Chief Justice John Roberts’ decision on the ObamaCare case was,
if anything, even worse than most conservative critics have said.
At CFIF, I consider it point by point. Although I didn’t
use these terms, what I show is that Roberts mischaracterized
precedents, tortured logic, deliberately skated around
constitutional restrictions on the taxing power, redefined words,
unliterally rewrote the statute in two places, conflated tax breaks
with an unprecedented beast amounting to a tax on inactivity,
blatantly politicized the court in the name of avoiding a
politicized image, and, as an aside, elevated a cliched aphorism to
quasi-precedential status. In some places, he was grossly
intellectually dishonest; in others, he was intellectually
incoherent and/or philosophically hollow. If indeed he bowed to
pressure from Barack Obama and the media, then he was pathetically
craven; in finding a taxing power that not a single other court had
found, he was stupendously arrogant. The decision was hamhandedly
manipulative, logically insupportable, and deeply cynicial — and,
of course, was, throughout the taxing part, full of utter
sophistry.
Maybe Roberts was hoping that, with regard to the East Coast
establishment, he will be seen like Confederate General Johnston
was outside Atlanta, when he kept retreating rather than engaging
Gen. Sherman in battle. A local newspaper editor, enthralled, wrote
the Johnston’s reputation had “grown with every backward step.”
In terms of constitutional law and effective limits on federal
action, by acknowledging limits on the Commerce Clause while
expanding them on the taxing power he was like the American officer
in Vietnam who said he had to “destroy the village in order to save
it.” This decision was the judicial equivalent of a justice showing
evidence of suffering from Stockholm Syndrome with regard to the
coastal “elites.”
Call Roberts the Bart Stupak of the Supreme Court. He
capitulation was just that bad.
Again, please do read my
CFIF piece. Here’s one paragraph, from a much larger
article:
The maxim to choose an interpretation of a law that would accept
the law as constitutional, over an alternative interpretation that
doesn’t, is meant to apply in cases where the two interpretations
are equally or near-equally reasonable. Here, though, as we have
seen, Roberts had to strain and stretch and twist and skate and
float and use misdirection in order to somehow, some way, pretend
to impose a plausible interpretation on an assertion that is not
even in the same logical solar system as interpretations that are
“straightforward” and “natural.”
And yes, I do cite chapter and verse (figuratively speaking) to
back up these assertions and conclusions.