[Mb-civic] An observation on our courts
KMBushy at aol.com
KMBushy at aol.com
Thu Sep 29 07:30:06 PDT 2005
In light of the changes occuring at the Supreme Court, the nation's
attention is briefly focused on the judiciary. That focus is usually short-lived and
we tend to think about a somewhat dysfunctional judiciary when a case or an
issue about which we are concerned seems to go awry. Then it fades again
from our conscious thinking.
While I certainly don't agree with every thought Thomas Jefferson had, these
comments by him in 1821 seemed to recognize the state of our justice system
in 2005~!
At the time our nation was founded, there were strong concerns about a
strong President running roughshod over the Congress and the judiciary and a
strong Congress doing the same. Very few had concerns about the judiciary,
particularly Hamilton in the Federalist Papers. He showed very little concern about
a judiciary getting out of control. One exception to that was Thomas
Jefferson. It was not at the time of the writing of the Constitution but years later,
after a few court decisions had been handed down which gave power to the
courts, which I am not sure many of the writers of the Constitution envisioned.
But having given them power as a result of earlier court decisions,
Jefferson wrote in 1821, ``The germ of destruction of our Nation is in the power of
the judiciary, an irresponsible body working like gravity by night, and by day
gaining a little today and a little tomorrow and advancing its noiseless
step like a thief over the field of jurisdiction until all shall render
powerless the checks over one branch over the other, and will become as venal and
oppressive as the government from which we separated.''
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