June 26, 2015

"The substance of today’s decree is not of immense personal importance to me," says Justice Scalia...

... beginning his dissenting opinion in Obergefell v. Hodges, today's same-sex marriage case. Scalia is joined by Justice Thomas, and Thomas also has a separate dissenting opinion, joined by Scalia.

The Chief Justice also has a dissenting opinion, joined by Scalia and Thomas. And Justice Alito has a dissenting opinion, joined by Scalia and Thomas. So Scalia and Thomas are on all 4 dissenting opinions, and the Chief and Alito are only on their own. That's a lot to sift through, and I'm going to do each of the dissenting opinions in separate posts. This is the Scalia post. I'm doing it first because I bet it's the most clearly written, and I expect to enjoy reading it (even though I'm a longtime supporter of same-sex marriage, and I think it was time for the Court to take a position on the right and end the disuniformity, and I think the majority opinion, discussed 2 posts down, is a worthy and competent application of the case law).

Justice Scalia has long objected to the Court's substantive due process cases, and that's what he does again here today. He thinks the Court is acting like a legislature when it protects the substance of fundamental liberties — he writes "liberties," in quotes — "that the Constitution and its Amendments neglect to mention." He writes that the people were doing a good job working through the same-sex marriage issue. It's been "American democracy at its best."

In a straining-to-be-memorable passage, Justice Scalia says the majority hides its usurpation of power "beneath the mummeries and straining-to-be-memorable passages of the opinion."  (A "mummery" is a "Ridiculous ceremony (formerly used esp. of religious ritual regarded as pretentious or hypocritical).") That's from the OED, which gives an example of the word from Frederick Lewis Allen's 1931 book "Only Yesterday/An Informal History of the 1920's": "[The Ku Klux Klan's] white robe and hood, its flaming cross, its secrecy, and the preposterous vocabulary of its ritual could be made the vehicle for all that infantile love of hocus-pocus and mummery, that lust for secret adventure, which survives in the adult whose lot is cast in drab places.")

Justice Scalia criticizes the majority's failure to stick to history as it delineates what liberties get protected as fundamental. You can see in the earlier post that Justice Kennedy set out 4 reasons that underlie the right-to-marry cases and that, he says, apply equally well to same-sex couples. Scalia does not try to distinguish same-sex and opposite-sex couples on these 4 points. He objects to talking about fundamental liberty in these terms at all, repeating over and over that the judges are acting like legislators. Even if it were acceptable for judges to make legislative decisions, the Supreme Court would be terribly unrepresentative of the people of the United States, Scalia says, because they are all lawyers, they all studied at the same 2 law schools (Harvard and Yale), not one is a Protestant Christian, and (except for one) they are all (as we say in Wisconsin) coasties.

Justice Scalia expresses astonishment at "the hubris reflected in today’s judicial Putsch." A "Putsch" is "An attempt to overthrow a government, esp. by violent means; an insurrection or coup d'état." That's the OED. "Hubris" is "o’erweening pride; and pride, we know, goeth before a fall." That's Scalia himself.

He complains that the "style" of the opinion "egotistic" — partaking of the "extravagances" ordinarily found in (ahem) dissenting opinions. He's especially bothered by: "The nature of marriage is that, through its enduring bond, two persons together can find other freedoms, such as expression, intimacy, and spirituality." "Really?," he responds. "Who ever thought that intimacy and spirituality [whatever that means] were freedoms? And if intimacy is, one would think Freedom of Intimacy is abridged rather than expanded by marriage. Ask the nearest hippie."

I misread "Ask the nearest hippie" when I glanced at it earlier. I thought he was accusing the majority of being so sloppy about finding the meaning of freedom that it was equivalent to asking the nearest hippie. But he was joking about marriage. Hippie voice: Marriage as freedom?! That's freaked-out, man. Marriage is the death of freedom.

Justice Scalia picks on a line that I thought, see below, was especially opaque: rights come from "a better informed understanding of how constitutional imperatives define a liberty that remains urgent in our own era." His response is "Huh? How can a better informed understanding of how constitutional imperatives [whatever that means] define [whatever that means] an urgent liberty [never mind], give birth to a right?" That "stuff" isn't the "clear thinking and sober analysis" that belongs in a court opinion.

