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Sotomayor, Freedom, and the Law

Tyranny begins in the legislature.

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Published: 17 July 2009
Sotomayor, Freedom, and the Law

The dreary Senate hearing on the nomination of Judge Sonia Sotomayor to the U.S. Supreme Court left me so in the doldrums that my only chance for solace was to dig out my copy of Freedom and the Law (1961) by Bruno Leoni.

Leoni (1913-1967) was a professor of legal theory and a lawyer in Italy. He was also an eminent liberal scholar and champion of individual freedom, who served as president of the Mont Pelerin Society. Freedom and the Law has a provenance worth describing. In 1958 Leoni, F. A. Hayek, and Milton Friedman each gave a series of lectures at the Fifth Institute on Freedom and Competitive Enterprise at what is now Claremont McKenna College in California. To say this meeting was consequential would be a gross understatement. Hayek’s lecturers were incorporated into The Constitution of Liberty. Friedman’s grew into Capitalism and Freedom, and Leoni’s were collected as Freedom and the Law. (Readers of this column will know that I previously wrote about Leoni’s essay “Voting Versus the Market,” which appears in Freedom and the Law.)

Leoni’s work was critical in helping to launch the multidisciplinary movement known as Law and Economics, in which these two areas of knowledge are applied to each other in order to achieve an otherwise impossible depth of understanding of society.

His work is highly relevant to the Judiciary Committee’s hearing on Sotomayor. In speeches she has suggested that because of sex and ethnicity, judges either can’t or shouldn’t try to be impartial in their rulings. Moreover, President Obama said he wanted a Court nominee with empathy based on life experience, as well as knowledge of the law. However, under questioning by adversarial senators, Sotomayor seemed to back away from both approaches. At one point, she said, “They [judges] don’t determine the law. Congress makes the laws. The job of a judge is to apply the law. And so it’s not the heart that compels conclusions in cases. It’s the law. The judge applies the law to the facts before that judge…. I look at the law that’s being cited. I look at how precedent informs it. I try to determine what those principles are of precedent to apply to the facts in the case before me and then do that…. We apply law to facts. We don’t apply feelings to facts.”

This is clearly what the conservative senators wanted to hear, but observers of varying ideological stripes were disappointed that Sotomayor stooped to feeding the television audience such pablum. She more than implied that a judge’s job is mechanistic: The facts plus the law plus precedent equals a ruling.

Nothing in human affairs is that simple. Judgment and interpretation are required every step of the way. This is why, contrary to popular fable, the line between the rule of law and the rule of men and women is so fine as to be nonexistent. (See John Hasnas’s important papers The Myth of the Rule of Law and the Depoliticization of Law [pdf]). Laws, which are intended to be applied to an unlimited number of unforeseeable future circumstances, do not speak for themselves. Human beings must interpret them. This does not mean language is inherently impenetrable. (I could hardly write if I believed that.) However, there is a broad middle ground between impenetrability and perfect clarity. As libertarian legal scholar Randy Barnett noted,  “While I do not share [the] view of law as radically indeterminate, I sure think it is a whole lot more underdeterminate than Judge Sotomayor made it out to be in her testimony today.”

If the law is underdeterminate–if there is scope for interpretation and more than one competing interpretation can be reasonable–what is an advocate of liberty to do?

Enter Leoni

Leoni offers us hope. Let’s start at the beginning. Why do we care who is on the Supreme Court? We care because down the street from the Court is the legislation factory we call the U.S. Congress. It has virtually nothing to do but churn out bills. In fact, most “serious” pundits judge congresses by how many bills they churn out. All the incentives faced by members of Congress push in one direction: to legislate (that is, meddle in people’s affairs).

Furthermore, we know that much of this legislation, since it interferes with what people want to do, will spawn litigation. Eventually some of these cases will wind up before the Supreme Court, the rulings of which will become the law of the land. Hence the interest in Supreme Court nominees.

Thus it would matter far less who is on the Supreme Court if there were little or no legislation.

But we need legislation, don’t we?

Without legislation there would be no law, right?

