Rick's position is simple and unconditional--simple because unconditional. By contrast, I agree with Goldsworthy and Kay. Which means that my position is not unconditional--and, therefore, not simple. Maybe Rick and I will get to clarify our respective positions, by talking with one another about cases--real and/or hypothetical--in Brooklyn later this month.
Sunday, June 6, 2010
If I understand Rick's response correctly,
Wading into Michael's "deep waters"
Thanks to Michael for his recent post, in which he asks us to consider two hypotheticals in light of Jeffrey Goldsworthy's claim that "[j]udges may sometimes be morally justified in lying about what they are doing, but in a democratic and tolerably just society, only in rare and exceptional circumstances." Sometimes morally justified. Even in a democratic and tolerably just society. But only in rare and exceptional circumstances."
So, my view -- which is certainly open to revision -- is that it is not "legitimate in either or both [of Michael's hypotheticals] for [a judge] to pretend that according to what [he or she] judge[s] to be the better interpretation of the Amendment, the policy at issue is unconstitutional[.]" Part of the "deal", it seems to me, is that a judge is given a role -- a role to which power attaches -- on the condition that he or she agrees (promises, I think) not to "lie about what [he or she is] doing."
But, again, I could be wrong. So, Michael, what do you think?
O'Neill on "Religion and the Judiciary"
This post, "Religion and the Judiciary" -- about the relevance of judges' religious faith -- from the "U.K. Supreme Court blog"("SCOTUK?"), by MOJ-friend Aidan O'Neill, is worthy reading and thinking about. (Among other things, the post is a reminder that even someone as gifted as Ronald Dworkin will sometimes say shockingly unhinged things. Aidan's post quotes an example.) Aidan's interesting post closes with this:
What the religiously motivated find difficult to understand or accept is that the freedom from discrimination on grounds of religion or belief which has been afforded them by the law does not extend to giving the religious a general right to discriminate (on otherwise unlawful grounds such as sex, age, race, disability, or sexual orientation) on the basis of religion or belief. There will undoubtedly be more litigation – if not further legislation – on this whole vexed issue. The UK tradition of being blind to our Justices’ religion will come to be further strained as a result.
If the term "does not extend" is meant to be used descriptively -- that is, to report that, in fact, the laws in the U.K. are not understood to protect religiously motivated "discrimination" -- then, of course, I have to defer to Aidan, who knows far more about the laws in the U.K. than I do. If, though, the suggestion is that the laws should not distinguish between (irrational, invidious, etc.) "discrimination," on the one hand, and "religiously motivated decisions about employment and related matters by religious institutions and authorities," on the other, then I'd have to disagree.
UPDATE: Aidan wrote to me, and said -- in response to the above -- that "[t]he phrase 'does not extend' from the passage you quote, was indeed being used being used be me purely descriptively rather than implying any prescriptive judgment on my part." He added, "[t]he law is still very recent on all this and the case law has yet fully to develop. At the moment however the relevant government quango intervening on matters of discrimination , the Equality and Human Rights Commission, seems very much to be running the line that religion cannot and should not be recognised as providing any kind of lawful basis for making choices in employment or service provision on the basis of the employee/service recipient’s sexual orientation. But as you know in the UK we have a quite different history and perception of the right role of religion in society, favouring establishment and presuming state regulation of religious bodies, rather than assuming any strict separation between the two sphere which so marks out US jurisprudence on the issue."
Deep waters, revisited
[Some notes from my comments to the judges at the Second Circuit Judicial Conference: notes, it bears emphasis, intended to engender discussion and not to answer the question posed. I am happy to report that the discussion was thoughtful and energetic.]
In the wake of SCOTUS’s then- and still-controversial decision in Roe v. Wade (January 1973) and of the late John Ely’s famous critique of the decision just three months later in the pages of the Yale Law Journal (April 1973), an old, tired debate erupted with great ferocity both inside the legal academy and outside it—a debate that even now, thirty-seven years later, continues with great ferocity—about what it means, or should mean, to “interpret” the Constitution of the United States.
Assume, for purposes of discussion, that you have a confident answer to that question—or that, at least, you have an answer to that question to which you are, confidently or not, committed.
Now, consider two hypotheticals:
1. It is sixty years ago: June 3, 1950.
You are a judge in a constitutional case in which it is argued that
racially segregated public schooling violates the Fourteenth Amendment. According to what you judge to be the better
interpretation of the Fourteenth Amendment, such schooling does not violate the
Amendment. As a matter of deep moral
and/or religious conviction, however, you are convinced that such schooling is
not merely unwise, but constitutes a grievous assault—a sinful assault, if you
will—on the inherent dignity of Americans of African ancestry.
2. It is ten years ago: June 3, 2000. You are a judge in a constitutional case in
which it is argued that executing persons for crimes committed when they were
children violates the Eighth Amendment. According
to what you judge to be the better interpretation of the Eighth Amendment, such
executions do not violate the Amendment.
As a matter of deep moral and/or religious conviction, however, you are
convinced that such executions are not merely unwise, but constitute a grievous
assault—a sinful assault—on the inherent dignity of those who are executed.
