The S.C., domestic enemies, and the anchor and rudder of our
constitutional system!
The discussion concerning the nomination to the SCOTUS exposes and
brings to light we have extremists in our society--- left wing militants
and right wing militants, who ought to be viewed as domestic enemies of
our constitutional system!
What these militants have in common is their desire to use the SCOTUS to
impose their personal whims and fancies as being within the meaning of
our Constitution, even though their personal views are, without
question, in direct conflict with the intent of the Constitution and the
beliefs under which it was agreed to by the people when ratifying it,
and can be documented from historical records such as:
Madison’s Notes on the proceedings and debates of the convention of
1787; The
Federalists and
Anti Federalist Papers, recording public debate of the proposed
constitution in a series of newspaper articles; and
Elliot’s Debates,
the actual ratification proceedings of several states, during which time
the meaning and intent of the various articles sections and clauses of
our Constitution is elaborated upon to gain state ratification, and in
many instances it is elaborated upon by the very delegates who attended
the Constitutional Convention!
Together, the above sources do in fact record a preponderance of
evidence___ a general consensus___ establishing the intent of the
framers and ratifiers and the beliefs under which the Constitution was
agreed to by “We the People.”
Justice Story in his Commentaries informs us that:
"If the Constitution was ratified under the belief, sedulously
propagated on all sides, that such protection was afforded, would it not
now be a fraud upon the whole people to give a different construction to
its powers?"
And Jefferson tells us:
"On every question of construction [of the Constitution], let us
carry ourselves back to the time when the Constitution was adopted,
recollect the spirit manifested in the debates, and instead of trying
what meaning may be squeezed out of the text, or invented against it,
conform to the probable one in which it was passed."--Thomas
Jefferson, letter to William Johnson, June 12, 1823, The Complete
Jefferson, p. 322.
But the domestic enemies of our constitutional system want to give new
meaning to our Constitution and do so without that meaning being
accepted by the people via the Constitution’s amending process. What
these scoundrels pretend is that the SCOTUS is not bound to abide by the
intent and beliefs under which our Constitution was adopted. They
eagerly instruct us that the Court is not required to adhere to the
intent of the Constitution and support its opinions with supportive
references to the historical records mentioned above, because to do so,
would bind us to the “dead hand of its framers“.
This thinking disingenuously ignores the amendment process, designed by
the framers to allow the people, not renegade judges, make change to
accommodate changing times. But there is a reason for their thinking, it
cleverly removes the anchor and rudder of our constitutional system
[abiding by its documented intent] and sets folks in government free to
make the Constitution mean whatever they want it to mean.
The bottom line is, and should be remembered by all freedom loving
people, the most fundamental rule of our constitutional system is to
carry out the intent and beliefs under which our Constitution was
adopted.
“A constitutional provision is to be construed, as statutes are, to the
end that the intent of those drafting and voting for it be
realized."(Mack v Heuck (App) 14 Ohio L Abs 237)
"No part of the constitution should be so construed as to defeat its
purpose or the intent of the people in adopting it."Pfingst v State (3d
Dept) 57 App Div 2d 163 .
"the rule being that a written constitution is to be interpreted in the
same spirit in which it was produced" Wells v Missouri P.R. Co.,110Mo
286,19SW 530.
"Where language used in a constitution is capable of two constructions,
it must be so construed as Ratliff v Beal, 74 Miss.247,20 So 865 .
"In construing federal constitutional provisions, the United States
Supreme Court has regularly looked for the purpose the framers sought to
accomplish.” Everson v Board of Education, 330 US 1, 91 L Ed 711,67 S Ct
504, 168 ALR 1392.
"The primary principle underlying an interpretation of constitutions is
that the intent is the vital part and the essence of the law." Rasmussen
v Baker, 7 Wyo 117, 50 P 819.
And, see Rhode Island v. Massachusetts, 37 U.S. (12Pet.) 657,721(1838),
in which the Supreme Court has pointed out that construction of the
constitution "...must necessarily depend on the words of the
Constitution; the meaning and intention of the conventions which framed
and proposed it for adoption and ratification to the Conventions...in
the several states...to which this Court has always resorted in
construing the Constitution."
Fact is, even Congress understands this fundamental principle of
constitutional law, even though they no longer follow it.:
"In construing the Constitution we are compelled to give it such
interpretation as will secure the result intended to be accomplished by
those who framed it and the people who adopted it...A construction which
would give the phrase...a meaning differing from the sense in which it
was understood and employed by the people when they adopted the
Constitution, would be as unconstitutional as a departure from the plain
and express language of the Constitution." Senate Report No. 21, 42nd
Cong. 2d Session 2 (1872), reprinted in Alfred Avins, The Reconstruction
Amendments’ Debates 571 (1967),
Now, here is an example of the Court pointing to what the Founders
intended by referencing the Federalist Papers 18 times in order to find
the legislative intent of our Constitution. See:UNITED
STATES v. LOPEZ, ___ U.S. ___ (1995)] Also see: GREGORY v. ASHCROFT,
501 U.S. 452 (1991) and: Nixon v. United States (91-740), 506 U.S. 224
(1993).
Regards,
John William Kurowski, Founder
American Constitutional Research Service
Those who reject abiding by the intent and beliefs under which our
Constitution was agree to as it may be documented from the historical
records, wish to remove the anchor and rudder of our system and
set folks in government free to make the Constitution mean whatever they
wish it to mean.
[Permission is hereby given to reprint this article if credit to its
author and the ACRS appears in such reprint. No copyright is claimed for
quotes within the article which are public domain materials.]