Tuesday, January 31, 2017

Gorsuch, the 14th Amendment, and the nebulous void of moral reasoning

As expected, President Trump this evening nominated Neil Gorsuch to replace Antonin Scalia as Associate Justice on the Supreme Court. Given the Court's decades of abuse of substantive due process arguments (I will explain what a substantive due process argument is below), I continue to wonder how Judge Gorsuch thinks the due process clause of the 14th Amendment ought to be construed.

For example, the Court's recent Obergefell decision established a constitutional right to marriage between same sex couples. The majority opinion in that decision, written by Justice Kennedy, reasoned that state prohibitions against same-sex marriage were unconstitutional because they stood in conflict with the due process clause of the 14th Amendment of the Constitution. Let us test the reasoning behind that proposition.

The due process clause reads:

    [N]or shall any state deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law.

Now, surely, the point of this clause is not that a state may not deprive a person of life, liberty, or property at all. States execute persons convicted of capital crimes on a fairly regular basis, most assuredly depriving them of life. Likewise, states regularly deprive persons of liberty by incarcerating them when they have been convicted of a crime punishable by a prison sentence. And finally, states deprive persons of property all the time when they levy taxes on them. Thus, the 14th Amendment does not prohibit all state deprivations of life, liberty, and property, but only those that are carried out without due process of law.

How, then, do we determine whether such a deprivation has been carried out with or without due process of law? Presumably, by consulting the laws on the books and examining the procedures used to enforce those laws.

For example, Section 26 of Article XIII of the California Constitution grants the state the right to levy income taxes on me:

    Taxes on or measured by income may be imposed on persons, corporations, or other entities.

Furthermore, my W2 form, forwarded by my company to the State, is legally valid evidence of my income for the past year. Finally, various state laws and rules establish formulas for determining the fraction of that income I must pay in tax. So, if I were to argue that the State of California, by levying an income tax on me, was depriving me of property without due process of law, this argument would founder in the courts because the State could not only make reference to various laws on the books granting it the authority to tax, but could also demonstrate that it had followed fair and well-defined evidence and procedures in making the assessment against me.

So, now let us turn to the matter of same-sex marriage. The argument is made that state prohibitions of same-sex marriage are unconstitutional because they are in conflict with the 14th Amendment. This is so, presumably, because the ability to marry is a species of liberty that is being denied to same-sex couples. But, now we must turn to our test of whether this denial is being carried out with or without due process of law. Once again, we do so by consulting the laws on the books and the procedures followed to carry out those laws. One such law was Michigan's Proposal 04-2, a duly passed amendment to the Michigan state constitution, which stated:

    To secure and preserve the benefits of marriage for our society and for future generations of children, the union of one man and one woman in marriage shall be the only agreement recognized as a marriage or similar union for any purpose.

Presumably, the law intended that the county clerk, as a condition of issuance of the marriage license, follow the procedure of examining the applicants' birth certificates, which are considered legally valid evidence of identity and gender. Thus, it would seem, this particular deprivation was being carried out in accordance with a duly enacted law, namely, Proposal 04-2, and in accordance with a well-defined procedure, so that Michigan's deprivation of this particular species of liberty, namely, the liberty to marry a partner of the same sex, was carried out with due process of law.

We have reached the critical juncture of the substantive due process argument, the point at which the defenders of that argument depart from the solid footing of the law, and float off into the nebulous void of moral reasoning. For, the defenders of the majority opinion in Obergefell (and of other decisions based on substantive due process arguments, such as Roe v Wade) will say: "Well, yes, we do not deny that Michigan's deprivation of the liberty to enter into a same-sex union was in accordance with a duly enacted law and followed a well-defined procedure. But that is mere procedural due process. We can't just look at the laws on the books and the procedures that were followed. There are other moral criteria against which we may test: for example, we may consult our sense of natural justice, or our intuition of natural law. And when we consult those other sources, they tell us that Michigan's deprivation is unjust and must be overturned. In brief, due process cannot possibly have been followed unless we feel that the substance of the decision is just. In other words, we must have substantive due process."

