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from a libertarian perspective
By Ryan Crowell Jun 28th 2007 at 7:33 pm EDT
These recent Supreme Court rulings ought to be praised for, for the first time in decades, the Supreme Court upholding liberty. In its rejection of Campiagn Finance reform, protecting first amendment liberties, to limiting government-enforced discrimination when it comes to schooling.

A strict interpretation of the Constitution is one that will always secure liberty, and protect us from government force. I know progressives don't care about liberty, and would rather the government have unlimited powers to engineer society, rather then allowing free men acting with their own free will to influence their society, which is why progressivism is so dangerous to liberty. While there are some issues when right wingers stand opposed to liberty, I believe if this court upholds the Constitution as it is written, liberty will finally be restored.
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One more 5-4 outrage from the Roberts court

With Samuel Alito replacing Sandra Day O'Connor last year, the Supreme Court's right wing is a solid four person block, and this term Justice Kennedy has lined up with them in most of the key cases.  It's bad news, including today for  equality and opportunity in education.

Thanks again to all the students who stood with us to speak out against the nominations of the smiling, All-American ideologue John Roberts and the most right wing federal judge in America, Samuel Alito

About the only campaign promise that President Bush kept was to appoint Justices in the mold of Scalia and Thomas, and a range of conservatives who now have split with Bush on other issues continue to praise the Roberts and Alito confirmations as a key accomplishment by the administration. 

Progressives, and other supporters of a reasonable interpretation of the Constitution and laws of the United States, have a lot of work to do.  They need to persuade elites about the bankruptcy of the right wing vision of the law.  They also need to persuade the public on the controversial hot-button issues that underlie critical Supreme Court decisions -- issues like free speech, government surveillance, detention of alleged terrorists, criminal justice, tort lawsuits, and discrimination/ affirmative action.  Until the public sees that a right wing Supreme Court is undermining their values and interests in the day to day world, voters won't see Supreme Court appointments as an election issue, nomination battles will continue to favor the conservatives, and the right wing extremist block may grow even bigger.


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