I suspect that the effect of liberal bias in the media is hugely underestimated. Have you ever listened to those "man on the street interviews?" That's the swing vote. This crowd can't identify which party is more generally in favor of big government, and wouldn't know an originalist from an organist. They will follow the lead of the talking heads on the evening news.

But there is no doubt that the Republican leadership has done huge damage to the party.




Senate failure on Judges
Good afternoon Mr. Limbaugh,

The Senate majority was considered secure by GOP Chieftains and not in any jeopardy. The Republicans were clearly content with resting on past election laurels; despite early warning signs which indicated an increasingly fractured caucus that began abandoning President Bush and a leadership team that was woefully inadequate on policy implementation and constituent relations.

Sen. Frist’s (R–TN) default elevation to Majority leader was forewarning of deteriorating management; his affable demeanor and insufficient stewardship was a perilous combination much like trusting a beautiful naive virgin will remain pure in chamber of ninety–nine Viagra crazed perverts.

During the 109th session of congress he abnegated conservative principles in an effort to assuage liberal elements within the party. Those apparent weaknesses were evident and quickly exploited by friends and foes alike. Despite apocalyptic admonishments and heavy grass roots lobbying in opposition, he foolishly agreed to appoint Sen. Arlen Spector as Chairman of the Judicial Committee.

After he received assurances that conservative judicial nominees would have a fair and expedited hearing, followed by a referral to the full senate to receive an up or down floor vote, two years later many of the President’s nominees continue to languish in committee purgatory or have withdrawn their name from consideration. Sen. Santorum and others conservatives invested immeasurable political capitol to re–elect Sen. Spector and supported his chairmanship assignment; that proved fatal with base voters.

Moreover, Sen. Frist and his team were incapable of maintaining party unity which resulted in political emasculation. The “Nuclear Option” to break Democrat filibusters on judicial nominees was blithely threatened several times in a fashion reminiscent of Charlie Brown and Lucy, every time he’d line up to kick seven members of his own party would assist in quickly moving the ball…he routinely acquiesced.

The Majority leader is bereft of oratory skills, partisanship and clearly lacks philosophical inspiration. He is a good Christian man who was ill–served by his staff, deputies, and consultants however; at the end of his term in 08’, he can retire with the honor and dignity of a southern gentleman knowing that he kept his initial campaign promise…two & through. (Two terms & through).

With the selection of Sen. Martinez to head the RNC, and other uninspiring retreads Sen.’s Lott, McConnell et al, it seems apparent that the GOP leadership haven’t learned past is prologue.

Where is John Brown when we need him?
The only thing that can undo 50-plus years of liberal (read: Marxist) influence on our society is another civil war.

This is a clash of world-views, there is no middle ground.

Breyer is an engineer, not a judge
About the only good thing I have to say about Breyer is that at least he is honest about his "progressive" judicial philosophy, rather than trying to conceal it.

His book would have been more appropriately titled "Legislating from the Bench - and Proud of It." And the acknowledgement page on the inside would need to credit Ginsberg, Souter, Stephens, and O'Connor for making it all possible.

And speaking of O'Connor, what a HUGE disappointment she was. At least with Ginsberg and her deep ACLU roots, you knew exactly what you were going to get even if you hated it. No surprises there, no false hope. Just unadulterated, arrogant social engineering accurate to the inch against her liberal blueprint.

Yes, it is truly scary. The Constitution they ascribe to isn't foundational bedrock, it's clay to be molded at their whim. Constitutional law, in their parallel universe, is little more than a convenient pretense for social engineering.






Lifetime appointments of DICTATORS?
Congress does have oversight but NEVER uses it!

This article points out the major flaw in American society.
We have rogue Judges who ignore laws they have sworn to uphold and substute their own personal politics for American Law.
Any way to dethrown those Dictators?

