Albuquerque Journal

Progressiv­es too eager to cut constituti­onal corners

- GEORGE WILL Columnist E-mail georgewill@washpost.com. © 2019

WASHINGTON — Presidenti­al aspirant Beto O’Rourke, thrashing about in an attempt to be noticed, says tax exemptions should be denied to churches and other institutio­ns that oppose same-sex marriage. O’Rourke’s suggestion, and Massachuse­tts Sen. Elizabeth Warren’s plan to tax the “excessive” exercise of a First Amendment right, and the NBA’s painful lesson about the perils of moral grandstand­ing illustrate how progressiv­ism has become a compound of self-satisfied moral preening and a thirst for coercion.

O’Rourke is innocent of originalit­y: Harvard law professor Mark Tushnet recommends a “hard line” against people who deviate from progressiv­ism: “Trying to be nice to the losers didn’t work well after the Civil War” and “taking a hard line seemed to work reasonably well in Germany and Japan after 1945.” Apparently it is progressiv­e to regard unprogress­ive Americans as akin to enemies vanquished in wars. No Churchilli­an nonsense about “in victory, magnanimit­y.”

UCLA law professor Eugene Volokh notes that in 1952 California voters used a progressiv­e device, a referendum, to amend the state’s constituti­on to deny tax exemptions to certain people despised by the majority — people who advocated the unlawful overthrow of the U.S. government. Fortunatel­y, in 1958, in another case from California — concerning denial of property tax exemptions to veterans who refused to swear an oath not to advocate the unlawful overthrow of the government — the U.S. Supreme Court did its countermaj­oritarian duty to protect minority rights, striking down this measure: “To deny an exemption to claimants who engage in certain forms of speech is ... the same as if the state were to fine them for this speech.”

Warren, a policy polymath, has a plan for everything, including for taxing speech that annoys her. The pesky First Amendment — in 2014, 54 Democratic senators voted to amend it to empower Congress to regulate spending that disseminat­es political speech about Congress — says Congress shall make no law ... abridging the right of the people “to petition the government for a redress of grievances.” One name for such petitionin­g is lobbying. Warren proposes steep taxes, up to 75%, on “excessive” lobbying expenditur­es, as though the amendment says Congress can forbid “excessive” petitionin­g. Lobbyists are unpopular, and her entire agenda depends on what the amendment was written to prevent — arousing majority passions against an unpopular minority, the wealthy. Warren, who like O’Rourke is operatic when denouncing Donald Trump’s ignorance of, or hostility to, constituti­onal norms, might not be a plausible person to make the case against him.

“In defeat, defiance” was Churchill’s recommenda­tion. The NBA’s is: When tyrants snarl, grovel. Beijing’s tantrum — great powers do not resemble frustrated toddlers — was detonated by a Houston Rockets employee who tweeted support for Hong Kong protesters. Commission­er Adam Silver, who represents the teams’ owners — sorry. Forgive the insensitiv­ity. The NBA has been so insufferab­le in its virtue signaling, so relentless in its progressiv­e preening, that this past summer it announced that it has “moved away” from calling those who own teams “owners.” The term supposedly carries connotatio­ns of slavery.

But back to Silver. He took the 2017 AllStar Game away from Charlotte, so horrified was the NBA by a North Carolina law requiring transgende­r people to use public bathrooms according to the sex on their birth certificat­es. The NBA’s decision expressed its “long-standing core values,” which are, however, compatible with the NBA having its China training camp in Xinjiang province, where Chinese citizens are in concentrat­ion camps that facilitate “re-education.”

There is strong evidence from an independen­t tribunal that met in London that China, which has many more people in concentrat­ion camps — perhaps 1.5 million in Xinjiang alone — than Hitler had during the 1936 Olympics, is still harvesting organs, including hearts, from prisoners, some while still alive, for Chinese and foreign purchasers. Silver, however, is ostentatio­usly sensitive about “owners,” so Beijing should avoid that word, or else. The NBA should have done what a congressio­nal letter recommends: suspend activities in China until “government-controlled broadcaste­rs and government-controlled commercial sponsors end their boycott of NBA activities and the selective treatment of the Houston Rockets.” This would have caused Beijing’s infantilis­m to become a national embarrassm­ent — a weak nation’s idea of national strength.

Unfortunat­ely, however, O’Rourke, Warren and Silver demonstrat­e the tendency of too many progressiv­es to cut constituti­onal corners, to despise and bully adversarie­s, and to practice theatrical but selective indignatio­n about attacks on fundamenta­l American principles, some of which they themselves traduce. Just what we did not need in our dispiritin­g civic life — additional evidence that there really is no such thing as rock bottom.

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