Some
Comments on Jonathan Rowe’s Tensions
Within the Synthesis of Originalism
In
my prior New Reform Club post,
The Two Discourses: How
Non-Originalists Popularize Originalism and What that Means, I reviewed the
traditional criticisms that non-originalists make in regard to originalism. I
did not take a position in regard to the merits of the non-originalist’s critique.
Rather, I was making an anthropological or sociological claim: (i) non-originalists exist; (ii) non-originalists have a
non-frivolous critique of originalism (and for and about originalists); and (iii) non-originalism is the
dominant position in legal academia.
I do not think these positions are particularly
controversial.
I
then turned to the Alliance
for Justice (“AFJ”) letter, signed by more than 350 academics, mostly in law, which
made essentially an originalist-intent-based argument. The letter argued that
the Senate had a constitutionally mandated duty to consider the President’s
nominees for the Supreme Court. I criticized both the substance of that letter,
and the willingness of its many non-originalist signatories to promote an
originalist-intent-type argument.
Over
at American Creation blog,[1]
Jonathan
Rowe took the position that my critique of the AFJ letter was rooted in alleged duplicity or hypocrisy. Rowe explained: “I don’t defend the ethics of such
practice. But I can’t find myself outraged by it either. . . . I’ve
read too much Leo Strauss to be surprised that philosophers and politicians
would engage in communication that offers one message to one set of people, and
a different one to another set.” That’s not quite right. My primary concern was not rooted in duplicity or hypocrisy. So let me try again.
I
do not know why each signatory signed this letter; only the signatories know
why they signed. A variety of possible reasons come to mind. I find it very
difficult to believe that most of these academics signed this letter because
they agreed with its contents (as opposed to supporting its naked conclusion). Perhaps
the non-originalists who signed this letter had some good reasons to sign this letter: a letter they do not really
agree with, and perhaps the signatories will tell us what those reasons are. Perhaps.
But they might not get around to explaining their real motives and genuinely
held beliefs; indeed, they have not come forward to do so.
As
I stated, the signatories may have had some good reasons to have signed this letter, but it is also possible to
imagine some reasons which are not so good. And we are fully entitled to
speculate on what those reasons might be. It is not as if we do not have a long
history of non-originalists speculating on the real motives giving rise originalist
discourse.[2]
One
possible reason why the signatories might have signed this letter is that the signatories
did not care to invest the time necessary to craft a fully fleshed-out argument
along the intellectual lines they genuinely support. All 350 academics were
just too busy; they just could not be bothered. They have time for clients and other
causes, books and articles, but not for the public who they are seeking to
influence. That’s not hypocrisy: that’s contempt. And if that is the reason, I
expect the public will take the hint.
A
second possibility which might explain why the signatories signed this letter
is that a fully fleshed-out argument along the intellectual lines they
genuinely support would not be understood by the public—or, at least, so they
believe. It is not that the signatories are lazy; it is that the public is just
too s-t-o-o-p-i-d to understand their
great wisdom. (Surely, you are not so naive to believe that academics have an
aspirational duty to reach out to the public and to educate them?) In such
circumstances, the AFJ-350 have no good reason to put forward their genuinely
held beliefs. That’s not hypocrisy: that’s elitism. And if that is the reason, I
expect the public will take the hint.
There
is a final possibility. Apparently, some non-originalists believe they are part
of a victimized, long-suffering, powerless, discrete, insular intellectual minority.
As Professor Jack Balkin, a prominent commentator (but not one of the
Alliance-for-Justice-350), wrote:
Accepting that
opposition as the proper frame for debate just locks liberals into a clever
rhetorical strategy created by movement conservatives in the 1980s, who
wanted to put themselves on the side of the American constitutional tradition,
and liberals on the outside looking in. [here]
[here]
(emphasis added)
and,
The notion that
in order for liberals to believe in a living Constitution they have to reject
originalism in all of its forms is the biggest canard ever foisted
on them. [here]
[here]
(emphasis added)[3]
In
this intellectual milieu, signing a letter you do not really believe is not
hypocrisy: it is virtue. Thus, signing
such a letter is the natural and justified response of victims to an unfair
world imposed upon them by malevolent intellectual forces which have deformed reasoned, public debate. That’s not hypocrisy: that’s something else entirely. I am going to refrain from characterizing that reason, but I expect the public will take the hint.
