• @wjrii
    link
    English
    285 months ago

    I haven’t kept up with his output, but when I was studying SCOTUS cases years and years ago, his opinions, mostly dissents or concurrences back in those days, were just bafflingly literal and lazy. Shit like, “I would declare the government’s actions unconstitutional because they’re regulating cars and the word ‘car’ is not in the Constitution.”

    I can’t believe his thread of, I won’t even call it originalism, more like historical-context-free literalist textualism, has gained any traction.

    • @FireTower
      link
      95 months ago

      I’ve found they do tend to be more blunt and straightforward. I think to understand them you have to start from the lens of his that stare decisis is a poor doctrine. Many of his dissents have such strong departures from the main opinion because of this. If you don’t presuppose things like the Wickard V Filburn case’s impact on the commerce clause dissents like Gonzalez v Raich, seem much more plausible.

      • @wjrii
        link
        English
        8
        edit-2
        5 months ago

        the lens of his that stare decisis is a poor doctrine

        I can imagine an abhorrent precedent like Dredd Scott leaving a bad taste in a young black lawyer’s mind, but it’s certainly an odd way to approach jurisprudence in a common law country, and it’s a pretty shit way to regulate a complicated body of law that relies on litigation for clarity. Combine it with a simplistic version of originalism once stare decisis is discarded, and I stand by my statement: bafflingly literal and lazy, and I’ll add arrogant. “I know best, the entire body of built up law that came before me is without value, and the decisions that real people make under their influence are gauze in the wind.” It invites constant relitigation and enables the most extreme kind of judicial activism while claiming to be above that fray.