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Kagan Wants to Impose Her Values on Your Speech
· Wednesday, May 19, 2010
Supreme Court nominee Elena Kagan has expended a great deal of intellectual energy searching for a rationalization that would preserve freedom of speech for viewpoints she likes while imposing government controls on speech she does not like.
Consider her approach to the 1991 Supreme Court case of Rust v. Sullivan. The issue here was whether the Department of Health and Human Services violated the right of free speech when it published regulations stating that federal tax dollars would not be provided under the Title X family planning program to clinics that either counseled people to have abortions, or referred people to abortionists, or advocated abortion.
Pro-abortion family planning providers sued. They argued -- believe it or not -- that the First Amendment requires the taxpayers to pay them to counsel pregnant women to get abortions, to direct pregnant women to abortionists and to agitate in our society in favor of the legalized killing of unborn babies generally.
In a wholly sane world, this argument would have been laughed out of court. In 1991, five generally sane members of the Supreme Court essentially did just that.
Writing for the majority, Chief Justice William Rehnquist said "the government has no obligation to subsidize even the exercise of fundamental rights, including 'speech rights.'"
Rehnquist did not put it this way, but to say otherwise would mean, for example, that the government must subsidize Tea Party Patriots when they attend a rally because they are exercising their First Amendment right to assemble, or that the government must subsidize Citigroup when it lobbies President Obama because it is exercising its First Amendment right to petition the government for a redress of grievances.
You will probably not be surprised to learn Elena Kagan has not called for a Tea Party travel subsidy based on the First Amendment. In two law journal articles, however, she did attack the Supreme Court for its decision in Rust v. Sullivan, suggesting the court's decision was an illegitimate act of "viewpoint discrimination."
"There, the government favored anti-abortion speech over abortion advocacy, counseling and referral, and the Court, to its discredit, announced that because the selectivity occurred in the context of a governmental funding program, the presumption against viewpoint discrimination was suspended," she wrote in an 1993 essay in The University of Chicago Law Review.
A year before that, Kagan wrote a 48-page treatise in The Supreme Court Review attempting to carve out an entirely new constitutional doctrine on freedom of speech based on a concept she called "content-based underinclusion."
The concept was based on the notion that from a First Amendment perspective there is no essential difference between the government prohibiting some forms of speech and the government enacting a program that funds some forms of speech. In this essay, she presented a highly convoluted argument that eventually twisted back around to making a judgment about the Supreme Court allowing the government to fund family planning programs that did not promote abortion while declining to fund those that did.
At first, Kagan seemed to argue that the Constitution required the government either to fund both abortion-excluding and abortion-including family planning services, or to fund no family planning services at all. Thus, the government would avoid discrimination.
"The regulations at issue in Rust can hardly be understood except as stemming from government hostility toward some ideas (and their consequences) and government approval of some others: the subsidization scheme, as the majority itself noted, reflected a 'value judgment,'" she wrote. "Further, the regulations, in treating differently opposing points of view on a single public debate, benefited some ideas at the direct expense of others and thereby tilted the debate to one side. For both these reasons, a refusal to fund any speech relating to abortion would have been constitutionally preferable to the funding scheme that the regulations established."
But then Kagan turned around and seemed to argue that if the public perceives that a certain type of speech causes real harm -- such as speech promoting the smoking of tobacco -- then perhaps the government can prohibit that speech.
"The question that remains open for me is whether profound and indisputable harms can be taken into account for the purpose of lowering the standard of review applicable to viewpoint-based underinclusion -- whether and when they may negate our usually justifiable concerns about the effects and motives of such government action," she wrote. "It may be possible to develop guidelines for this purpose -- guidelines that will isolate and harshly confine a set of underinclusion cases in which viewpoint distinctions should be tolerated."
In other words, Kagan is saying: Maybe we can develop a rule that allows us to shut up those people whose speech offends us, while we liberals get to keep talking.
Kagan tellingly never discusses the actual language of the First Amendment, which simply says, "Congress shall make no law ... abridging the freedom of speech." This is not a complicated or ambiguous rule. The answer to the question of what Congress can and cannot fund -- other than that it cannot fund an abridgement of speech -- is not found in this amendment. It is found in the sharply limited substantive powers that elsewhere in the Constitution are delegated to the federal government.
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Duke of Earl
Elena Kagan takes the viewpoint of all liberals ... er progressives. When the Constitution is being reviewed for the general public, it is wrong; and, when the constitution is viewed through the eyes of the liberals ... er progressives, the constitution allows the government a great deal more flexibility. After all, liberals ... er progressives know what is best for everyone.
The problem from the liberals perspective is that the Constitution does NOT speak to what the government is permitted to do. The Constitution speaks to the LIMITS as to what government can do.
There is a large difference and the liberals will never understand the concept of a Republic.
Duke
Posted May 19, 2010 at 8:22:41 AM
Shawn
Another example of a crooked official in a branch of justice appointing a crooked official in another branch of justice, whose very purpose is to offset/balance the appointer's views. Not working out so well...we need another way. I guess our founding fathers were trying to ensure we elected somebody we trusted and have integrity so that their appointees would likely be trusted and have integrity. Unfortunately, our country is getting what is votes for. How blind we are outside the scope of our television.
Posted May 19, 2010 at 9:41:02 AM
Larz
Hey, I actually concur with Kagan's point. If the Fed is not going to pay for one viewpoint, then they shouldn't fork out for the other one. I am all for that, insofar as, maybe us peons would be able to actually achieve the ever elusive American Dream without the fraudulant waste in our federal government. The federal government is TOO BIG. The federal government should be for security and international relations only!!
It reminds me of grade school when Johnny (Keshown, whatever you prefer) got a C on his exam but Jane (Lakweesha) got a B and they had the same answers (cheated). Does Jane say something even though she may endanger Johnny's grade or be labeled a cheater. Kagan wants to complain about not getting funding for her viewpoint, but in the end is willing to not get funding for both viewpoints. I will never understand the liberal mindset.
I actually like the way she's going here, of course we must stay vigilant, because it may be our only way of decreasing the funding of the federal government.
Posted May 19, 2010 at 10:38:06 AM
TJS
Kagan is a crook. No judicial commentary or decision should be complicated. Historic court decisions were short and sweet. Now they are book length.
If the narrative is complicated, it is meant to deceive. Liberals have lots of nice stories about how they are right. Most are foolish and childish, but some are long, boring and preposterous. Like Kagan.
Posted May 19, 2010 at 1:22:45 PM
Rod
Duke, TJS and Larz have it right. Government is too big, and making excuses in order to do more and more and more, ALL of which is outside the scope of the constitution. The federal government should stick to foreign affairs, security, and perhaps infrastructure (roads, for example).
Posted May 20, 2010 at 1:06:45 PM
Dan Antonucci
What else is new? Before Obama is done the United states of America wil have changed its name to the People's Republic of Obamanation!
Posted May 22, 2010 at 8:06:29 PM