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Dave wrote:
On Fri, 12 Dec 2008 17:29:15 -0500, Marty said: That would be: "When the Court "discovers" new rights which no rational person could believe were in the minds of those ratifying the Constitution or applicable amendments, they have changed the document without following the procedure called for to change it" The bit about "no rational person" rather implies mental incompetency does it not? Nope. It implies rejection of the intent of those ratifying the Constitution or the amendment as the standard for interpreting the document. Far from suggesting incompetence, it suggests a willful but entirely competent desire to claim constitutional sanction for what amounts to no more than their own policy judgments. Ah, "intent", always boils down to that doesn't it? Personally, I, perhaps stupidly, believe in the moral integrity of the men and women who make it to the bench of the Supreme Court. If they make a decision that I don't agree with, I am sure they are making it out of a sincere belief in its' legality, and not because they have some nefarious intent to rewrite the Constitution. I feel the Founding Fathers set the system up the way they did precisely because they knew that times would change, society would evolve and events would occur which they had no way to foresee, hence the need for a body with the power to in effect, "guess" what they might have done. Hopefully they will do it in a wise and just way, and further leave any really large changes to Constitutionally defined amendment process. I still say, if you are going to suggest, that the Supreme Court renders decisions based on intent that no rational person could see, most certainly implies that those rendering the decision are in fact irrational and thus not mentally competent. Cheers Martin |
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