March 20, 2013

"But it’s hard to imagine the NLRB or the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau as instruments of tyranny."

"Was it Hitler or Stalin who banned prepayment penalties for adjustable-rate subprime mortgages?"

42 comments:

Original Mike said...

"Dear judges: Stop trying to figure out what the founders meant by every little word. You can’t, and it doesn’t matter."

I don't even need to read every little word to know that the founders didn't intend to let a president make recess appointments while the Senate was out on a lunch break.

edutcher said...

Wasn't it one of Fauxcahontas' creations?

So, yeah, I can see it in a heartbeat.

furious_a said...


"But it’s hard to imagine the NLRB or the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau as instruments of tyranny."


I dunno, the incompetent yet omnipotent bureaucrats in Brazil were every bit as terrifying as thr cunning, ruthless Thought Police in 1984.

furious_a said...

"thr" = "the".

Original Mike said...

"In fact, we know next to nothing about what the founders intended"

Is this guy a child? Yeah, I know he's not. He's intellectually dishonest. The founders wanted the president to be able to fill posts while Congress was back home. Three-horse-back-states-away.

Original Mike said...

In this day and age we have no need of recess appointments. Congress is always available for consultation. (Unfortunately)

Unknown said...

"Hard to imagine the NLRB or the consumer Financial Protection Bureau as instruments of tyranny."

It doesn't tax my imagination at all and it shouldn't tax anyone else's either. Just look at what's actually happening around us.

Patrick Henry was right! said...

Is this guy a law professor???

damikesc said...

But it’s hard to imagine the NLRB or the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau as instruments of tyranny.

NLRB is an instrument of tyranny right now as we speak.

Chip S. said...

Eric Posner : mean reversion :: Peppered Moth : natural selection

Hagar said...

Not hard at all, and with this administration it is in fact what is intended.

traditionalguy said...

None dare call re-distribution tyranny. Even John Roberts only sees it as a small part of taxation power.

gadfly said...

. . . like the rule that the president’s term lasts four years. (Sorry, I mean a president’s term.)

So why be unclear as to whether the discussion is about Prez Zero or about all presidential terms?

Somehow, I suppose, the reader's take is supposed to be about a cute (or is it, 'acute') writing style. (Sorry about the confusion).

Joe Biden, America's Putin said...

But it’s hard to imagine the NLRB or the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau as instruments of tyranny.

Not hard to imagine if it is in fact a reality.

Boeing

Known Unknown said...

Tyranny is rooted in tedium.

MartyH said...

Posner demonstrates that he has little imagination. Tyranny is not just the knock on the door in the middle of the night; it's the government telling private businesses who they must lend to at what rate, which is where this is heading eventually. I predict a credit card meltdown within ten years or so. Consumers will have taken on more debt than prudent and that they would have without the CFPB. In the meantime, if Capital One plays their cards right, they will be Too Big To Fail by then, and get a huge government bailout.

Known Unknown said...

"Members of Congress, like kindergartners, get recesses. But unlike kindergartners, they get to decide when these recesses occur. For most of its history Congress has met in one session per year, with each session starting in January (or sometimes later in the winter) and ending in December (or sometimes earlier in the fall). The period between the end of one session and the beginning of the next is called the intersession recess. Congress also sometimes adjourns in the middle of a session. These breaks, called intrasession recesses, may be as short as an hour for juice and cookies or as long as weeks while members vacation or campaign. Throughout history, presidents have made appointments during intersession recesses, and since the 1940s they have also frequently made appointments during intrasession recesses longer than three days or so."

His intended audience must be retarded or enjoy being condescended to.

furious_a said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
furious_a said...

"But it’s hard to imagine the NLRB or the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau as instruments of tyranny."

Actually, no, it's not.

The Ministry of Interior, labor camps and psychiatric wards were for the outliers -- the Solzhenitsyns, Sakaharovs, and unrepentant Baltic nationalists. They just killed one bodily.

For everyone else, the real soul-killers were the low- and mid-level bureaucrats who stamped ration cards, allotted housing permits, scanned internal passports, tutored one's children in Marxism/Leninism during Young Pioneer Sleepaway Camps, assessed one's political reliability when considering one's children for university, chaperoned and reported on one during permitted trips abroad, or harangued one during weekly party get-your-mind-right meetings.

Birds of a feather, the NLRB and CFPB they are.

The Godfather said...

This passes for thoughtful legal analysis?

Wince said...

"Was it Hitler or Stalin who banned prepayment penalties for adjustable-rate subprime mortgages?"

Actually, don't Islamic tyrannies make illegal the charging of interest?

Known Unknown said...

"Was it Hitler or Stalin who banned prepayment penalties for adjustable-rate subprime mortgages?"

Well, on Cyprus, they just take 10% of your savings as a penalty for mismanaging your money.

Kirk Parker said...

Posner the Younger beclowns himself... not for the first time, I imagine.

poppa india said...

"Hard to imagine..." yet the Department of Education is buying Remington Model 870 shotguns and the Department of Agriculture has it's own SWAT teams.

Thomas said...

Contrary to some of the comments above, and to the impression one might have after reading this, E. Posner is actually intelligent.

But this is a really awful piece. The entire argument, such as it is, is that when the president and the Senate disagree, the president wins. There's a not to tradition, and also a nod to the fact that this isn't within the tradition, and a mention of the fact that the Senate gets to determine when it is in recess, and then no acknowledgement of the fact that the president disagrees. Worse, there's no explanation for how it is that the Senate came to be in the midst of a new session as a result of a pro forma meeting when Posner would have us think that pro forma meetings have no effect. (This matters to the case--it determines how long the recess appointments, if valid, last.)