These are all familiar Scalia ideas. I get the impression he banged this one out pretty casually, making observations he's made many times before, in other opinions and in his many speeches. I'll hazard to say he's made his peace with same-sex marriage. He saw it coming long ago, and he's not upset about the social change. It's not of immense personal importance to me.

225 comments:

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Bleach Drinkers Curing Coronavirus Together said...

"Let's take a closer look at" that kiss

K in Texas said...

All this about religious coercion already starting because of "wedding chapels" is baseless. These are COMMERCIAL established doing business. So everyone would think its OK for the commercial wedding chapels to refuse to marry a black or Hispanic couple?

Big Mike said...

I still love just as many if not more people today than I did yesterday.

Which is to say no one that he doesn't see in the mirror.

Bleach Drinkers Curing Coronavirus Together said...

Which is to say no one that he doesn't see in the mirror.

I don't need a mirror to know what I feel. But then, I am not mind-blind. Unlike some people.

Bleach Drinkers Curing Coronavirus Together said...

Mike: Can you name anyone that you love, among those that you're not already related to?

Anonymous said...

Blogger K in Colorado said...
All this about religious coercion already starting because of "wedding chapels" is baseless. These are COMMERCIAL established doing business. So everyone would think its OK for the commercial wedding chapels to refuse to marry a black or Hispanic couple?


Are the black and hispanic couple male and female?

Otherwise, you're confused.

Rick said...

As has often been pointed out, any damage done to the institution of marriage in the last 70 years was wrought by heterosexuals

The damage to marriage was done by government and the political / social activists that influenced it.

Anonymous said...

Terry wrote;

http://thinkprogress.org/lgbt/2014/10/20/3581733/idaho-marriage-chapel-adf/
This is a Good result as far as thinkprogress is concerned. This is what they wanted to happen. This is the purpose of the law.


Terry, you're insane. Sunsong told me if you're not getting a gay marriage, and you're hetrosexual, this ruling won't effect you.

Steve M. Galbraith said...

All of which the state already did for heterosexual couples. How does it increase it's reach? Consenting adults who are not closely related truck down to the Auditors office, get a license, and contract a marriage. So what?

Because the state now extends these to same sex couples. The size and reach of government has increased.

This is not just about giving licenses out to same sex couples.

What about my other point re religious institutions? Universities? Hospitals? Must they now give the same benefits to same sex couples that they give to heterosexual couples? The state now has the power to enforce these rights against those who disagree with recognizing those marriages.

As to the demeaning: I agree with your point on that.

You're focusing on just a small part of what just happened.

And again just to be clear: I favor changing the statutory definition of marriage to include same sex couples. I just don't believe that limiting state recognition to heterosexual couples violates the equal protection clause or is, as Kennedy argued, preventing gay people from having loving lives.







Rick said...

The Cracker Emcee said...
What does the outcome conserve?"

Realistically, it damages nothing and the state actually retreats a bit from limiting our personal interactions


No. The government has granted itself the power to redefine and control any institution or social arrangement it chooses to. Which means any reductions you note are by its choice and thus can be expanded by its choice.

n.n said...

Rick:

damage to marriage was done by government and the political / social activists

Beginning with [false] gender equivalence, and specifically the sexual revolution, which required establishment of a pro-choice doctrine in order to normalize selective-child policy. The progressive liberals like their stable environments, and that's where their empathy with other human lives ends.

That said, it seems inevitable that every civilization will, whether through internal subversion or external defeat, experience progressive corruption and conclude with a dysfunctional convergence. In the meantime, it seems like a good idea to minimize creation of moral hazards and constrain authoritarian overreach.

Bleach Drinkers Curing Coronavirus Together said...

Hey Mike -

Any time you're able to name all those loved ones of yours, let me know.

Your reputation as a non-hypocritical, non-psychopath hinges on that.

But don't let that make you feel pressured.

Take all the time you need.