Where did we get the idea that a group of mostly undistinguished men and women–absurdly claiming to be our representatives and sitting in what is surely the ultimate ivory tower–should make blanket rules for everyone (except perhaps for themselves), regardless of time, place, and circumstance? It certainly has not protected liberty. Why don’t more people realize how poorly this simpleminded procedure serves a complex society?

Law versus Legislation

Most of us are badly in need of reminding that what is admirable about the Western legal tradition–that which has made our progress and prosperity possible–is the product not of legislatures but of something rather different. This fact compels us to distinguish law from legislation. As Hayek wrote in the first volume of Law, Legislation, and Liberty,

Unlike law itself, which has never been “invented” in the same sense, the invention of legislation came relatively late in the history of mankind….  Law in the sense of enforced rules of conduct is undoubtedly coeval with society; only the observance of common rules makes the peaceful existence of individuals in society possible. Long before man had developed language to the point where it enabled him to issue general commands, an individual would be accepted as a member of a group only so long as he conformed to its rules…. To modern man … the belief that all law governing human action is the product of legislation appears so obvious that the contention that law is older than law-making has almost the character of a paradox. Yet there can be no doubt that law existed for ages before it occurred to man that he could  make or alter it.

Or as Leoni put it, “[F]ewer and fewer people now seem to realize that just as language and fashion are the products of the convergence of spontaneous actions and decisions on the part of a vast number of individuals, so the law too can, in theory, just as well be a product of a similar convergence in other fields.”

He goes on, “The paradoxical situation of our times is that we are governed by men, not, as the classical Aristotelian theory would contend, because we are not governed by laws [legislation], but because we are.”

The question for Leoni is not how can we get good legislation and avoid bad legislation. The matter is much deeper than that: “It is a question of deciding whether individual freedom is compatible in principle with the present system centered on and almost completely identified with legislation.”

He tells us that in order to imagine an alternative to governance by legislatures, we need not visit Utopia. Rather, we may study Roman and English history: “Both the Romans and the English shared the idea that the law is something to be discovered more than to be enacted and that nobody is so powerful in his society as to be in a position to identify his own will with the will of the land.” This was law that judges discerned when resolving specific disputes brought before them by specific individuals; it was law based on custom and the expectations it gave rise to. (See Hasnas’s “Toward a Theory of Empirical Natural Rights” [pdf].)

Leoni lists three differences between judges in the sense just described and legislators:

  1. “[J]udges or lawyers or others in a similar position are to intervene only when they are asked to do so by the people concerned, and their decision is to be reached and become effective, at least in civil matters, only through a continuous collaboration of the parties themselves and within its limits.”

  2. “[T]he decision of judges is to be effective mainly in regard to the parties to the dispute, only occasionally in regard to third persons, and practically never in regard to people who have no connection with the parties concerned.”

  3. “[S]uch decisions on the part of judges and lawyers are very rarely to be reached without reference to the decisions of other judges and lawyers in similar cases and are therefore to be in indirect collaboration with all other parties concerned, both past and present.”

Thus, “the authors of these decisions have no real power over other citizens beyond what those citizens themselves are prepared to give them by virtue of requesting a decision in a particular case.”

Free Markets versus Central Planning

Leoni draws important parallels between judge-discovered law and the free market on the one hand and legislation and central planning on the other: “[A] legal system centered on legislation resembles … a centralized economy in which all the relevant decisions are made by a handful of directors, whose knowledge of the whole situation is fatally limited and whose respect, if any, for the people’s wishes is subject to that limitation.”

He exposes the posturing of self-styled “representatives” with a refreshing bluntness not often encountered today:

No solemn titles, no pompous ceremonies, no enthusiasm on the part of applauding masses can conceal the crude fact that both the legislators and the directors of a centralized economy are only particular individuals like you and me, ignorant of 99 percent of what is going on around them as far as the real transactions, agreements, attitudes, feelings, and convictions of people are concerned…. The mythology of our age is not religious, but political, and its chief myths seem to be “representation” of the people, on the one hand, and the charismatic pretension of political leaders to be in possession of the truth and to act accordingly, on the other.

Finally, to bring this back to Judge Sotomayor and the job she will assuredly be awarded, Leoni noted that judiciary law can become like legislation “whenever jurists or judges are entitled to decide ultimately a case.” But isn’t that what a Supreme Court is entitled to do when it makes law for everyone everywhere?