With this argument (actually, a contradiction in terms), we enter into a very dangerous region. Through this reasoning, the defenders of substantive due process manage to untether themselves completely from every vestige of positive, written law and assert that the judicial decision at hand is to be based instead on a sense of natural justice. But whose sense of natural justice are we to refer to when making the judicial decision? Why, that of the defenders of the substantive due process argument, of course. And if their sense of justice is different from the moral sense of millions of voters in Michigan, well, so be it; the voters sense of justice must be overruled. If we follow this line of reasoning, it leads us to a form of government where we are ruled not by ourselves, but by the moral sensibilities of a majority of 9 judges sitting in the Supreme Court in Washington. As Justice Scalia wrote in his dissent from the majority opinion in Obergefell:

    I write to call attention to this Court's threat to American democracy. ... [I]t is not of special importance to me what the law says about marriage. It is of overwhelming importance, however, who it is that rules me. Today’s decree says that my Ruler, and the Ruler of 320 million Americans coast-to-coast, is a majority of the nine lawyers on the Supreme Court.

We may be happy with (or, as Judge Scalia seemed to be, indifferent to) the outcome of Obergefell -- our gay friends and relatives have been granted the right to enter into a same-sex union -- but the form of government that imposes that outcome on us is certainly not what the Founding Fathers intended, being much closer to rule by a panel of ephors than a democracy, and we should find that form of government by aristocracy of Harvard and Yale Law grads abhorrent. This explains why it is so important that Justices be nominated to the Court who are not going to engage in specious substantive due process arguments of this kind.

And it is for that reason I would like to hear a disquisition from Judge Gorsuch during his confirmation hearings on the subject of the proper way to reason about the 14th Amendment. This is not a question about how he would decide a particular case, but about judicial philosophy in general. As such, I believe it would be perfectly appropriate for him to expound on the topic.

A parade of gifted thespians

If you didn't watch the Screen Actors Guild awards the other night, you missed out on a parade of gifted thespians. Each new speaker devoted a substantial portion of his/her acceptance speech to an impassioned screed against Trump, trying to outstrip the actors who had come before and soar to even loftier planes of high dudgeon. (Hating Trump while claiming that "Love trumps Hate" obviously makes for great career advancement in Los Angeles, provided, of course, that your outrage is not judged by the members of the Guild to be merely mediocre and lost in the din.) And then the cameras would pan out across the audience to show the various hot house flowers of Hollywood dressed in their silk gowns and jackets and coifed in their bird's nest hairdos, cheering ferociously in approval, confirming what most Americans have suspected for quite some time now, namely, that Hollywood has become a fantasyland of inbred liberal elites, pajama boys and Lena Dunhams speaking only to each other, their current level of hysteria so out of proportion to the actions Trump is taking that it merely demonstrates how completely they have departed their senses, like Attis, vagus animis, worked up into a frenzy he will later regret.

The tantrum on the Left

First you had Obama and Holder demonizing the police. Then you had sanctuary cities. Now you have the acting Attorney General refusing to enforce the legal and duly promulgated executive order of the President on immigration.

When County Clerk Kim Davis refused to issue marriage licenses to gay couples, liberals cheered as she was sued and eventually jailed for contempt of court. But now, Sally Yates will be apotheosized into the liberal pantheon for defying the law in exactly the same way.

The tantrum on the Left rages on. One only hopes they can keep it up for four years, for it is highly entertaining and can do nothing but redound to the benefit of Trump and the Republicans.

Friday, January 27, 2017

Obama, not Trump, a more apt comparison to Big Brother

I find it highly amusing that Adam Gopnik and other dandies of the Left are comparing the incoming Trump Administration to George Orwell's book 1984. The obvious comparison, and the one likely intended by Orwell, is rather between 1984 and the post-WWII Labour government of Clement Attlee. Even Gopnik himself admits as much:

    As the British author Anthony Burgess pointed out a long time ago, Orwell’s modern hell was basically a reproduction of British misery in the postwar rationing years [in other words, the years of the Attlee Labour regime], with the malice of Stalin’s police-state style added on.

It was the British Labour regime that replaced Winston Churchill's Conservative government. It was the British Labour regime that the anti-Keynesian economist Friedrich Hayek condemned in his book The Road to Serfdom. It was the British Labour regime that Daniel Yergin critiqued in his book and TV series The Commanding Heights. It was the British Labour regime that Margaret Thatcher, the disciple of Churchill and Hayek, began to dismantle (to the great benefit of England) as soon as she became Prime Minister in 1979, leading the Conservative Party back to power. And the obvious political heir of the British Labour regime is the Progressive, Leftist Obama administration, not the incoming Trump administration.

