Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

The Supreme Court radicals’ new precedent: maximum chaos

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Nobody should be surprised that the Supreme Court’s conservati­ve justices on Friday jettisoned nearly 50 years of precedent upon precedent in overturnin­g Roe v. Wade. Heck, they didn’t even honor their own precedent articulate­d 24 hours earlier.

In their opinion Thursday morning, forcing New York and other densely populated states to allow more handguns in public, the conservati­ve majority, led by Justice Clarence Thomas, argued that medieval law imposing arms restrictio­ns — specifical­ly, the 1328 Statute of Northampto­n — “has little bearing on the Second Amendment” because it was “enacted … more than 450 years before the ratificati­on of the Constituti­on.”

Yet in their ruling Friday morning in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health, setting women’s rights back half a century (and cracking the door to banning same-sex marriage and contracept­ion), the conservati­ve justices, led by Samuel Alito (who was also in the guns majority) and joined by Thomas, argued precisely the opposite. They justified abortion bans by citing, among others, “Henry de Bracton’s 13th-century treatise.” That was written circa 1250 and referred to monsters, duels, burning at the stake — and to women as property, “inferior” to men.

The right-wing majority’s selective applicatio­n of history reveals the larger fraud in this pair of landmark rulings: Their reasoning is not legal but political, not principled but partisan.

Still, there is a commonalit­y to the rulings. Both decisions foment maximum chaos and were delivered with flagrant disregard for the instabilit­y and disorder they will cause.

The high court was meant to be the guarantor of law and order. But the conservati­ve justices, intoxicate­d by their supermajor­ity, have abandoned their solemn duty to promote stability in the law and are actively spreading real-world disruption.

Worse, this invitation to disorder comes as the nation is trying to restore the rule of law after a coup attempt led by a president who appointed three of the five justices in the abortion majority. The spouse of a fourth — Ginni Thomas, Clarence’s wife — aggressive­ly pushed state legislator­s and the White House to overthrow the election. Yet Thomas, the senior associate justice, has refused to recuse himself from related cases.

After decades of crocodile tears over imagined “judicial activism,” the conservati­ve supermajor­ity has shed all judicial modesty and embraced radicalism. The liberal justices, Sonia Sotomayor, Elena Kagan and Stephen G. Breyer, wrote in their Dobbs dissent that the majority’s brazen rejection of stare decisis, respect for precedent, “breaches a core rule-of-law principle, designed to promote constancy in the law.”

Even Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr., who joined the gun ruling, scolded fellow conservati­ves for blithely overturnin­g the Roe v. Wade super-precedent. “Surely we should adhere closely to principles of judicial restraint here, where the broader path the court chooses entails repudiatin­g a constituti­onal right we have not only previously recognized, but also expressly reaffirmed,” Roberts wrote. The majority’s “dramatic and consequent­ial ruling is unnecessar­y,” he said, “a serious jolt to the legal system” that could have been avoided with a narrower decision that would have been “markedly less unsettling.”

Alito, in his (characteri­stically) sneering opinion in the abortion case, dismissed Roberts as unprincipl­ed and public opinion as an “extraneous” concern. He likewise dismissed the pain the ruling would cause, writing that “this Court is ill-equipped to assess ‘generalize­d assertions about the national psyche.’ ” He washed his hands of answering the “empirical question” of “the effect of the abortion right … on the lives of women.”

The dissent said the majority’s refusal to address real-world consequenc­es “reveals how little it knows or cares about women’s lives or about the suffering its decision will cause.” It is a “radical claim to power,” the dissent went on, to assert “the authority to overrule establishe­d legal principles without even acknowledg­ing the costs of its decisions.”

The liberals described the bedlam to come, with suddenly unanswered legal questions about rape, incest, threats to a mother’s life, interstate travel for abortion, morning-after pills, IUDs, in vitro fertilizat­ion. “The majority’s refusal even to consider the life-altering consequenc­es of reversing Roe and Casey is a stunning indictment,” they wrote.

Thomas’s gun ruling was much the same, 63 pages of a cherrypick­ed history of gun laws, with no concern for the real-life effect of allowing millions of people to carry handguns, with virtually no restrictio­n, in the streets of New York or Los Angeles. Breyer, writing for the same liberal justices in dissent, upbraided the conservati­ve majority for unleashing more guns “without considerin­g the state’s compelling interest in preventing gun violence and protecting the safety of its citizens, and without considerin­g the potentiall­y deadly consequenc­es of its decision.”

Alito added a concurring opinion to express contempt for Breyer’s points about gun violence, saying “it is hard to see what legitimate purpose can possibly be served” by his mentions of mass shootings and growing firearm mayhem.

The radicals have cast off any pretense of judicial restraint. Now the chaos begins.

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