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03-29-2012 03:12 PM |
Liberty Requires Accepting Responsibility
As one of the nine US Supreme Court judges, Antonin Scalia is responsible for making an important decision by June. He's known about it for a while. Because he is consistently the justice who is most concerned about 'government intervention' and impinging on personal liberty, it is assumed he has already made up his mind to vote with the other justices who will find parts or all of the recent health care law unconstitutional.
It is Justice Scalia's right and his responsibility to vote according to his convictions, based on his thorough knowledge of the Constitution, the legal precedents set in previous court decisions, and the content of the recent law. But, during hearings about the law's provisions, Justice Scalia has stated: "What happened to the Eighth Amendment?" (the ban on cruel and unusual punishment), "You really expect us to go through 2,700 pages?"
I think it is trivial by comparison for a congressman to have voted for or against the law without having read it thoroughly. But I find it completely irresponsible, in fact shameful, for a Justice on a Court which is notoriously split 5-4, to complain about having to be fully informed before making one of the most momentous decisions in recent American history.
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