So Sad
Much time will be needed to assess the Bush/Iraq/war on terror. The two new supreme court justices may, however, very well end up his best legacy. I was deeply saddened to see the senate lost, and I don't think that many voters really knew the import of such a defeat. Presidents come and go, but precendents live practically forever.
Maybe we can all celebrate Kelo by bulldozing the houses of the liberal bench, celebrate Grutter by denying college entrance to their grandchildren, and celebrate Roe by giving planned (cleanse the gene pool)parenthood council to any of their pregnant granddaughters/granddaughters-in-law. That sounds really terse, but sowing and reaping is not a new idea.

Did Justice Breyer
actually attend law school?

Did he ever crack Black's Law Dictionary and check the meaning of stare decisis?

It's bad enough that we have been attacked numerous time by Islamofascists, but we also have to contend with a judicial dunce who can't grasp the meaning of historic jurisprudence.

10 Commandments
I found it interesting that Breyer said that one display of the 10 commandments was OK because it was there for a long time but the other was not because it was new and might cause religious conflict. Think about that "might cause religious conflict." Is he saying if it is going to or likely to cause religious conflict it cannot be displayed? ONe of the purposes for the 1st Amendment is for people to be able to practice religion even if their religion offends others. No one has a right not to be offended.

My problem with this whole situation with the courts and religion is that the courts are no longer protecting religion but they are restricting religion. Perhaps the end game is that when it comes to a point that no government agency can acknowledge the existence of religion that religion can be totally eliminated from all aspects of the public. The courts and/or other government agencies cannot protect that which it cannot acknowledge.

Conservatives Stayed Home?

"Many conservatives reportedly chose not to vote in November to protest the Republican Party's abandonment of conservative principles."

I know this isn't germane to the discussion, but Limbaugh's premises are often so faulty that I had to take a look.

Here are the cumulative popular votes for the House of Representatives over the last several non-Presidential elections (millions):

Year - Repub - Democ - Total
1970 - 24.12 - 28.78 - 54.26
1974 - 21.17 - 29.87 - 52.31
1978 - 24.40 - 29.13 - 54.48
1982 - 27.61 - 35.13 - 63.88
1986 - 26.38 - 32.34 - 59.76
1990 - 27.40 - 32.40 - 62.35
1994 - 36.32 - 31.54 - 70.49
1998 - 31.98 - 31.39 - 66.60
2002 - 37.09 - 33.64 - 74.71
2006 - 28.46 - 39.27 - 68.06

I'd say that these data show a few things:

* A gradual, expected increase in voting over time (which trails adult population growth, BTW).

* Spikes in voting in 1982, 1994, and 2002 (Possible causes - worst recession in history in 1982, Drama in previous Presidential elections in '94 and '02 [Clinton elected with only 43% of the vote, Bush II elected despite receiving fewer votes than Gore], nationalistic feeling following 9/11/01, ???).

* Relatively steady Democratic vote (excepting '82), especially when compared to Republican vote.

* Dramatic increases in Democratic vote in '82 (17.3% more votes than '78) Republican vote in '94 (32.5% more than '90), Republican vote in '02 (16% more than '98), Democratic vote in '06 (16.7% more than '02)

What this does NOT show is that conservative voters stayed home. Unless you want to also argue that a whole lot of usual non-voters came out in droves for the Democrats at the same time.

This, of course, just doesn't happen. Voting begets voting; people who vote in one election are far more likely to vote in the next. There is not a dramatic change, from election to election, in the composition of the voting population.

And those of us who bother to label ourselves "conservative" or "liberal" are far more likely to vote than those of us who won't paint ourselves into those corners. Consider two people - one a self-described "conservative" who always votes Republican, and one who doesn't describe himself one way or the other and who doesn't always vote. When presented with an election which, by every indication leading up to it, would decide which party controls Congress, which of these two is less likely to vote?

How dumb does Limbaugh think conservatives are, to suggest they would cut off their own noses?

No, what this shows is the same thing that poll after poll has demonstrated - that the Republicans lost the center, and lost it big.

