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A
clashing of principles and jurisdictions
August 23, 2003
While everyone is focusing
on the propriety of Alabama Supreme Court Justice Roy Moore's
refusal to remove a Ten Commandments monument from his courthouse,
we are giving the federal courts a pass -- and we mustn't.
Undeniably, the federal constitution's Supremacy Clause makes
the federal constitution and constitutional federal laws supreme
over state constitutions and laws and binding on state judges.
So should our analysis
end here? That's what some conservative pundits are saying. The
federal courts have ordered Justice Moore to remove the monument
under authority of the United States Constitution, which is the
supreme law of the land. The U.S. Supreme Court is the final arbiter
of what the Constitution means, having arrogated to itself that
authority in 1803.
Since the high Court declined to hear the case, the ruling of
the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals ordering Judge Moore to remove
the monument now stands. Thus, Justice Moore must comply, notwithstanding
his belief that to do so would violate his oath of office affirming
that the state government was established under God.
This is a very difficult
case for me because my sympathies are with Justice Moore, yet
I am also a staunch believer in the rule of law -- and an equally
strong opponent of anarchy.
My allegiance to the
rule of law leads me to believe that we cannot permit a state
court judge -- no matter how righteous his cause -- to violate
federal appellate court rulings. He should vigorously oppose the
wrongheaded feds at every phase and exhaust all possible remedies,
but once they are exhausted, he must obey. Our entire system of
ordered liberty depends on the integrity of our legal system,
which in turn depends on government officials, especially judges,
obeying the law. Indeed, state judges also take an oath to uphold
the federal constitution.
On the other hand,
our liberties also depend on two other very important concepts
that are at issue in this case. The Framers believed that our
Constitution was grounded in the principles of the Christian religion
and that without that foundation neither our Constitution nor
the liberty it guarantees could survive. Justice Moore is fighting
laudably to preserve that tradition.
The Framers also believed
that liberty could best be achieved and sustained through a system
of federalism -- which they quite specifically established, dividing
governmental power between the federal and state governments.
To be sure, they made the federal government supreme as to those
matters on which they conferred it authority -- but the 10th Amendment
expressly reserved the balance to the individual states.
Justice Moore is aware
that the federal courts have egregiously exceeded their authority,
usurping power properly reserved to the states. He is fighting
to preserve the principle of federalism in furtherance of the
cause of liberty.
Here's where it gets messy. The First Amendment contains two religion
clauses, the Establishment Clause: "Congress shall make no
law respecting an establishment of religion"; and the Free
Exercise Clause: "or prohibiting the free exercise thereof."
The federal courts have ordered Justice Moore to remove the monument
on the grounds that it constitutes an unconstitutional establishment
of religion.
Their ruling is flawed
on a number of grounds, but unfortunately seems to follow the
precedent of earlier lamentable Supreme Court decisions. As you
can see, the Establishment Clause, on its face, prohibits only
the U.S. Congress from "establishing" a religion. Sadly,
the Supreme Court has repeatedly held that the Establishment Clause
is also applicable to state governments through incorporation
in the Due Process Clause of the 14th Amendment.
But the 14th Amendment
was never intended to make the federal Establishment Clause binding
on the states. Nor did the Framers intend that the Establishment
prevent the federal government, much less the states, from all
support for religion.
Supreme Court Chief
Justice Joseph Story wrote, "Thus, the whole power over the
subject of religion was left exclusively to State governments,
to be acted on according to their own sense of justice and the
State Constitutions." And, "Probably, at the time of
the adoption of the Constitution, and of the (First Amendment),
the general, if not universal, sentiment in America was that Christianity
ought to receive encouragement from the State, so far as such
encouragement was not incompatible with the private rights of
conscience, and the freedom of religious worship. An attempt to
level all religions, and to make it a matter of state policy to
hold all in utter indifference, would have created universal disapprobation,
if not universal indignation."
The federal courts
have greatly eroded states rights and religious freedoms through
renegade decisions in the most cynical tradition of judicial activism.
So while our federal law is certainly entitled to supremacy, at
what point do citizens stand up and say that federal courts have
claimed supremacy in areas over which they were never given authority?
What can be done about their obscene misinterpretations of the
Constitution?
Congress could selectively
limit the Court's jurisdiction. And, we should fight for constitutionalist
federal judges with the courage to preserve our religious liberties.
In the meantime, we should honor the Court's rulings.
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