Dahlia seems to forget history
by
Xando
06/21/2008, 9:22 AM #
It's fairly easy to look at Brown v. Board of Education and see that the Supreme Court can have a major role in shaping the nation for good.
It's a lot harder when you recall how Dred Scott ended up being one of the causes of hundreds of thousands of people dying in the Civil War by dissolving the Missouri Compromise.
The virtue of democracy is that it requires compromise. And this requirement leads to stability.
The doctrine Dahlia supports isn't just a matter of conservative vs. liberal - it's a matter of democracy vs. absolutism. Dahlia would see the major issues of our nation decided Politburo-style by a narrowly selected group who must first pass through a system that imparts a certain worldview. Doctors do not become Supreme Court justices. Day laborers do not become Supreme Court justices. Only lawers become Supreme Court justices.
And rule by lawyers is not the same as rule of law. In fact, it is directly contrary to rule of law. Lawyers function in society only because they are checked by other lawyers working in opposition - and this system fails when we exalt a judicial star chamber above democracy.
In Dahlia's vision, the Supreme Court is not really a Court so much as it is Supreme - the branch that commands the others, not a equal branch.