Is
it any wonder that millions of Americans vote for Trump?
Seth
Twitter: https://twitter.com/SethBTillman ( @SethBTillman )
PS: Here is my new post on the migration crisis in Europe. Seth Barrett Tillman, Louise Arbour Welcomes You To Administrative Unit 34B, The New Reform Club (Apr. 8, 2016, 8:38 AM).
Twitter: https://twitter.com/SethBTillman ( @SethBTillman )
PS: Here is my new post on the migration crisis in Europe. Seth Barrett Tillman, Louise Arbour Welcomes You To Administrative Unit 34B, The New Reform Club (Apr. 8, 2016, 8:38 AM).
PPS:
My co-bloggers do good work. So, please have a look around New Reform Club.
My
prior post on this subject is [here]:
Seth
Barrett Tillman, The Two Discourses: How
Non-Originalists Popularize Originalism and What that Means, The New
Reform Club
(Mar. 28, 2016, 9:22 AM)
My
prior post is [here]:
Seth
Barrett Tillman, Part 2: On Ted Cruz’s
Eligibility for the Presidency, The New Reform Club (Apr. 7, 2016, 4:18 AM)
[1] An
excellent blog. One of my regular intellectual ports of call.
[2] See, e.g., Robert Post & Reva Siegel,
Originalism as a Political Practice: The
Right’s Living Constitution, 75 Fordham
L. Rev. 545, 561 (2006) (asserting anthropomorphically: “As a political
practice that developed in the 1980s, originalism seeks, more or less blatantly, to alter the Constitution so as to
infuse it with conservative political principles.” (emphasis added)). Compare E-mail from Professor Gary
Peller to the Georgetown Community (on or about Feb. 13, 2016) (“I imagine many
other faculty, students and staff, particularly people of color, women and
sexual minorities, cringed at headline and at the unmitigated praise with which
the press release described a jurist that many of us believe was a defender of
privilege, oppression and bigotry, one whose intellectual positions were not
brilliant but simplistic and formalistic.”), https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/grade-point/wp/2016/02/18/georgetown-law-professors-argue-over-how-and-whether-to-mourn-scalia/,
with Kimberlé Crenshaw &
Gary Peller, The Contradictions of Mainstream Constitutional Theory, 45 UCLA L. Rev. 1683, 1710–11 (1998) (“The Romer decision is sophistry, but no more
so than any other manipulation of the baseline from which governmental action
is evaluated. Justice Scalia is right that, given the state’s power to
criminalize homosexual conduct upheld in Bowers,
it is implausible to contend that there is a constitutional duty to protect
sexual minorities against discrimination. . . . But Scalia is
not ‘right’ because there is no reason to accept the old common-law baseline
that Scalia proposes either.” (footnote omitted)). Remarkable—courageous—a wholly transparent
willingness to speak truth to power when it really counted—when Antonin Scalia
was alive and might have responded.
Readers—feel free to add further examples of this literature in the
comments section below.
[3] If this
was the “biggest canard,” will Professor Balkin ever tell us what the lesser
canards were?
"Accepting that opposition as the proper frame for debate just locks liberals into a clever rhetorical strategy created by movement conservatives in the 1980s, who wanted to put themselves on the side of the American constitutional tradition, and liberals on the outside looking in." (emphasis added)
ReplyDeleteI love it when they're caught red-handed, and this is an admission of it. The anti-originalist left has no tether to the Founding principles nor affection for them aside from generic blather about liberty, a word they have hollowed out of all meaning and filled back up with libertinism.
Modus ponens is also a "clever rhetorical strategy."
ReplyDeleteThe rhetorical strategy in Wisconsin judicial election campaigns a few cycles back was aptly characterized by a local columnist as "Nobody Here But Us Scalias".
ReplyDeleteOr as they say on Broadway, "nobody likes it but the public."
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteLet see a show of hands: How many would have signed this letter if it were a George Bush nominee at stake? I'm not seeing your hands, could you raise them higher please?
ReplyDeleteThank you for the link and discussion.
ReplyDelete