The People vs. the Police State: The Struggle for Justice in the Supreme Court

Guest Post by John W. Whitehead

 

The untimely death of Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia has predictably created a political firestorm over who gets to appoint the next U.S. Supreme Court justice, when, how, and where any judicial nominee will stand on the hot-button political issues of our day (same-sex marriage, Obamacare, immigration, the environment, and abortion).

This is yet another spectacle, not unlike the carnival-like antics of the presidential candidates, to create division, dissension and discord and distract the populace from the nation’s steady march towards totalitarianism.

Not to worry. This is a done deal. There are no surprises awaiting us.

The powers-that-be have already rigged the system.

They—the corporations, the military industrial complex, the surveillance state, the monied elite, etc.—will not allow anyone to be appointed to the Supreme Court who will dial back the police state. They will not tolerate anyone who will undermine their policies, threaten their profit margins, or overturn their apple cart.

Scalia’s replacement will be safe (i.e., palatable enough to withstand Congress’ partisan wrangling), reliable and most important of all, an extension of the American police state.

With the old order dying off or advancing into old age rapidly, we’ve arrived at a pivotal point in the makeup of the Supreme Court. With every vacant seat on the Court and in key judgeships around the country, we are witnessing a transformation of the courts into pallid, legalistic bureaucracies governed by a new breed of judges who have been careful to refrain from saying, doing or writing anything that might compromise their future ambitions.

Today, the judges most likely to get appointed today are well-heeled, well-educated (all of them attended either Yale or Harvard law schools) blank slates who have traveled a well-worn path from an elite law school to a prestigious judicial clerkship and then a pivotal federal judgeship.

In other words, it really doesn’t matter whether a Republican or Democratic president appoints the next Supreme Court justice, because they will all look alike (in terms of their educational and professional background) and sound alike (they are primarily advocates for the government).

Given the turbulence of our age, with its police overreach, military training drills on American soil, domestic surveillance, SWAT team raids, asset forfeiture, wrongful convictions, and corporate corruption, the need for a guardian of the people’s rights has never been greater.

Unfortunately, as I document in Battlefield America: The War on the American People, what we have been saddled with instead are government courts dominated by technicians and statists who march in lockstep with the American police state.

This is true at all levels of the judiciary.

Thus, while what the nation needs is a constitutionalist, what we will get is a technician.

It’s an important distinction.

A legal constitutionalist believes that the authority of government derives from and is limited by a body of fundamental law (the Constitution) and strives to hold the government accountable to abiding by the Constitution. A judge of this order will uphold the rights of the citizenry in the face of government abuses.

A legal technician, on the other hand, is an arbitrator of the government’s plethora of laws whose priority is maintaining order and preserving government power. As such, these judicial technicians are deferential to authority, whether government or business, and focused on reconciling the massive number of laws handed down by the government.

John Roberts who joined the Supreme Court in 2005 as Chief Justice is a prime example of a legal technician. His view that the “role of the judge is limited…to decide the cases before them” speaks to a mindset that places the judge in the position of a referee.

Roberts’ approach to matters of law and justice can best be understood by a case dating back to his years on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia. The case involved a 12-year-old black girl who was handcuffed, searched and arrested by police—all for eating a single French fry in violation of a ban on food in the D.C. metro station. Despite Roberts’ ability to recognize the harshness of the treatment meted out to Ansche Hedgepeth for such a minor violation, he ruled that the girl’s constitutional rights had not been violated in any way.

This is not justice meted out by a constitutionalist.

This is how a technician rules, according to the inflexible letter of the law.

Circuit Judge Sri Srinivasan of the DC Court of Appeals, who is rumored to be a favorite pick for Scalia’s spot on the court, is another such technician. When asked to strike down a 60-year-old ban on expressive activities in front of the Supreme Court Plaza, Srinivasan turned a blind eye to the First Amendment.

Srinivasan’s rationale? “Allowing demonstrations directed at the Court, on the Court’s own front terrace, would tend to yield the opposite impression: that of a Court engaged with — and potentially vulnerable to — outside entreaties by the public.”

This view of the Supreme Court as an entity that must be sheltered from select outside influences—for example, the views of the citizenry—is shared by the members of the Court itself to a certain extent who, as Lithwick points out, have become “worryingly cloistered, even for a famously cloistered institution… today’s justices filter out anything that might challenge their perspectives.”