I'm not sure why Limbaugh wants to feed the group delusion that this election was about something else. And I have no idea why he would have such a low opinion of conservatives.

(http://clerk.house.gov/members/electionInfo/elections.html)

.

Ginsburg also
I saved an article (buried somewhere) about an address Ginsburg gave to a graduating class at LSU. I was shocked by her statement that she thinks "the Constitution is skimpy" because it does not "provide guarantees" for housing, education, health care and income, among others.

BTW - I think liberty died in Washington with the Kelo v. New London Decision. At least Justice O'Conner decided correctly and wrote a brilliant dissenting opinion in that case before her retirement. If only she could have done that througout her career.

Also, when I heard about the decision in the news, I guessed correctly which justices ruled in favor of the plunderers - Ginsberg, Kennedy, Souter, Stephens, Breyer! My co-workers were amazed that I was right but it was an easy call. Fortunately, we just overwhelmingly passed (good but imperfect) private property protections in our state.

Lawyers and a cure

When I become King. . . .

1. No lawyer would be allowed to run for any political office.
2. No lawyer could be appointed as a judge.
3. A judge who lets a criminal off on a technicality or other scheme must receive the same sentence that the criminal gets if he is caught and tried again.
4. The word “alleged” cannot be used when there is video or confession of a crime.
5. Before a new law is passed it must be accompanied by the repeal of 10 laws.
6. No child can graduate without passing a test on the Constitution.
7. No college can issue a degree of any sort without passing that same test.
8. The Gettysburg Address must be memorized by any office holder, city thru federal.
9. Every citizen must recite the Ten Commandments in English before voting.
10. These tenets can only be added to, not changed or deleted.

Stare decisis...
...only is a virtue when it protects the "right" to abortion. Any other time the Constitution is a living document and must be loosely interpreted. Didn't you guys get the memo?

'An Activist's Liberty'
That's what he should have named his book.

"The purpose behind the purpose behind the purpose."

No ego problem there.

He thinks of himself as 'the boundary patrol' so 'no one gets too powerful'.

He better take a good long look in the mirror.

Still blaming the voters
When are pundits like Mr. Limbaugh going to stop blaming the voters and hold Republicans themselves responsible for abandoning America's principles? How many times are they going to attack the voters who were forced to hold Republicans responsible themselves?

Pundits like Mr. Limbaugh, and his brother who has admitted carrying politician's water even though they didn't deserve it, were obviously ineffective at keeping Republicans on track. If the pundits had held Republicans responsible for their anti-American, big-government polices all along, Republicans wouldn't have screwed us.

Limbaugh should stick to criticizing the Republicans who reaped what they sowed. Those big-government, anemic foreign policy Republicans have jeopardized America's chance to get strict interpretationist judges appointed to the courts.

If Republicans had reduced the size of government, implemented the FairTax, defeated our enemies instead of empowering them, and secured our borders, they would own a decisive majority in Congress. But instead America is left reeling from their failures.

Because of Republican failures, we can't impeach Breyer for his betrayal of his oath. Because of Republican failures, we're unlikely to get other justices like Roberts and Alito.

Put the blame where it belongs Mr. Limbaugh, not on the voters. Look in the mirror and acknowledge the Republicans whose water you carry screwed us all.

http://freedomistheanswer.blogspot.com/

lostinthewilderness avoids the issue
Excuse me, lostinthewilderness, but David Limbaugh and others are 1000% correct to point out that the price of not electing Republicans in the recent election is that the ability to appoint sound minded judges to the federal bench is greatly diminished; and that is a very serious problem. Are you under the illusion that judicial appointments will not be affected by the election of a Democratic majority? Or is your way of dealing with a serious problem is to pretend it does not exist. Quite notably, despite your writing six paragraphs in your post, you don't say a single word about the effect of the recent election on the ability to have judges like Justice Scalia appointed to the federal bench, which was David Limbaugh's point. Instead, you rant about Republicans "screwing" us? No, your kind screwed us and America; you helped elect tax-and-spend Democrats who want the kind of judge following Justice Breyer's thinking appointed to the federal bench. So focus on David Limbaugh's problem and have the intellectual honesty to deal the adverse consequence of what has always struck me as badly muddled, adolescent thinking by your type.

