creators.com opinion web
Liberal Opinion Conservative Opinion
William Murchison
William Murchison
6 Nov 2009
The Fort Hood Massacre

It makes no sense to see Army Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan, as represented in at least one family account, as the … Read More.

3 Nov 2009
Can Washington Make You Buy Health Insurance?

Yes, yes, says White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs. Congress has the power to make everyone buy health insurance.… Read More.

27 Oct 2009
Comeback Time for Christians

The Holy Father — Pope Benedict XVI — offers to let Episcopalians and other Anglicans of Catholic … Read More.

The View From California

The coming contest, fight, whatever, over Judge Sonia Sotomayor's confirmation to our country's top court gains context from the California Supreme Court's 6-2 decision the same day.

The California jurists said voters last year were within their rights to pass a proposition barring the state from authorizing same-sex marriage.

The decision can be read as a victory for good morals: an approach with which I would not take issue. There's more, nevertheless. The Californians held back from imposing on voters an ideology — same-sex marriage as perfectly fine for those who like it and, as for those who don't like it, tough.

A decision of that character and thrust would certainly have created problems for states determined to keep alive the distinction between marriage and coupling. So also it would have reduced the California's sovereign electorate to a collection of yellers and fist-shakers.

Not a pretty prospect: the people's expressly conferred support for traditional marriage thrown out by a panel of lawyers fast to congratulate themselves for reforming the rotten, the used-up, the no-longer-relevant.

When a coterie of self-anointed reformers schemes against the people's will, the outcome is about what you expect. It's ugly. Distrust and anger multiply. On both sides. Interest in cooperation — on anything — diminishes among parties to the decision.

On the shoulders of Judge Sotomayor — who would seem an odds-on candidate for confirmation to the Supreme Court — rest expectations having to do with her presumed sympathy for "empathy." The empathetic judge looks at the law but then glances above and around it. Hmmm, what (BEGIN ITALS) should (END ITALS) the law mean? Not what (BEGIN ITALS) does (END ITALS) it mean? Should.

I confess to a gross overgeneralization. Not even Earl Warren and Hugo Black, these long-dead prototypes of empathy, understood "should" in precisely the same term.

Here's the point: A judge who sees law as a visionary ideal rather than the outcome of hard work by horse traders known as legislators isn't going to — well, let's back up to California and the just-decided case over gay marriage.

A judge with highfalutin' notions about what's right and what's wrong isn't going to let The People get away with contradicting him.

He'll take broadsword to a law he doesn't like (e.g., the old, pre-Roe v. Wade abortion statutes), or he'll put under his personal authority an entire public school system he sees as needing improvement in specific ways.

An empathetic California Supreme Court, on some premise or other (the plaintiffs' contention was that the pro-traditional marriage proposition stripped gays of a fundamental right), could have lectured Californians on the need for a new order of matrimony. The court didn't. Amazing — given that only a year ago the same court struck down an earlier ban on same-sex marriage as a violation of equal protection.

The point here isn't, hooray, hooray for the suddenly enlightened justices of the Golden State. The point is, pause, see what can happen when a handful of lawyers decides, for whatever reason, what's best for all of us and how fast we ought to do it: no whining, no flinching, just (BEGIN ITALS) do it! (END ITALS)

The irony in the Sotomayor case, of course, is that a president elected by a majority vote proposes to seat on the Supreme Court a woman he seems to value for her ability to ignore trifles like the will of the majority, or social peace, or a law's actual meaning. The liberal — and Obama is a liberal — theory of judging involves the use of courts to do quickly what democratic debate, being unwieldy, can't accomplish.

The judge whose place she will take, David Souter, nice and interesting guy as he was alleged to be, was himself a sort of empathizing, let's-move-the-ball-forward kind of judge. Sonia Sotomayor won't immediately change the tenor of discussion and judgment on the court, but assuming the President reads her rightly she will certainly try. As will all future Obama candidates for the court we may yet rename the Society for the Advancement of Empathy in America.

William Murchison is the author of "Mortal Follies: Episcopalians and the Crisis of Mainline Christianity." To find out more about William Murchison and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate website at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2009 CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.

??

??

??

??


AddThis Social Bookmark Button
More
William Murchison
Nov. `09
Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
8 9 10 11 12 13 14
15 16 17 18 19 20 21
22 23 24 25 26 27 28
29 30 1 2 3 4 5
About the author About the author
Write the author Write the author
Printer friendly format Printer friendly format
Email to friend Email to friend
View by Month
Author’s Podcast
Deb Saunders
Debra J. SaundersUpdated 8 Nov 2009
Steve Chapman
Steve ChapmanUpdated 8 Nov 2009
diane dimond
Diane DimondUpdated 7 Nov 2009

15 Sep 2009 Another Bronx Cheer For Politicians

24 Jul 2007 Do the Democrats Mean It? Probably Not

5 Feb 2008 The Right and the "Wrongs" of McCain