Instead of spewing out purple prose that is somehow supposed to have some connection to Donald Trump ("Caligula, the mad Roman emperor, infamously appointed his horse Incitatus to the Roman Senate, and that has been for millennia a byword for cracked authoritarian action." Huh?), it would be good if Mr Gopnik actually familiarized himself with the history of intellectual and political developments in the late 20th and early 21st centuries.

Wednesday, January 25, 2017

Gorsuch's views on originalism and substantive due process?

From what I am reading, I'm guessing that Neil Gorsuch is going to be Trump's nominee to the SCOTUS. Judge Gorsuch seems to be an extremely well-qualified candidate and some evidence strongly suggests that he is an originalist, just as Judge Scalia was.

Other evidence, however, raises questions in my (perhaps feeble) mind. For example, his opinion in Browder v. City of Albuquerque uses a substantive due process argument to reach the decision. The opinion states:

    The Supreme Court has interpreted this language as guaranteeing not only certain procedures when a deprivation of an enumerated right takes place (procedural due process), but also as guaranteeing certain deprivations won’t take place without a sufficient justification (substantive due process). Some suggest this latter doctrine with the paradoxical name might find a more natural home in the Privileges and Immunities Clause; others question whether it should find a home anywhere in the Constitution. But, the Supreme Court clearly tells us, home it has and has where it is. At the same time, the Court has warned that the doctrine should be applied and expanded sparingly “because guideposts for responsible decisionmaking in this unchartered area are scarce and open-ended.” Washington v. Glucksberg, 521 U.S. 702, 720 (1997) (quoting Collins v. City of Harker Heights, 503 U.S. 115, 125 (1992)) (internal quotation mark omitted). [emphasis added]

This is not a resounding repudiation of substantive due process. On the other hand, the opinion seems to be saying: "Hey, whatever our personal opinions may be on the use of substantive due process arguments, we must allow such arguments if we are required to allow them by the SCOTUS."

If I were Trump, I would require Judge Gorsuch to provide me with a written description of his judicial views on the use of substantive due process arguments in the cases Roe v Wade and Obergefell.

Judge Gorsuch is 49 years old and replacing Judge Scalia, a staunch advocate of originalism and ferocious opponent of the use of substantive due process arguments. Trump needs to make sure that he is actually appointing some one with similar views, especially when that individual is going to sit on the Court for decades.

Sunday, January 22, 2017

Madonna: Fuck you, but I believe in love

Some quotes from yet another vulgar embarrassment of the Left, Madonna, as she spoke in the so-called "Women's March" yesterday in Washington:

    And to our detractors, that insist that this march will never add up to anything, fuck you, ... fuck you! ... Yes, I have thought an awful lot about blowing up the White House. ... As W.H Auden wrote on the eve of World War II: "We must love one another, or die." I choose love.

Apparently, Madonna's willingness to love her neighbors does not extend to the millions of Americans, including the many millions of American women, who voted for Mr Trump.

All Madonna, Jane Fonda, and Meryl Streep have accomplished over the last couple of weeks is to reinforce Middle America's impression of the Democratic Party as a bunch of bi-coastal, New York, Hollywood, Nancy Pelosi elites. The majority of American women in the American heartland simply don't identify with this kind of violent and vulgar militancy.

I welcome, almost revel in, these rants as demonstrating to the entire nation the type of people who have become the core of the embarrassment that is the current Democratic Party.

As an aside, since we are quoting from great Western poets like Auden (although he is dead and white and male, hmmm problematic), let me quote from a great poet of the Left, Madonna Louise Ciccone herself:

    Like a virgin, ooh, ooh
    Like a virgin
    Feels so good inside
    When you hold me, and your heart beats, and you love me

    Oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh
    Ooh, baby
    Can't you hear my heart beat
    For the very first time?

Lyrics for the ages, no?

Saturday, January 21, 2017

Hanoi Jane is how the Left fights back?

This is what the Left comes up with?

Hanoi Jane Fonda, the aging Barbarella (btw, one of the most degrading and at the same time laughable female movie roles of my lifetime -- at least Meryl Streep is a great actress), rants on about penises and pussy power, accusing Donald Trump of being the Predator-in-Chief, conveniently forgetting that the original Predator-in-Chief was the Democrat Bill Clinton, whose wife, Mr Trump's opponent in the recent election, has denied his sexual assaults for decades, while an audience of like-minded left-wing La La Landers applauds her every word and Bill Maher drops the occasional f-bomb to demonstrate his liberal cred?

