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Chauly
Posted on Monday, April 09, 2012 - 12:06 pm:   Edit Post Delete Post View Post/Check IP Print Post    Move Post (Custodian/Admin Only) Ban Poster IP (Custodian/Admin only)

This fellow has some good stuff...

Three Battles

The Political-Ideological Conflicts that Will Define the Decade

by Robert Tracinski

In considering the implications of the Obamacare hearings, I got to
thinking about how this fits into the bigger picture: the larger
political-ideological conflicts that will define, not just this election
year, but this decade, the teens.

I think there are three big battles to be fought, offering three distinct
variations on one common theme.

• Economic Judicial Review

Ideological conflicts in the political arena are a lot like ideological
conflicts in the courts. They are fought, not in terms of vague
generalities, but in the concrete terms of specific cases. The ideological
issue of capitalism versus communism, for example, was settled by a 1989
ruling in the long-contested case North Atlantic Treaty Organization v.
Warsaw Pact. You get the idea.

So it is fitting that one of the big battles that defines this era will be
a court case.

We don't know yet under what name the Supreme Court's Obamacare ruling
will go down in history. They're considering two cases: National
Federation of Independent Business v. Sebelius and Florida v. United
States Department of Health and Human Services. Whichever it is, I suspect
it will become as much a household word as Roe v. Wade.

Yesterday, I discussed the significance of this case, with a brief
overview of the legal history involved. That article is now up at
RealClearMarkets. The upshot is that for the past 70 years, the courts
have refused to exercise judicial review over regulation of the economy,
but this case could resurrect constitutional protections for economic
freedom.

Interestingly, this is the point just made by President Obama, who told
reporters: "Well, first of all, let me be very specific. We have not seen
a court overturn a law that was passed by Congress on an economic issue,
like health care, that I think most people would clearly consider
commerce. A law like that has not been overturned at least since Lochner,
right? So we're going back to the '30s, pre-New Deal." The president is
right on the larger issue. On economics, the courts have allowed pure,
unlimited majority rule, and that is what the left is desperately
scrambling to preserve. But all of Obama's details are wrong, from the
date of Lochner to its central issue. James Taranto does a nice job of
analyzing Obama's ignorance.

I have neither attended an elite law school nor taught a course on
constitutional law, so I was a little surprised to find out that I know
ten times as much constitutional history as Obama. But only a little.
After all, the whole point of modern statist jurisprudence is that they do
not have to study or think about the Constitution when dreaming up their
economic controls.

Obama made this gaffe when he was pressed to explain an earlier comment on
the Supreme Court, in which he launched his own miniature version of FDR's
campaign against the "nine old men." Obama told reporters: "Ultimately,
I'm confident that the Supreme Court will not take what would be an
unprecedented, extraordinary step of overturning a law that was passed by
a strong majority of a democratically elected Congress." Ignore little
details like the fact that Obamacare passed by a 219-212 vote in the
House—hardly a "strong majority." The big news is that Obama's statement
seems to deny the very existence of judicial review, i.e., the power of
the courts to declare a law unconstitutional. This prompted an appeals
court that is still hearing an Obamacare-related case to call the
president's bluff and demand an exact written statement from the Justice
Department describing their position on judicial review. That ought to be
interesting.

Of course, each side of the political debate hates judicial review when
the results go against them, but they love it when it goes their way.
After all, hasn't the use of judicial review—and a rather loose and
freewheeling interpretation of it, finding "emanations from penumbras" of
the Constitution—been central to the left's agenda? What the hell else was
Roe v. Wade? Surely, it thwarted "strong majorities" in states that wanted
to ban abortion.

Yet now we are beginning to see a campaign on the left denouncing Supreme
Court justices as political "hacks dressed up in black robes." That's from
Maureen Dowd, who I suppose ought to know a thing or two about political
hacks.

At any rate, if this is the left's reaction, not to the Obamacare ruling
itself, but to the mere suggestion that economic liberty might have
constitutional protection—well, you can see how significant this issue
really is.

So that's the first battle: to restore what we might call "economic
judicial review."

• Entitlement Reform

The second battle is one that President Obama took up at the same time
that he launched his attack against the courts. His other target was Paul
Ryan's budget, and specifically its effort at entitlement reform, which
Obama condemned as "thinly veiled Social Darwinism."

I can't think of a philosopher with less influence and fewer followers
today than Herbert Spencer. But the pseudo-intellectuals on the left use
"Social Darwinism" the same way they use Galileo: not as an actual person
who stood for specific ideas, but as a partisan political talking point.

