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Wednesday, October 06, 2004
Terry Jeffrey :: Townhall.com Columnist
True words from John Kerry
by Terry Jeffrey
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 After his largely stylistic victory in the presidential debate on foreign policy, John Kerry inadvertently reminded Americans of an imminent domestic threat to our system of government.

 According to the Chicago Tribune, a pumped up Kerry told a post-debate rally in Miami: "I'll tell you, if you just needed three words of motivation, you want 'em? The -- Supreme -- Court."

 Truer words were never spoken. The issue of the Supreme Court ought to drive everyone who believes this nation ought to be governed by the Constitution as it was written and ratified to go to the polls Nov. 2 -- to defeat John Kerry.

 If Kerry is elected, constitutionalists will almost certainly lose the Court for another generation. Liberal activists are likely to secure super-majority control of what is now the most powerful branch of the federal government. An opportunity that advocates of limited government have worked three decades to bring about -- a chance to finally curb the abuses of the power-hungry high court -- will be squandered.

 "All reliable sources indicate that there will be between one and three retirements [among the justices] over the next four years, so everything we've seen happen for this first term for [President] Bush has been the warm-up round for the Supreme Court," Republican Sen. John Cornyn of Texas, a member of the Judiciary Committee, told The Washington Times this week.

 But Cornyn may have underestimated the number of potential retirees. Justice J.P. Stevens, a liberal appointed by President Ford, is 84. Chief Justice William Rehnquist, a conservative first appointed by President Nixon and then elevated to chief justice by President Reagan, just turned 80. Sandra Day O'Connor, a Reagan appointee who often votes with the liberals, is 74. Ruth Bader Ginsburg, a Clinton appointee who anchors the Court's left, is 71.

 At 56, Clarence Thomas, a conservative, is the only justice under 65.

 This court -- whose members have not changed in a decade -- is narrowly divided on issues that cut to the core of American culture. Since January 2000, it has voted 5-4 to overturn an act of Congress designed to protect children from pornography on cable TV; to prevent New Jersey from forcing the Boy Scouts to have gay scoutmasters; to declare a Nebraska ban on partial-birth abortion a violation of the "right" to privacy; to rule that public funds can be used for tuition vouchers at religious schools; to back the University of Michigan law school in using race as a factor in admissions; and to allow the government to restrict freedom of political speech before elections.

 Last year, the Court voted 6-3 that same-sex sodomy is a "right." This year, it voted 5-3 not to decide -- for now -- whether public school children can say "under God" in the Pledge of Allegiance.

 Our moral culture hangs by a single vote in this divided court. But so, too, does our political culture. It is not only what will be decided but who will do the deciding.

 Will Americans make their own laws and decide their own destiny through the ballot box? Or will arrogant, un-elected, liberal judges do it for them? Continued...

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About The Author

Terence P. Jeffrey is the editor-in-chief of CNSNews

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