An inflection point may be at hand. For decades the U.S. Supreme Court has permitted the compromise of Constitutional equal protection rights to permit what can be broadly described as affirmative action. The ongoing lawsuit by people of Asian ancestry against Harvard University’s admissions policies may well be the case that ends any consideration of race in education or employment. If so, a broad social and political upheaval may occur as any form of race conscious government action is banned.
Students for Fair Admission (SFA) is pursuing a lawsuit against Harvard University contending that the admissions process discriminates against Americans of Asian descent contrary to the requirements of Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Title VI bans discrimination based on race, color, sex, religion or national origin. Title VI, and the associated Title VII that bans discrimination in employment, flow from equal protection rights contained within the U.S. Constitution.
Tuesday, October 23, 2018
Thursday, October 4, 2018
The Supreme Court’s Politicization – can we fix it?
The Republic is in a bind.
The nation is divided almost evenly from left to right. The division over a generation has grown worse and
infected the Supreme Court of the United States. After the present confirmation process is
completed there must be an effort to find a way to end this politicization of
the Supreme Court and ensure that it remains the legitimate arbiter of the
Constitution.
Article III of the U.S. Constitution states the “judicial
power of the United States, shall be vested in one Supreme Court.” Article II of the Constitution gives the
President the power, “with the Advice and Consent of the Senate, … [to] appoint
… Judges of the supreme Court. The power
imbued to the Supreme Court as the ultimate interpreter of the Constitution is
uniquely American.
Before the Constitution was adopted there was great
debate. Alexander Hamilton wrote
Federalist Paper No. 78 about the judicial power under the pen name
Publius. An opposing view was written in
Brutus No. 15 by an unknown author.
Brutus’ overarching concern was that the Supreme Court, as ultimate
authority of what the Constitution meant was unchecked due to its position and
lifetime tenure of its members. He said,
“In short, they are independent of the people, of the legislature, and of every
power under heaven. Men placed in this situation will generally soon feel
themselves independent of heaven itself.”
Hamilton saw this state as a positive aspect of the
Constitution. He answered Brutus arguing
that the independence and lifelong appointment would “secure a steady, upright,
and impartial administration of the laws.”
He contended that the judiciary “will always be the least dangerous to
the political rights of the Constitution” because it held no power of the purse
(Legislative) or the sword (Executive).
Saturday, September 29, 2018
Obituaries - a favorite read
OK, Ok, you might be questioning this somewhat off the path title on my blog. But I love to read obituaries in the weekend newspapers. In a time when we are so distracted with technology I recommend reading them to get a better perspective.
One of my favorite obituaries that remains firm in my mind was that of Maureen O’Donnell. She passed away in Annandale, Virginia on February 20, 1989 at the young age of 58 of cancer. She had suffered greatly in life – losing 4 of her 6 children to cystic fibrosis. But that did not stop her. She only channeled her love to her students at W.T. Woodson High School where she taught Latin. She was viewed as both a mother and teacher by her students.
She was remembered as a “small woman infused with boundless energy, [who] built one of the nation's strongest high school Latin programs from scratch, inspiring hundreds of students not only to study a "dead" language but to revere such traits as honor, compassion and understanding.” She was awarded with an honorary doctorate by Yale and as Virginia Teacher of the Year in 1982 for the program she created.
One of my favorite obituaries that remains firm in my mind was that of Maureen O’Donnell. She passed away in Annandale, Virginia on February 20, 1989 at the young age of 58 of cancer. She had suffered greatly in life – losing 4 of her 6 children to cystic fibrosis. But that did not stop her. She only channeled her love to her students at W.T. Woodson High School where she taught Latin. She was viewed as both a mother and teacher by her students.
She was remembered as a “small woman infused with boundless energy, [who] built one of the nation's strongest high school Latin programs from scratch, inspiring hundreds of students not only to study a "dead" language but to revere such traits as honor, compassion and understanding.” She was awarded with an honorary doctorate by Yale and as Virginia Teacher of the Year in 1982 for the program she created.
Friday, August 3, 2018
The workforce is doing well
The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) today released its “Employment
Situation Report” for July, 2018. It is
a very positive report that continues to reflect an improved workforce environment.