Are you getting the picture yet?

The members of the Supreme Court are part of a ruling aristocracy composed of men and women who primarily come from privileged backgrounds and who have a vested interest in maintaining the status quo.

When you’re cocooned within the rarefied, elitist circles in which most of the judiciary operate, it can be difficult to see the humanity behind the facts of a case, let alone identify with the terror and uncertainty that most people feel when heavily armed government agents invade their homes, or subject them to a virtual strip search, or taser them into submission.

Now do you understand why the Supreme Court’s decisions in recent years have been characterized most often by an abject deference to government authority, military and corporate interests?

They no longer work for us. They no longer represent us. They can no longer relate to our suffering.

In the same way that the Legislative Branch, having been co-opted by lobbyists, special interests, and the corporate elite, has ceased to function as a vital check on abuses by the other two branches of government, the Judicial Branch has also become part of the same self-serving bureaucracy.

Sound judgment, compassion and justice have taken a back seat to legalism, statism and elitism.

Preserving the rights of the people has been deprioritized and made to play second fiddle to both governmental and corporate interests.

In the case of the People vs. the Police State, the ruling is 9-0 against us.

So where does that leave us?

The Supreme Court of old is gone, if not for good then at least for now.

We can no longer depend on the federal courts to protect us against the government. They are the government.

Yet as is the case with most things, the solution is far simpler and at the same time more complicated than space allows, but it starts with local action—local change—and local justice. If you want a revolution, start small, in your own backyard, and the impact will trickle up.

If you don’t like the way justice is being meted out in America, then start demanding justice in your own hometown, before your local judges. Serve on juries, nullify laws that are egregious, picket in front of the courthouse, vote out judges (and prosecutors) who aren’t practicing what the Constitution preaches, encourage your local newspapers to report on cases happening in your town, educate yourself about your rights, and make sure your local judges understand that they work for you and are not to be extensions of the police, prosecutors and politicians.

This is the only way we will ever have any hope of pushing back against the police state.

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14 Comments
SpecOpsAlpha
SpecOpsAlpha
February 16, 2016 4:06 pm

“The Supreme Court of old is gone, if not for good then at least for now.

We can no longer depend on the federal courts to protect us against the government. They are the government.”

The SCOTUS has almost always done this, since Marbury vs Massachusetts.

SpecOpsAlpha
SpecOpsAlpha
February 16, 2016 4:08 pm

Correction: versus Madison

Dick Jones
Dick Jones
February 16, 2016 6:23 pm

So it’s no surprise that since the moment he died, there has already been chatter on who Scalia’s successor should be.

Obvious blather on standard third-rail wedge issues like gun confiscation and abortion already dominate the mind-control signals of the MSM airwaves.

The thought-control pundits talk about “Constitutionality” – a word that they have only encountered on their teleprompters. They wouldn’t know a “Constitution” if they got hit on the head with it.

The idea that the SCOTUS can determine the Constitutionality of a law – “judicial review” – is universal, having been implanted into the sheeple’s mind through public school indoctrination and cop-&-lawyer shows on the boob tube. So right now, we are all wringing our hands, desperate to get “The One True Judge” on the bench that will defend the Constitution.

And yet, the truth of the matter is this. There is nothing in the Constitution specifically permitting judicial review. When Justice John Marshall invoked this concept in Marbury vs Madision in 1803, based on his interpretation of the Constitution (article 3 and article 6), James Madison was incensed. Madison, after all, wrote the Constitution; he had never intended for this power to be granted to SCOTUS.

But – and I say this with all intended sarcasm – what difference does it make? Who cares about history? The reality of the situation is that judicial review of the Constitution is an accepted power of SCOTUS, even if the original creator of the Constitution expressly thought otherwise.

Of course, even if you accept the concept of judicial review, other absurdities should immediately leap out at you. How can the Constitutionality of a law be determined by a 5-4 split vote? How can a law be 55% Constitutional yet 44% unConstitutional? How crazy, how immoral can it be for one dude in a black robe to have such power over the lieves of 350 million people?

So what we are left with, is this: citizens left to beg their elected representatives to confirm/block the nomination of a lawyer to a court, in the hopes that this lawyer will protect and defend the Constitution, using a power that the original creator of the Constitution NEVER INTENDED THEM TO HAVE.