This is how the Democrats think they are going to recapture the American Middle? Don't they realize how completely they are alienating most of the American public? Oh well, let them keep it up. It is all so entertaining.

Trump's Obamacare executive order

Trump's Obamacare executive order states:

    Sec. 2. To the maximum extent permitted by law, the Secretary of Health and Human Services (Secretary) and the heads of all other executive departments and agencies (agencies) with authorities and responsibilities under the Act shall exercise all authority and discretion available to them to waive, defer, grant exemptions from, or delay the implementation of any provision or requirement of the Act that would impose a fiscal burden on any State or a cost, fee, tax, penalty, or regulatory burden on individuals, families, healthcare providers, health insurers, patients, recipients of healthcare services, purchasers of health insurance, or makers of medical devices, products, or medications.

Does this mean I can get a waiver or exemption from paying the 3.8% passive investment income tax I now am being forced to pay in order to subsidize other people's health insurance?

Wednesday, January 18, 2017

Let me get this straight

So, if internal Democratic emails are divulged by the Russians, diplomats are expelled.

But, if classified information is divulged by a man who thinks he's a woman, he is pardoned.

Monday, January 9, 2017

New definition for verb: to garland

In 1987, Democrats smugly gave us a new verb. When I search for the terms "bork verb," google returns the following definition:

    obstruct (someone, especially a candidate for public office) through systematic defamation or vilification.

I propose that we change our dictionaries once again, namely, by providing the following additional definition for the verb "to garland:"

    obstruct (someone, especially a judge nominated to the Supreme Court) by refusing to grant hearings or a vote to him/her.

Sunday, January 8, 2017

The hypocrisy of Obama's exit interview

In his "exit interview" with former Democratic operative and now so-called ABC News Correspondent, George Stephanopoulos, President Obama says:

    I underestimated the degree to which, in this new information age, it is possible for misinformation for cyber hacking and so forth to have an impact on our open societies, our open systems, to insinuate themselves into our democratic practices in ways that I think are accelerating. And so part of the reason that I ordered this report was not simply to re-litigate what happened over the last several months, but rather to make sure that we understand this is something that Putin has been doing for quite some time in Europe. ... You know, I think there are a lot of factors going into an election. I think the bottom line is that Donald Trump is gonna be sworn in as the 45th President of the United States of America. And it's not necessarily profitable to sort of try to untangle all the different factors that went into it. The issue here is you have I think the-- the clear example of how, if we're not vigilant foreign countries can have an impact on the political debate in the United States in ways that might not have been true 10, 20, 30 years ago in-- in part because of the way news is transmitted and in part because so many people are skeptical of mainstream news organizations that-- everything's true and everything's false. You know nothing-- nothing is-- is settled. Everything is contested. In that kind of environment, where there's so much skepticism about information that's coming in, we're gonna have to spend a lot more time thinking about how do we protect our democratic process and as I've been saying for years, we're gonna have to spend a lot more time on cyber security. That's one of the reasons why I'd ordered a commission. ... One of the things that I am concerned about is the degree to which we've seen a lot of commentary lately where there were Republicans or pundits or cable commentators who seemed to have more confidence in Vladimir Putin than fellow Americans because those fellow Americans were Democrats.

Well, one thing is "settled" for sure. While it is certainly true that the Russians hacked the DNC, Mr Obama's insinuation that the emails they published were "misinformation" is a bold-faced lie. In my last blog post, I included a link to a post from the tech blog Errata Security that demonstrates beyond the shadow of a doubt that the emails leaked by the Russians were authentic and not tampered with. These emails reveal the intentional and pre-meditated attempts of two consecutive DNC chairwomen, Debbie Wasserman Schulz and Donna Brazile, to influence the outcome of the Democratic primary unfairly in favor of Hillary Clinton.

In other words, regardless of how they obtained the emails, the Russian hackers did not publish "misinformation," but rather genuine, unaltered documents that merely revealed the internal machinations of Democratic operatives as they attempted to rig the election. The American people were, therefore, not misinformed, Mr Obama, but rather simply persuaded by solid evidence about the nature of the activities of one of the parties involved in the election. The problem for the Democrats is not that the Russians disseminated misinformation, but rather that the Democrats in the DNC were so ham-handed that they didn't do an adequate job of covering up the tracks of their own nefarious attempts to place their thumbs on the scale for Hillary.