Workforce health is related to the overall health of the
economy: Gross Domestic Product (GDP) reportedly increased 4.1% in the second quarter
of this year – a high growth rate; measures
of business and consumer confidence are high; wages may finally be rising in a tight labor market;
inflation is holding at about 2%; the
stock market remains at very high levels.
Saturday, July 14, 2018
Constitutional Education Opportunity – Kavanaugh Confirmation
The impending confirmation hearings for Brett Kavanaugh’s nomination to the U.S. Supreme Court promise once again to be an education bonanza for the American people – as long as Senators do not muck it up with too much partisan bickering.
The Supreme Court history can be broken down, according to Cass R. Sunstein’s “Unanimity and Disagreement on the Supreme Court” into two periods: 1800-1941 and 1941 to present. The earlier period was one of great harmony with a very high rate of unanimous decisions and almost no dissenting opinions. After 1941 there was a major shift to a Court that was less based on consensus and more like “nine separate law offices.” Consenting opinions, dissents, and 5-4 decisions were far more common.
The Supreme Court history can be broken down, according to Cass R. Sunstein’s “Unanimity and Disagreement on the Supreme Court” into two periods: 1800-1941 and 1941 to present. The earlier period was one of great harmony with a very high rate of unanimous decisions and almost no dissenting opinions. After 1941 there was a major shift to a Court that was less based on consensus and more like “nine separate law offices.” Consenting opinions, dissents, and 5-4 decisions were far more common.
Thursday, May 24, 2018
Post Parkland (and now Santa Fe) - Call to action
Immediately following the Parkland mass public shooting, I
asked readers of the Liberty Takes Effort blog to ACT by contacting their
governors and state legislators to demand immediate passage of Extreme Risk
Protection Order (ERPO) laws within their states.
If you acted - great.
I am going to ask you to do more to protect children in our schools. If you did not – you can jump on board now.
The fatal shooting of 10 and wounding of 14 at Santa Fe High
School in Texas last week is just one more warning that this can happen
anywhere.
Florida passed an ERPO law within weeks of the Parkland mass
public shooting. Reasonable people
demanded reasonable action and reasonable elected officials acted. Florida’s new law has been used several
times already to intervene and separate a person at the intersection of
dangerousness and fire arm access.
Vermont and Rhode Island recently passed ERPO laws and 20
additional states are considering them (AK, AL, AZ, HI, IA, IL, MA [legislature
voting very soon], ME, MI, MN, MS, NJ, NV, NY, OR, PA, TN, TX, VA, WY.) Is your state listed? Is it not?
Have you expressed your opinion to your state legislator and governor? Have you encouraged your family and friends
to take action? Waiting for the next
election is not the answer!
Tuesday, April 10, 2018
Post Parkland – dangerousness and fire arm access
Dangerous people should not have access to fire arms. On this subject there seems to be near universal agreement. Laws, regulations, and enforcement are required to intervene and prevent people who are dangerous from purchasing or possessing fire arms.
Controversy arises largely in the defining of dangerousness. Mental health professionals fear the mentally ill generally will be further stigmatized and isolated. Civil rights defenders fear abuse of civil rights without clear definitions and strict adherence to due process. These are legitimate concerns that must be addressed in the development of policies.
There are existing federal and state laws that prohibit specific categories of dangerous people from purchasing fire arms. For example, people involuntarily committed to a mental institution, or found not guilty by reason of insanity, or who committed a violent act towards others and are the subject of a domestic violence restraining order, or have been convicted of a felony, or have been convicted of a domestic violence misdemeanor.
Controversy arises largely in the defining of dangerousness. Mental health professionals fear the mentally ill generally will be further stigmatized and isolated. Civil rights defenders fear abuse of civil rights without clear definitions and strict adherence to due process. These are legitimate concerns that must be addressed in the development of policies.
There are existing federal and state laws that prohibit specific categories of dangerous people from purchasing fire arms. For example, people involuntarily committed to a mental institution, or found not guilty by reason of insanity, or who committed a violent act towards others and are the subject of a domestic violence restraining order, or have been convicted of a felony, or have been convicted of a domestic violence misdemeanor.
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