Dude1394 said...

I have finally seen the light.
Brothers marrying brothers.
Sisters marrying sisters.
Fathers marrying daughters. Can a father now sign for his daughter to marry him?
Mothers marrying daughters.
Back to the pile.

Known Unknown said...

First, people have rights and there some limits to those rights prescribed by the constitution.

Uh, no. The exact opposite. Its not about what the State allows you to do, it is all about what that State cannot do to you. It's a negative-rights document, as Obama has lamented on more than one occasion.

And it's astounding it was written when it was, and is as brilliant as it is.

Anonymous said...

The Cracker Emcee: I'm afraid I don't understand how some construct of "culture" is going to dictate my values to me or to the vast majority of folks.

If you weren't the heir of "some construct of 'culture'", you'd be scooting around on all fours and incapable of articulate speech.

If you honestly believe that you and your ethics aren't the product of a culture (not a "culture"), then you're one hell of an oblivious fish.

I'm a Bible-believing Christian too and the first lesson I draw from the gospels is my responsibility for my own faith and actions...

Which faith you arrived at absolutely independently of any cultural tradition, and which you apparently believe your children and grand-children can maintain even if nobody else in the world shares those values anymore.

Laura said...

If marriage is a basic human right, do prenuptial contracts become null and void?

Are broken engagements legally actionable?

Must unwanted suitors be entertained?

What constitutes equal protections with regard to the right to marriage? Discrimination?

Any takers for a plaintiff whose lawyer has refused to file citations for contempt against a felony-level delinquent spouse because of inability to prepay legal fees? If marriage is a basic human right, divorce is an entirely new ballgame . . .

sunsong said...

“It is impossible for a man to learn what he thinks he already knows.”
~ Epictetus

Quaestor said...

Please don't love me Rhythm and Balls. Showering more than twice a day is wasteful.

Bleach Drinkers Curing Coronavirus Together said...

Showering more than twice a day is wasteful.

Is that how often you get excited by my love for you?

Humperdink said...

Cracker, your language unmasks you.

Etienne said...

I can't get past Scalia's "the freedom to govern themselves"

That's the whole dissent really, sans all the examples. The people are no longer free to legislate their country, when a court can intervene, and declare the whole process a waste of time, and thereby impose a new liberty, even though no caveman, no Greek, no Roman, no Abyssinian, has ever had such a liberty before.

What I see happening now, is that religion must die (Society as it was must die). If being homosexual is equated to race by Equal Protection, then too, non-religion must have Equal Protection, and any State or Federal law must therefore be unconstitutional, if people are allowed to discriminate against the non-religion minorities.

I don't see how the church can function going forward. Everything they stand for is based on Adam and Eve. There was no Ben or Popeye. Only they populated the world. So, these religions can not exist if Equal Protection is the new liberty.

People won't vote, if the court can legislate. There's no sense spending years refining the laws, when five people can create new liberties for the days popular social cause, needing Equal Protection.

Rusty said...

Why thank you ritmo.

Sydney said...

People won't vote, if the court can legislate.

I have reached this point.

Kirk Parker said...

Meade,

"Good snark"

Good, indeeed, to know that when the shooting war begins (as was always sadly likely, alas, and as the recent pair of lawless Supreme Court decisions just make all that more likely) it's good to know you'll on the wrong side.

Terribly, monstrously good, but yeah still good.

Is this really what domestic peace is costing you???

Kirk Parker said...

Roughcoat,

It's a fight "to the pain". (h/t Princess Bride.) "Fair" has absolutely nothing to do with it.


SMG,

"This ruling doesn't end the debate; it really starts it up again. In a different way."

Yes indeed, it makes the Shooting War all that much more likely. Damn the Supremes, damn them to hell. (And I say this as someone who thinks the words 'damn' and 'hell' might actually mean something.)


Meade,

"Now tell us about the true Scotsman, Meade."

The true Scotsman is truly conservative. Under his kilt.

Whoa, the Jon Stewart is strong on this one. FOAD dude, you're now officially (irrevocably? who knows?) part of The Problem.

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