(As an aside, isn't it interesting how individuals who leak information that Democrats find useful are celebrated as saints -- think Daniel Ellsberg and Deep Throat -- while the leakers of information about Democratic malfeasance -- think the Russian hackers or, say, Linda Tripp -- are vilified unrelentingly?)

In sum, at the very moment when he is expressing concern that misinformation threatens to undermine our democratic processes, Mr Obama is himself engaging in a campaign of misinformation and misdirection to undermine democratically elected Donald Trump, wringing his hands over Russian hackers, while ignoring the hidden malfeasance within his own party that those hackers brought to light.

And, as Obama engages in this bold-faced campaign of misinformation, the lap-dog Stephanopoulos, sits there with nary a hard question coming to mind, nodding gravely in assent and pretending to be impartial. Is it any wonder that Americans have lost all faith in the major news outlets when they are populated by the likes of Stephanopoulos and Brazile?

Mr Obama, if you are truly interested in "protecting our democratic process," then the best place for you to start is by rooting out the corruption in your own party and condemning the incestuous relationship between your party and so many mainstream "news" organizations.

One can hope that this "exit interview" will truly be the last we hear from Obama for some time, but I doubt seriously his vanity will so allow.

Monday, January 2, 2017

Obama should expel Wasserman Schultz and Brazile from the United States

IMHO, the most interesting documents regarding the Russian hacking of the DNC are:

  • Bears in the Midst: Intrusion into the Democratic National Committee, the original blog post by Dmitri Alperovitch, CEO of cyber security company CrowdStrike, describing in precise technical detail the Russian intrusion into the DNC network
  • The Russian Expat Leading the Fight to Protect America, a more biographical article on Alperovitch, who is obviously another of the brilliant Russian software engineers that we in Silicon Valley have become so familiar with over the last several decades. I find it amusing that the leaders of the DNC were such boobs when it came to cyber security that they needed to be protected from the smart Russians by a smart Russian.
  • The Long Fall of Debbie Wasserman Schultz, which reports: "the leaked emails ... clearly showed the committee’s posture of neutrality in the Democratic primary to have been a hollow pretense, just as Bernie Sanders and his supporters long contended. ... The litany of Wasserman Schultz’s offenses during the primary was familiar to supporters of Sanders and other Clinton rivals: scheduling debates at odd times, shutting Sanders out of the party’s data file, stacking convention committees with Clinton supporters."
  • Donna Brazile Shared Additional Debate Questions With Clinton Campaign, Identified Her Tipster, which reports: "Donna Brazile, the interim chair of the Democratic National Committee, began providing town hall and debate questions to the Clinton campaign earlier than previously known, emails released by WikiLeaks on Monday show."
  • The email sent by Donna Brazile providing Jennifer Palmieri, the Director of Communications for the Clinton campaign, with the debate question, is undoubtedly authentic, which reports: "I was just listening to ABC News about this story. It repeated Democrat talking points that the WikiLeaks emails weren't validated. That's a lie. This email in particular has been validated." The author of the blog post demonstrates how he verified the authenticity of Brazile's email with a DKIM verifier. DKIM is a completely reliable email verification method that relies on digital signatures. DKIM verifies the source of the email and guarantees that the email has not been tampered with or altered in any way. In other words, Donna Brazile not only intentionally and unfairly tried to influence the outcome of the Democratic primary, but then, when caught with her hand in the cookie jar, lied about it.

In sum:

  • Yes, the Russians did hack the DNC and sought to influence the American elections (so shut the fuck up, Donald).
  • On the other hand, two successive DNC chairwomen, Debbie Wasserman Schulz and Donna Brazile, actively worked to undermine Bernie Sanders and favor Hillary Clinton, thereby seeking to influence the American elections, and Brazile told brazen lies about and attempted to cover up her actions.

I am waiting for Barack Obama to expel Wasserman Schultz and Brazile from the United States for trying to influence American elections unfairly.

Sunday, January 1, 2017

Where we really need to focus

Turkish security forces were searching for a gunman who opened fire in a popular Istanbul nightclub in the early hours of New Year’s Day, killing at least 39 people in the latest attack to rock a nation battling terrorist groups on multiple fronts.

But, it's those damn settlements on the West Bank that we really need to focus on.