A judge who understands he is not God
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www.cnn.com/2004/LAW/09/29/scalia.harvard.ap/index.html
I've already quoted from this on my website! Precious!
www.democrat.ca/en/principles.htm
CAMBRIDGE, Massachusetts (AP) -- Supreme Court Justice Antonin
Scalia says he believes "abstract moralizing" has led the American
judicial system into a quagmire, and that matters such as abortion
and assisted suicide are "too fundamental" to be resolved by judges.
"What I am questioning is the propriety, indeed the sanity, of
having value-laden decisions such as these made for the entire
society ... by judges," Scalia said on Tuesday during an appearance
at Harvard University's Kennedy School of Government.
In some cases -- and in response to a question from the audience, he
acknowledged Brown vs. Board of Education was one -- there is a
societal benefit when a court rules against prevailing popular
opinion, but generally speaking it is fundamentally bad for
democracy, he said.
While Scalia never mentioned the gay marriage issue specifically,
the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court has come under fire
nationally for overstepping its authority on the issue.
That court ruled last year that gay couples constitutionally could
not be denied marriage licenses; the decision paved the way for the
nation's first state-sanctioned same-sex marriages.
"I believe in liberal democracy, which is a democracy that worries
about the tyranny of the majority, but it is the majority itself
that must draw the lines," Scalia said.
As an example, he cited the women's suffrage movement, which he said
resulted from the will of the people, not a court.
On an unrelated issue, Scalia was asked why he refused to step aside
in a case involving Vice President Dick Cheney when the two had gone
duck hunting together.
At first he refused to discuss the case, but then said there was no
legal precedent for recusal and that any controversy was whipped up
by the media.
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