Saturday, June 5, 2010
Sister of Mercy Margaret McBride
[From the current issue of The Tablet:]
Sister of mercy
Michael Sean Winters
Catholics in America are divided over the
formal excommunication of a nun who authorised an abortion to save a
mother’s life. It is the latest case to highlight the bitter divisions
within the American Church

Justice Souter’s Commencement Address at Harvard University
On May 27, Justice Souter, who retired from the Supreme Court for about a year ago, delivered a commencement address [Here] at his alma mater Harvard University. The New York Times praised his address in an editorial [Here] today, and Linda Greenhouse in her web log did the same this past Thursday [Here].
There is little question about Justice Souter’s acumen and his grasp of the law. However, I have several questions and some concerns about his understanding of the text of the Constitution and his method of interpreting it. Readers of and contributors to the Mirror of Justice will recall my earlier posting in May [Here] concerning Professor David Strauss’s new book The Living Constitution where I disclosed some of my own ideas about the importance of the Constitution’s text and its proper interpretation.
The thrust of Justice Souter’s address was to offer a theory of reading, interpreting, and applying the Constitution. His judicial philosophy appears to center on a distancing from (and critique of) the method he identifies as the “fair reading” model. He characterizes that model as a straight-forward approach that decides Constitutional cases by “reading fairly and viewing facts objectively.” He then illustrates his understanding of the “fair reading” model with the example of the twenty-one year old who wishes to run for the Senate; however, the age requirement of Article I mandates that a senator must be a citizen who has “attained the age of thirty years.” The Constitutional solution to the claim made by the twenty-one year old is a straight-forward application of the text. What Justice Souter does not mention about this approach to Constitutional application is that many times a day it is precisely this method of using the Constitution that supplies the solution to claims that are in dispute. When one thinks about statutes and regulations, the “fair reading” model also supplies the method or resolving questions surrounding the meaning of the law in an overwhelming majority of the cases. Because he fails to take stock of this important reality, I find Justice Souter’s assertion that “the fair reading model has only a tenuous connection to reality” problematic. His follow-up assertion that “Even a moment’s thought is enough to show why it is so unrealistic” is equally thorny.
I agree that in a small percentage of cases regarding all legal texts, including the Constitution, something more than plain meaning application of the text is in order. But rather than focusing on developing a coherent, rigorous, and objective method of Constitutional interpretation, the Justice instead opines that the Constitution “contains values that may well exist in tension with each other” and are not in harmony with one another; thus, a judge must wrestle with these values and determine which values must trump others. He proceeds to illustrate his contention by considering two important Supreme Court decisions including the Pentagon Papers case.
In the Pentagon Papers litigation, Justice Souter reminds us that the United States was represented by Irwin Griswold, then Solicitor General, who argued that the prior restraint issue was only one of the competing values at stake in the case; therefore, it was essential to look at all the various Constitutional provisions at issue, not just the First Amendment. Interestingly, Justice Black, whom Justice Souter reminds us, was once described by Justice Cardozo as “having one of the most brilliant legal minds”, took a tough questioning stance against the Solicitor General but essentially presented a literalist view of the First Amendment, which Justice Souter suggests parallels the “fair reading” method. Justice Souter nonetheless appears to appreciate the tack pursued by General Griswold because Justice Black’s focus on the text of the First Amendment “fails because the Constitution has to be read as a whole, and when it is, other values crop up in potential conflict with an unfettered right to publish.” Here, Justice Souter brings in his “other-values” argument by concentrating on what he calls “a conflict of approved values.”
It is at this point in his address that Justice Souter forgets a very important detail about the Constitution and how one, including a judge, ought to work with it. Anyone involved with Constitutional litigation must realize that it is not other values that are in conflict with the text of the First Amendment; rather, it is other texts of the Constitution that have a bearing on the meaning and role of the First Amendment in the resolution of the Pentagon Papers case. Justice Souter maintains that “the explicit terms of the Constitution do not resolve that conflict when it arises.” In respectful disagreement, I think they do and submit that Justice Souter has, in effect, conceded the point by bringing in the text of the whole Constitution rather than one element of it, i.e., the First Amendment, when he compliments General Griswold’s methodology.
Here in his address, Justice Souter asks a series of rhetorical questions about values versus the text of the Constitution and its “fair reading”: “Should the choice and its explanation be called illegitimate law making? Can it be an act beyond the judicial power when a choice must be made and the Constitution has not made it in advance in so many words?” He then quickly responds to the rhetorical questions he has just raised by saying, “You know my answer. So much for the notion that all of constitutional law lies there in the Constitution waiting for a judge to read it fairly.” It strikes me that General Griswold was doing just that, i.e., trying to read the Constitution—all of it—fairly. It was Justice Black who took the far more literal and narrow approach to Constitutional adjudication by concentrating on just one of its provisions, i.e., the First Amendment. Yet, Justice Souter maintains that the Pentagon Papers case demonstrates “how unrealistic the fair reading model can be.” Regrettably, I do not share Justice Souter’s conclusion; moreover, in spite of Justice Souter’s argument criticizing the “fair reading” approach, an analysis of his approval of the case’s outcome reveals that the literalist approach of one provision, the First Amendment, prevailed in the determining the outcome of the litigation.