To "BS Detector"
Some conservatives in the last election did cut off their noses by staying home, and there were plenty of other conservatives who said such stay-at-home conservatives did act stupidly.

I think that it will take more time than usual to figure out more fully what went on in 2006. The Democrats did not have a coherent message, and it would be a mistake for Democrats to think that Americans have embraced a left wing viewpoint -- they haven't. So I think that there are some transitory factors that will need to be taken into account.

A party whose President has been prosecuting an unpopular war has a difficult time winning, and in 2006, Iraq was not popular. (In my opinion, the Iraq War was and is the right thing to do, but that is the beside the point.)

A party that is not united has a difficult time winning elections, and in 2006, Republicans were not united.

A party that is viewed as complacent has a difficult time weinning elections, and in 2006, the Republicans were viewed as complacent.

The Law
Is an interesting animal, if you can conceive of it as alive, changing with the opinions of those who write and intrepit it. But prehaps it is human nature to manipulate it to meet certain groups needs. I think it is dangerous, but perhaps it is unavoidable...

Phil Byler
Phil, if you have an employee who is incompetent, will you continue to have him working for you? Voting Republican for the sake of voting Republican guarantees nothing. Four of the nine Republican-appointed justices when Bush took office regularly voted more like Democrat appointees. O’Connor (Reagan), Souter (Bush I), Kennedy (Reagan) and Stephens (Ford). It remains to be seen if Alito and Roberts are the strict constructionist as advertised. Now that the Democrats are in power of Congress, Bush will surely nominate another Souter. In his first interview after the Republican lost, Bush was giddy about the prospect of working with the new “cooperative” Congress on matters of illegal immigration. What make you think he will listen to the base now on justice nominations? Given the chance, he will try to dupe the base once again by sneaking in another Harriet Miers?

Judges and Voting
It's almost impossible to keep voting for a party that never gets it right. Sure, we can keep holding our noses, but at some point, enough is enough. For many on the right who might otherwise have voted for the GOP, 2006 was the breaking point. Is there a risk that we'll get more Ginsbergs as a result? Sure. But it's not like Republican presidents were hitting home runs with their nominations anyway - we got at least as many bad as good.

The ultimate problem, though, is that the GOP always plays the king like someone else is going to play the ace. THE defining principle of the GOP - with relatively few exceptions - has been and will always be utter and wanton cowardice. They don't really believe what they claim to believe; therefore, they almost always flinch when the Dems challenge them. But hey, at least they have really nice manners about it. Until they actually learn to fight to win, the whole thing is basically irrelevant.

A 100% of bad judges under Dem rule vs. a 50% chance of bad judges under GOP rule isn't really much to get excited over either way.

Jiimmy the Saint
You hit it right on the nail. Sometimes you have to clean house and give the opposition an opportunity. Case and point, Bill Clinton won in 1992 after Bush reneged on his pledge not to raise taxes. That was the medicine the Republicans needed. They responded with the 1994 Republican revolution and a newfound committment to true conservative principles. Upon taking the White House in 2000, they have become complacent and strayed from those principles. So, it was time to administer another shot of the medicine.

Some worried about the perils of having big-spending Democrats in power. Are they forgetting the budget-busting Republicans the last six years? Or, is it OK as long as it is the Republicans who are expanding government and breaking the bank?



What are we going to do about it?
What are we going to do about it? What can we do? Vote Republican at all costs for President regardless of who runs. As much as a lot of us can't stand McCain I am still going to vote for him and give him money if he gets the GOP nomination. I really wish the GOP majority in congress would impeach one of these judges if for nothing else than to introduce the argument to the American people.

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

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.
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