“In our time,” Leoni wrote, “the mechanism of the judiciary in certain countries where ‘supreme courts’ are established results in the imposition of the personal views of the members of these courts, or of a majority of them, on all the other people concerned whenever there is a great deal of disagreement between the opinion of the former and the convictions of the latter.”

Thus the assertion that the Supreme Court must not become a legislature is wishful thinking. It must and it will–no matter who sits on it.

So what’s an advocate of liberty to do? Leoni concluded that we must limit legislatures to as few matters as possible. That in itself is a tall order. But it is a start in the right direction.

27 Comments »

  1. [...] The rest of TGIF is here. [...]

  2. As a student at Claremont McKenna (CMC), I thank you for pointing this out.

    Do you happen to know if there is video or audio or anything about Leoni’s time there?

    Please let me know at chuckwalla1022@gmail.com.

  3. I don’t know, but I seriously doubt they recorded it.

  4. But how are judges to be held accountable for their decisions? Surely it must be recognized that judges will make wrong decisions from time to time. Is there a way to distinguish a wrong decision from a right one?

  5. But the judge’s decision only affects the parties, so the damage is contained. The losing party can appeal. Other judges, meanwhile, will see the error and not repeat it in future cases. The key here is competition. The early common law resulted from rivalry among many kinds of courts, including royal courts, church course, town courts, manor courts, and merchant courts. Judges’ incomes depended on attracting litigants, so they strove for fairness and wisdom. Follow the Hasnas links I’ve provided.

    Remember, too, that we are comparing real-world institutional alternatives. Judges make mistakes, of course. But so do legislatures, and they make them in one fell swoop for everyone. It’s a matter of going with the system likely to do the least amount of damage. See also Bruce Benson’s book The Enterprise of Law.

  6. [...] Sotomayor, Freedom, and the Law | Foundation for Economic Education [...]

  7. Dear Sheldon,

    “Of the thirty-six ways to get out of trouble, the best way is to leave.” ~ Chinese proverb

    You do in fact constantly make and contribute a significant degree of truth in your commentaries and articles. The deep-seated “truth” about the United States, its Constitution, the Bill of rights, etc., is the bona fide fact that America has always been—and is, a lamentable mammoth experiment gone awry. Truth? I just stated it. And yet … the inexorable trek to bare the master’s yoke and bloody whip merely deepens as American “law” fetters freedom, liberty, privacy and private property rights. The rabid American government-controlled school system has been a raving success, au contraire to those that say otherwise. The American booboisie constantly prove this fact. Proof? As my long ago friend, the late Frank Chodorov said to me at lunch one day, “The addle pated dimwits just keep voting for an ever-increasing “puking-dog democracy!” That pretty much says it Sheldon. And yet, what could the “excuse” be for those individuals that understand fully well what is occurring in America, yet choose to stay in the country and spend the ONLY life they will ever have fettered in “the master’s chains?” Oh well, each to his or her chosen choice I guess. All flaps and no throttle…. It’s a seething disaster unfolding.

    I, now at age 75, (I left the U.S. nearly thirty-one years ago) I still relish the above mentioned “freedom, liberty, privacy and private property rights,” too much to live the only life I would ever have, living in servility. I left the ever-increasing stink of collectivism in America—by ACTION instigated to reclaim my individual sovereignty. I rarely write about it. I acted. I’ll mitigate this comment’s prolixity by recalling Henry L. Mencken’s quote:

    “The fact is that the average man’s love of liberty is nine-tenths imaginary, exactly like his love of sense, justice and truth. He is not actually happy when free; he is uncomfortable, a bit alarmed, and intolerably lonely. Liberty is not a thing for the great masses of men. It is the exclusive possession of a small and disreputable minority, like knowledge, courage and honor. It takes a special sort of man to understand and enjoy liberty–and he is usually an outlaw in democratic societies.” — H.L. Mencken, Baltimore Evening Sun, Feb. 12, 1923

    The real truth exudes from Mencken’s mind … huh? Chodorov would agree.