As he concludes his address, Justice Souter asserts that the “fair reading” method “fails to account for what the Constitution actually says, and it fails just as badly to understand what judges have no choice but to do.” He maintains that the Constitution is “a pantheon of values” and that the Constitution “gives no simple rule of decision” for cases where competing values are in conflict with one another.
But it is, first and last, the text, the entire text of the Constitution that must form the basis of resolving the legal dispute and the dispute about competing claims and values. The Founders did not intend to give us an incomplete list of values that are important to the American people; rather, they gave us a basic law found in a coherent text that would assist us in regulating our lives in common under the rule of law. I may agree with Justice Souter that a mechanical application of a particular text dealing with a particular “value” is an unwise method of Constitutional adjudication. But I cannot agree with his assertion that the “fair reading” of the Constitution—again, all of it—“egregiously...misses the point” of Constitutional adjudication. From my humble perspective, the “fair reading” method is not “a simplistic view of the Constitution” that “devalues our aspirations” [whatever those aspirations are and who chooses them]; rather, it is a holistic approach to understanding and applying the Supreme law of the land to difficult cases which must nevertheless be resolved by a coherent understanding of the law that is specified rather than unenumerated “values” which are not.
In spite of these differences, I share some of Justice Souter’s concluding remarks when he says: “we can still address the Constitutional uncertainties the way [the Founders] must have envisioned, by relying on reason, by respecting all the words the Framers wrote, by facing facts, and by seeking to understand their meaning for living people.” But I add, in doing so, we must not let the passing fancy of the living disregard the immutable truths identified by those who preceded the present generation.
RJA sj
Friday, June 4, 2010
St. Gilbert?
I am a huge fan of G. K. Chesterton. His "Orthodoxy" and "The Dumb Ox" are two of my all-time favorite books. So, I also enjoyed this, written by Ian Gerdon, currently a theology student at Notre Dame (HT: Sightings):
Saint Gilbert of Battersea
— Ian Gerdon
You’ve never seen a blockbuster movie based on a book by G.K. Chesterton. Perhaps you’ve stumbled across one of the many television adaptations of his Father Brown mysteries; and if you’re fortunate enough to live in Chicago, maybe you saw last fall’s staging of The Man Who Was Thursday, Chesterton’s secret-agent-novel turned heartbreaking-Christian-allegory. Unlike C.S. Lewis or J.R.R. Tolkien (both of whom adored him), Chesterton didn’t write larger-than-life fantasy tales easily transferred to the screen. But in his own day, he was more a man of the people than either of those Oxford dons – a journalist, novelist, and poet of tremendous wit and notable width, whom Lewis later called the best Christian apologist in the English language.
Like Lewis and Tolkien, Chesterton is venerated by many, a practice that may someday be legitimated by ecclesial approval. At a conference last July on “The Holiness of G.K. Chesterton,” the Chesterton Society decided to get the ball rolling on what is hoped will be his eventual canonization in the Roman Catholic Church. Make no mistake: Though he made his living as a journalist, Chesterton was no theological lightweight. Open the standard edition of the collected works of St. Francis of Assisi and you’ll find Chesterton’s biography cited on the first page of the introduction; read any review of twentieth-century Thomism and you’ll find that one of the most highly recommended studies of Aquinas is, again, the biography Chesterton wrote. And rumor has it he was halfway through before he thought it wise to send his assistant to London to bring him some books on St. Thomas. . . .
Don S. Browning, R.I.P.
A question for Eduardo about discrimination
In his recent post, regarding the bishops' opposition to ENDA, Eduardo writes:
[The question is] precisely what sort of discrimination the bishops believe to be “unjust.” The letter doesn’t say, but it would be nice to know what they think. Would it be unjust for a Catholic school to fire a gay janitor simply because he is gay, even if he is celibate? . . . I guess I’d like to hear what would, in the bishops’ view, constitutes unjust discrimination (since it is a category that seems to include less than it excludes)? The letter is silent on this point. It’s far more eager to carve out room for “just” discrimination than it is to specify where discrimination goes too far.
I think Eduardo is right to remind us of the important distinction between "unjust" discrimination and the kind of discrimination that -- in my view, anyway -- probably should not be called "discrimination", because everyone today thinks "discrimination" is wrong when there are, in fact, some instances of "discrimination" that are not wrong-but-tolerable, but utterly unremarkable and not wrong at all (e.g., "discriminating" against boring people, or vegetarians, when putting together a list of dinner-party invitiees). For me, this distinction is often muddied in discussions of, e.g., "discrimination" on the basis of religion by "faith-based" social-service agencies or by religiously-themed student groups.
I wonder if Eduardo agrees with me that an appropriate appreciation for the church-autonomy principle should lead us to say that, with respect to some decisions by religious authorities, institutions, and employers, the question whether a particular employment-related action in question is "unjust" or "just" discrimination (or, as I would prefer, "discrimination" or not) is not a question that should be submitted for resolution to the civil or political authorities? (Identifying these decisions, and identifying the authorities and employers we are talking about, will not be easy in every case, of course.) Thoughts?