Overthecliff
Overthecliff
February 16, 2016 8:09 pm

John whitehead you bastard! You’re right.

Overthecliff
Overthecliff
February 16, 2016 8:20 pm

When people are oppressed by the government, they leave if they can. Some people realize they are oppressed sooner than others. they will look after their self interest.

Overthecliff
Overthecliff
February 16, 2016 8:22 pm

Last comment wrong thread.

Paul Revere
Paul Revere
February 16, 2016 8:31 pm

At some point soon, foriegn troops under the auspices of the global powers in charge and the UN, will be utilized to subdue the American citizenry. The writing is on the wall.

https://youtu.be/ugMmyBUKRy4

Headspace
Headspace
February 16, 2016 11:49 pm

@ Dick Jones…… Amen. Well said brother.

GilbertS
GilbertS
February 17, 2016 2:37 am

Nuthin’ new to me. After BarryCare and Roberts’ infamous sell-out, I like to refer to them as:
The TACO SUPREME COURT with 8 Injustices presided over by the Thief Injustice. I was always taught to respect the Taco Supremes as the last bulwark of freedom; our last recourse to the law when the sexecutive and the legiswasture screwed up. The blatant political nature of their selection makes it obvious they’re not some impartial bunch of friendly oldsters who want the Rule of Law to prevail. Once they screwed us on BarryCare, primarily so the Thief Injustice could try to Win Liberal Friends and Influence People, I gave up on them. With reflection, they seem all but pointless. Were I the resident, and the Injustices stood between me and what I wanted, I would ask them how many brigades they command and go about my business, secure in the knowledge the government can’t really sue itself and win or lose and sub-statute .223 and article .308 trump all other regulations.

Also, since the fundamental power of the court, namely judicial review, was arbitrarily assumed in the days of yore, their powers can be just as arbitrarily removed.

GilbertS
GilbertS
February 17, 2016 2:55 am

That video is silly. The military is constantly moving vehicles around the country. Any weekend of the year, you’re likely to see the Nasty Guard and the Reserves going to training events down the highway. You can expect to see trains moving lots of vehicles to maneuvers at big training bases, such as Fort Polk and Fort Irwin. Camo pattern also doesn’t matter. Some stuff never got painted prior to the sandbox, while other stuff will probably never be painted back to green. And the red crescent is the musim analog to the Red Cross, so it’s not entirely unusual to see it on medical trucks. The convoy in Yermo, CA is in the vicinity of USMC Logistics Base Barstow and Fort Irwin, home of the National Training Center, where units go for desert maneuvers.

Mark
Mark
February 17, 2016 9:18 am

Prior to the 16th amendment , the only tax the federal government could have is a direct tax. A tax on everyone for the same amount.

If Obamma care can be construed as a tax and not a fine . It must be a direct tax.

You just bring the nominee up and ask this question over and over and over again. It’s either not a tax and is an unconconstitutional penalty . Or it’s a tax that discriminates against mainly the Metro Sexual generation by not being a Direct Tax. And therefore is an unconstitutional tax.

BUCKHED
BUCKHED
February 17, 2016 10:18 am

Dick Jones says:

How crazy, how immoral can it be for one dude in a black robe to have such power over the lives of 350 million people?

Well according to Lysander Spooner the Constitution does not apply to us “on principles of law and reason”

pablo
pablo
February 17, 2016 10:56 am

Say it again, and again, and again:

They no longer work for us. They no longer represent us. They can no longer relate to our suffering.

Once the puppets at the top start to feel our suffering, either because they get caught by the very system they created, or, by external events (read: popular revolt)
they will quickly change their tune, and maybe even pass legislation that is in our interests, not corporate interests.

They are all weak, and never worked a day job in their lives.
They all have dark secrets, and thus are easily controlled by the deep state.

Suzanna
Suzanna
February 17, 2016 1:26 pm

@ Paul Revere

Saw the video,

are you channeling Dave Hodges?

BTW, I believe we are likely to see military interventions on our streets.

Two years ago there was a MJ operation (northern forest) by Hispanics with no English

run by a Mexican and a Somali out of MN. I was in a more southern locale

and stunned by the sight of huge black MRAPS driving through town on

their way to the scene. “migrants armed with guns”………

http://fox6now.com/2012/05/17/cartels-invade-the-northwoods/