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Contributors
Kirk - Contributor
Richard Kirk
is a freelance writer who lives in Oceanside, California. E-mail
him at kirkrg@peoplepc.com
[go to Kirk index]
Robert
Byrd’s Rhetorical Excess
Judges, not Senate rules, threaten democracy…
[Richard
Kirk] 3/15/05
There is no surer sign of intellectual bankruptcy (or senility)
than the habit of comparing political opponents to Hitler. This
type of metaphorical excess is par for the course on Air America
and at MoveOn.Org. It is unusual for a Congressman.
Yet recently the very
senior senator from West Virginia, Robert Byrd, compared a
possible change in Senate filibuster rules for
judicial appointees to the Enabling Act of 1933--the German law
that concentrated absolute power in the hands of Adolf Hitler.
Hitler, Byrd solemnly observed, always proceeded under "the
cloak of legality." In this way the fiddling geriatric linked
President Bush with the mustached Fuhrer and implied that any
change in Senate rules (which Byrd himself modified as majority
leader) would be tantamount to the suspension of representative
government.
On the one hand we have complete concentration of authority
in the hands of a dictator whose maniacal vision eventually led
to a World War, at least forty million dead, and the near extermination
of European Jewry. On the other we have a proposed revision of
senatorial protocol. Hello, Bob! Is anyone home up there?
Let us be clear on
the real issue that Byrd is addressing. Republican leaders,
frustrated by unprecedented Democrat efforts to block
votes on judicial nominees, now desire to revise the Senate’s
rules in order to prevent filibusters on these appointees. We
are not talking about changing the Constitution. We are not talking
about subverting the right of Massachusetts residents to practice
their unique brand of political masochism. We are talking about
the "Rules of the Senate"-- which topic is covered
by all of nine words in Article I, Section 5, of the Constitution: "Each
house may determine the rules of its proceedings..." Had
the Founding Fathers believed that democracy itself rested on
this procedural point, they might have devoted at least a complete
sentence to it.
What is a darn sight
clearer than the superannuated senator’s
hyperbolic historical analogy, is that the Founders of our country
would be horrified by the way judges, in recent decades, have
exchanged their limited interpretive function for the gratifying
role of Philosopher-King. Thomas Jefferson in particular would
be leading a new revolution to place the weight of self-government
back in the hands of that branch closest to the people--the legislature.
With a finely modulated
style that further miniaturizes the rantings of Senator Byrd,
our third President observed: "The
germ of dissolution of our federal government is in the constitution
of the federal Judiciary...working like gravity by night and
by day, gaining a little today and a little tomorrow, and advancing
its noiseless step like a thief, over the field of jurisdiction,
until all shall be usurped."
Can anyone honestly
doubt that Jefferson would conclude, in light of recent rulings
on marriage, the pledge of allegiance,
and capital punishment, that the judicial usurpation against
which he warned is virtually complete? Would not Jefferson urge
his countrymen to rise up and to reclaim sovereignty from these
rapacious robed eminences? Would he not denounce these despots
who delegate to the people the task of arranging deck-chairs
on the ship of state while they sabotage the hull of self-government
with that infinitely flexible and destructive tool: a "living
Constitution"?
Were Byrd as insightful as he is loquacious and annoying, he
would see that the true danger to republican government lies
not in a revision of Senate cloture rules but in the continuing
concentration of power in the hands of judicial elites. Indeed,
the proposed change in Senate rules that Byrd portrays as Hitlerian
is only a first, tentative step toward reigning in the power
now capriciously wielded by Women and Men in Black. It is a step
that Jefferson, if not Hitler, would heartily endorse. tOR
copyright
2005 Richard Kirk
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