Today, January 22, hundreds of thousands of demonstrators
will march in front of the U.S. Supreme Court building as
part of a day-long protest of the legally protected "right"
of abortion created and decreed by said court 35 years ago
today.
Another, perhaps smaller, number will demonstrate on the
other side of the "abortion rights" controversy,
standing in front of the same building, demanding that abortion
remain "safe and legal." The irony will be lost
on most demonstrators and perhaps even some of the justices
inside. So many people, seeking either a change in the "law
of the land" or wishing to preserve unaltered one of
its provisions, will visibly direct their respective pleas
to the judicial, rather than the legislative, branch of our
government.
It reminds me of a cartoon I saw many yeas ago, in which
a child comes home from school and informs his dumbfounded
parents that "Today, we learned how the Supreme Court
makes a law." Funny, huh? But the sad truth is that the
Supreme Court has the Congress and the legislatures of 50
states straightjacketed in submission to a judicial tyranny
that the anti-Federalists feared and Federalists could scarcely
imagine at the beginning of our republic.
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You may visit Washington, D.C. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
and New York, New York and you will not find the site whereon
was held the constitutional convention that made "abortion
rights" among the liberties for which "governments
are created among men, deriving their just powers from the
consent of the governed." Nor will you find anywhere
in the Constitution any mention nor even hint of abortion
or a right to same. No, it has been the divination of such
a right by the Supreme and lesser courts that has held this
nation in a paralysis for 35 years, unable to defend itself
against the slaughter of, so far, an estimated 50 million
children in the womb and even outside the womb.
This applies to other issues besides abortion. Certainly,
anything touching upon the peaceful coexistence of religion
and state in the public square has to pass "constitutional
muster," according to the Supreme and nearest federal
court. Your community wishes to commemorate Christmas with
a crèche in front of City Hall? The court will tell
you what may and may not be in the display for it to be constitutionally
permissible. A moment of silence at the start of the school
day? A prayer for the safety of our soldiers in Iraq and Afghanistan
at the beginning of a football game? You are in danger of
violating Mr. Madison’s carefully constructed "separation
of church and state."
That phrase, by the way, appears nowhere in the Constitution
and was employed by the Supreme Court in the late 1940’s
to emphasize and reinforce as constitutional law what the
Constitution never said. It was taken from a letter Thomas
Jefferson wrote to a group of ministers in Danbury, Connecticut
concerning a scheme for using the coercive power of the state
to raise money for a particular church. That was an example
of something the Constitution forbids the federal government
from legislating, an "establishment of religion."
The Supreme Curt has not only usurped powers that the Constitution
leaves to the other two branches of the federal government
or to the States and people respectively, but has subverted
the whole purpose of government. The State is supposed to
be the servant, not the master of the people. It is not a
creative power; it can either conserve or destroy. Even the
Constitution does not create nor give to us our rights, but
recognizes, affirms and guarantees their protection. Who,
then, decides what those rights are? We do. The American people
have gratefully received rights "endowed by their Creator"
and have written them in plain English into our Constitution.
We did not hide them in "penumbras" and "emanations"
to be discovered by jurists of later generations. We put our
cards on the table.
We created government to be a backstop to help reaffirm and,
when necessary, reinforce values upheld by other, more fundamental
institutions – the family, the church, private charitable
organizations. We grant to the State the power to provide
for the care and nurture of children when and where the family
unit has broken down. We expect the State to apprehend and
punish those who commit crimes against society and against
their neighbors when the moral power of religion has proved
insufficient to deter them. We expect the State will step
forth with a temporary and needed "decent provision for
the poor" when private agencies are unavailable or unable
to provide the same. We pay for public schools because most
people are too busy making a living to educate their own children.
But "We the People" never imagined a society in
which a parent would be arrested and charged with criminal
trespass for going to his child’s school and refusing
to leave until he saw what she was being taught in the name
of "sex education." Yet that has happened and may
happen again.
Nor did we expect that the various rights of privacy that
"We the People" had written into the Constitution
– the right not to have soldiers quartered in our homes
in times of peace, the right to be free from unreasonable
search and seizure – would one day provide the justices
of the high court the alchemy needed to turn those specific
guarantees into a blank page headed "Rights of Privacy,"
for which the justices themselves would write the content.
Thus we have the "fundamental constitutional right"
that the Constitution nowhere mentions – the "right"
to abort or to "terminate a pregnancy" or exercise
"reproductive rights." The State authorizes killing
in other circumstances – in war, for example, or with
the death penalty for serious crimes. The law recognizes the
right of an individual to use deadly force if necessary to
defend his own or another’s endangered life or limb.
But with the single exception of abortion, the law nowhere
recognizes the "right" of an individual to terminate
the life of another human being, strictly as a matter of personal
"choice."
Yet the Supreme Court has created that right, not only as
a provision of federal law and of the federal Constitution,
but has imposed it on all 50 states and territories of the
United States.
If this is not usurpation, we are at a loss to say what usurpation
means – though I suppose the court could create a new
definition. And to the Founders, usurpation meant tyranny.
If you doubt it, read the Federalist Papers.
Now, if you will forgive the nearly sacrilegious nature of
the comparison, abortion has become a subject like the Christmas
crèche or the prayers (or suggestion of prayer) in
school or the Ten Commandments in schoolhouse or courthouse.
We may not even think about doing anything the court would
not approve. Banning late-term abortions, requiring minors
to seek parental consent or at least provide parental notification,
requiring "informed consent" or anything else touching
upon the sacred ground of abortion "rights" must
pass "constitutional muster." Meanwhile, the court
gives a pass to things like the McCain-Feingold Bipartisan
Campaign Reform Act that clearly abridges the freedom of speech,
which the Constitution says the Congress may not abridge.
The battle is not just, nor even primarily, about abortion.
It is about getting our Constitution back from the thieves
and tyrants of the federal judiciary.