Anonymous said...

Tyranny? Well, they'll ladle on the regulations and fees so that consumer's costs are going waay up. If you can actually get credit.

Rich Rostrom said...

"But it’s hard to imagine the NLRB or the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau as instruments of tyranny."

It's trivially easy.

For instance, the NLRB couid effectively destroy any business by ruling against it in bogus labor disputes. Alternatively, the NLRB could destroy any union that is opposed to the administration.

The CFPB has practically unfettered discretion to shut down any bank or other financial institution at will, by declaring that an "orderly liquidation" is required. It could destroy any bank that doesn't support the administration, or force banks to refuse credit to any business.

Bruce Hayden said...

But this is a really awful piece. The entire argument, such as it is, is that when the president and the Senate disagree, the president wins.

So, the Senate gets to decide when it is in recess, unless the President wants to appoint someone, and then he waits until they aren't there for a short bit, and declares them in recess, so that he can avoid having his nominees go through the confirmation process. And, Posner fails to address the points made by the court, that the Administration's argument, carried to the logical extreme, would allow the President to make "recess" appointments whenever the Senate isn't there for any period of time, including overnight, or even a 5 minute bathroom break, and that this is one of the Constitutional checks on the Executive, and their interpretation is an attempt to sidestep this check.

Keep in mind what was happening. This isn't a case of the Senate being out of session for 4 or 5 months at a time, so that the Senators could go home for awhile by coach or horesback, but rather, an attempt to circumvent the Advise and Consent power of the Senate in order to put people into positions who would fail to get confirmed in the normal course of events.

And, yes, both sides have done it. Was just watching Red Eye, and John Bolton was on there, with is bushy now white mustache, and was reminded by this post that he was U.N. Ambassador by this same strategy by the Bush (43) Administration. He was much too controversial, and was not going to get confirmed. The Senate goes out of town, and voila.

The court pointed out that the purpose of the recess appointment power was to allow the government to function during the long intersession recess, which in early times of the Republic could last many months. It was not to allow the President to bypass the Senate whenever they were not all present in the Capital, for periods as short as three days, or maybe even 5 minutes. The NLRB, etc., can survive without members for these short periods of time just fine.

And, yes, after giving perfunctory mention of the Senate supposedly having the power to decide when it is in session, and when it is in recess, Posner totally ignores this point, and implicitly says that what the President says in this regard is what matters, and that it is he, not they, whose determination of when they are in session counts.

Anonymous said...

Does Posner know that the document the court was trying to interpret was written by guys who regarded the Stamp Act as an instrument of tyranny?

tim maguire said...

"Was it Hitler or Stalin who offered universal healthcare?"

Anonymous said...

Wasn't it the NRLB that tried to tell Boeing that they had no right to make airplanes anywhere but Washington State?

Raised.by.wolves said...

There's no need to "imagine" the NLRB as an instrument of tyranny. Just read their meeting minutes.

Rocketeer said...

Huh. Go figure. I would have guessed Posner had read The Banality of Evil and been capable of understanding it. Either he hasn't, which is surprising, or he has, and has decided it's inconvenient.

Rusty said...

""But it’s hard to imagine the NLRB or the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau as instruments of tyranny.""

They're instruments of the state aren't they? Then they are instruments of tyranny.

Calypso Facto said...

“No tyranny is so irksome as petty tyranny: the officious demands of policemen, government clerks, and electromechanical gadgets.”
Edward Abbey

Peter said...

"All within the state, nothing outside the state, nothing against the state," said Benito Mussolini (when defining what he meant by "fascism").

Surely a large part of living within a tyrannical state is that nothing is too small or insignificant to avoid state intrusion and regulation?

"For Fascism the State is absolute, individuals and groups relative." God-like, the state endeavors to see and control not just the big things, but all the little things as well.

Brew Master said...

So lets take Eric Posners point at face value.

The President should be allowed to make recess appointments during anything he deems is a recess, be that 5 minutes, overnight, 2 days, etc....

Those appointments are then valid until the end of the next session.

Using this logic for when a session is being held, if a recess for lunch ends the morning session allowing for a recess appointment, then the appointment made during that lunch hour will only be valid until the end of the next session, that being the evening session.

If his argument is that the President gets to define what is or isn't 'in session', then those definitional terms must also be applied to how long his appointment lasts. Otherwise he is attempting to state that there are two different meanings of session, one which applies only when he wants to appoint someone, but then the that term lasts as long as the constitution states.

This is par for the course, I know. It is just fun to find the logical problems they try to paper over when trying to justify stepping outside the constitution.

Anonymous said...

Wow, so the author's pathetically weak mental abilities mean we should ignore what's written in the US Constitution?

Known Unknown said...

“No tyranny is so irksome as petty tyranny: the officious demands of policemen, government clerks, and electromechanical gadgets.”
Edward Abbey


Also known as Edward "Downtown" Abbey.

Known Unknown said...

Does Posner know that the document the court was trying to interpret was written by guys who regarded the Stamp Act as an instrument of tyranny?

It's funny to think of dudes in white wigs blowing up the whole house because of some overzealous taxation!

Sam L. said...

Hard to imagine? Not with this government!

MB said...

He subscribes to the "Through the Looking Glass" interpretation of the constitution.

"When I use a word, it means exactly what I mean it to mean, no more and no less." -- Humpty Dumpty