The Ryan budget has nothing to do with Social Darwinism, much less with
laissez-faire. It is explicitly billed as an attempt to preserve the
welfare state by making it economically sustainable. But it does do
something important that the left regards—correctly—as a crisis. Ryan
would limit the welfare state. The essence of his plan for Medicare and
Medicaid is to move from "defined benefits," in which recipients are
promised a certain outcome no matter how much it costs, to "defined
contributions," in which the government pledges to spend only a certain,
limited amount of money. The goal is to make it possible to keep the
welfare state within a predictable budget, rather than having it be an
open-ended, unlimited claim on the taxpayer.

In effec, the Ryan plan does not regard the welfare recipient's need as an
unlimited claim on the taxpayer, and that is what the left regards as
immoral. This is the central ideological issue: a limited claim on our
lives and efforts, versus an unlimited one.

• Global Warming

These first two issues are ones that I have discussed recently. But a
third battle is part of the same big picture: the battle over global
warming regulations.

It is important to grasp the specific role that global warming serves
within the environmentalist ideology and political program. Without global
warming, environmentalism has to chip away at industrial civilization
piecemeal, banning a couple of chemicals here, blocking development on an
environmentally "sensitive" site over there. They can harass industrial
civilization around the edges and significantly slow it down. But global
warming allows them to attack industrial civilization at its heart.

Carbon dioxide is an unavoidable byproduct of the only type of power
source, fossil fuels, that is cheap and plentiful enough to power
industrial civilization. By portraying carbon dioxide as a threat to the
planet itself, environmentalists make industrial civilization as such into
an evil to be eradicated.

The global warming dogma is what make the claims of environmentalism
total, perhaps even totalitarian. Global warming justifies the regulation
of everything in industrial civilization, as a matter of life and death.
It makes the environmentalists' claims on our lives unlimited.

There's that word again: unlimited.

You can see the common theme. The battle is between unlimited government,
and government that is "limited"—in the very broadest sense of that term.

It strikes me that we are still dealing with the hangover of the 20th
century. For most of the previous century, the threat that was always
hanging out there, as the alternative to a free society, was unlimited
control: totalitarian dictatorship. Fascism was vanquished in 1945 and
Communism in 1989-1992. But the Western left never really gave up the
dream of unlimited control. They tried to reconstitute an ideology of
total control under the banner of environmentalism and global warming.
They tried to push for the universalization of the welfare state by
expanding it step by step to the point where everyone would be dependent
on government. And to make all of this possible, they are now trying to
preserve the vacant constitutional space that has allowed them to pursue
unlimited controls in the realm of economics.

The battle today is not yet about strictly limiting government to only its
legitimate functions, the police, the courts, and the military. The best
result we can expect in this decade is simply to turn back from unlimited
government to a government that is still too big but constrained within
some limits. We cannot expect the courts to enforce laissez-faire, but we
can hope that they will be open to constitutional arguments against
economic regulations. We cannot expect Congress to dismantle the welfare
state, but we can hope that they will restrict it to a defined size and
budget. We cannot expect to abolish the EPA, but we can hope that Congress
and the president will deprive it of its unilateral power to control all
power generation.

Like I said, this is the battle of the coming decade. Maybe we will
achieve all of these goals earlier. Maybe achieving them and protecting
them will take a bit longer. But then we can move on the next step. Big
ideological issues like this do not favor stasis. They tend to move toward
greater ideological consistency, one way or another. So what are the
further implications of the issues I have just named? What are the battles
they open up for the next decade?

If Obamacare is struck down, reviving economic judicial review, then it is
clear that many other economic controls are vulnerable to similar
constitutional arguments. If we limit the scope of the welfare state, then
fewer and fewer Americans will be dependent on it. They will be more
likely to regard it as unnecessary, particularly for the self-supporting
middle-class, and they will be open to limiting it further. If the global
warming dogma is refuted, it will discredit every other claim made by the
environmentalists.

The implications would be, well, unlimited.
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Blake
Posted on Monday, April 09, 2012 - 12:54 pm:   Edit Post Delete Post View Post/Check IP Print Post    Move Post (Custodian/Admin Only) Ban Poster IP (Custodian/Admin only)

I really enjoyed reading that. Thanks for posting Chauly!

Where was that published?
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Blake
Posted on Monday, April 09, 2012 - 12:56 pm:   Edit Post Delete Post View Post/Check IP Print Post    Move Post (Custodian/Admin Only) Ban Poster IP (Custodian/Admin only)

google found it...

http://www.realclearpolitics.com/articles/2012/04/ 06/the_battles_that_will_define_the_decade_113761. html
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Chauly
Posted on Monday, April 09, 2012 - 01:17 pm:   Edit Post Delete Post View Post/Check IP Print Post    Move Post (Custodian/Admin Only) Ban Poster IP (Custodian/Admin only)

He publishes a daily online called "The Intellectual Activist" out of Charlottesville, VA

"To subscribe and receive commentary like this
all the time, go to www.TIADaily.com/subscribe.—RWT"
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