    Regards,

    Capt. A.
    Principaute de Monaco
    “Anyone who needs to be persuaded to be free, doesn’t deserve to be.” ~ L. Neil Smith

  8. Capt.A.,

    Interesting comments, but I’m curious – where the heck can one go to escape the accelerating loss of freedom that has been happening in America for decades? Unless one owns a tropical island, I don’t see a lot of options…

    Chuck

  9. Mr. Richman,

    Excellent commentary as always…I wonder what the Founders would do today…a different “system” perhaps? Thoughts???

    Regards,

    Chris

  10. Chris, which Founders? Hamilton would have a different answer from Jefferson, Paine, and Samuel Adams, don’t you think?

  11. Capt. A, thanks for the Mencken quote. I can’t help thinking that people’s attitudes toward freedom are shaped from an early age by the so-called public schools. As I’ve long maintained, the schools haven’t failed. The problem is they have succeeded all too well!

  12. To Mr. Russo, an others as well…

    Your insight is noted. Here’s an answer to people that ask me similar questions. First, some generally unknown facts:

    1. Aprox. 24-26 percent of Americans have a passport. Do you have one? If not, why not? Therein lays a profound reason why “people” remain chained to the life they live, and as mentioned in my comment earlier—government schooling, and tribal inculcation, the hallmark of self-inflicted terminal stupidity.
    2. Now, how about this: Aprox. 80-85 percent of Swiss citizens and EU citizens not only have passports—but they actually USE them and travel worldwide. See something here? Swiss schools also inculcate this. Yet the vast majority of Swiss education also focuses on the idea of getting “external education” via travel and learning existential truth about the world they live in.
    3. The very idea of RECOUNCING ONE’S CITIZENSHIP should they find that his or her country lacks moral integrity is anathema to the hoi polloi, making this one of the most formidable “chains of the master.” Thought: “Freedom in America, is feeling “free and easy” in one’s harness—as long as the government maintains ABSOLUTE control of the reins!” Capisce? The idea that an individual would “choose” citizenship other than the one they may hold! Oy! And therein lays a great step (renouncement) toward true freedom and liberty. Breaking the chains! Got that? If you too, find this abhorrent, you stand little chance of ever living your life on your terms. Ever. So, back the truck up … and give concerted thought to that. Governments do not give a damn whether you like steak or chicken, drive a Chevy, Ford, or Toyota. You are nothing more than a “resource” to be tapped through the “legalized system of theft.” As has been said … “bread and circuses” to keep the VOTING booboisie from rumbling—to keep the steam pressure at an acceptable level. The “puking-dog democracy” is alive and well. (Chodorov)
    4. Venues like Monaco, Switzerland, Campione d’Italia, San Marino et al., are places that do not engage in “legalized plunder.” It’s something worth considering if true freedom and liberty reside in your soul… Example: In Monaco, there are NO taxes, no welfare, no wiretapping, no renditions or torture of any kind. (Just that alone should compel one to “think and evaluate!”) In the constitutional monarchy here, Prince Albert II, basically believes in “live and let live” as did his father, Prince Rainier III. As with EVERY country on the face of the earth under rule, even Monaco has very minor quirks that might bother some. E.g., citizens of Monaco may NOT gamble in the casinos within Monaco! It’s allowed for citizens under other flags. Very minor intrusions on individual freedom and liberty do exist however. (The real problem: It’s VERY expensive to stay here. Again, the riff-raff does not come to Monaco! The same holds true for Campione. (Dinero habla, nadie anda = money talks, nobody walks!) That’s one way of the world. An excellent way actually!
    5. Over my life, little has changed to make me believe that “things are moving toward true freedom, liberty or privacy etc. (That’s why I left!) My observations were similar to yours: diminishment. Now for the HARD part: ACTION! Only action will rectify complacency, HOPE, best intentions etc., which are time wasting. Most people dream away their lives with the illusion that everything would be perfect — if only… Read that again! Consider this: Sometimes, TIME spent trying to CHANGE something—is “time” best spent looking for something you do not have to change. That too requires profound thought. If one tries to convince others on selected values they consider pertinent, they might or might not be successful. If YOU convince you, that your values and ideas reflect who you are, and refuse to compromise—chances rule favorably that you will succeed while saving “time.” The finite value of time cannot be overemphasized. You only have so much of it! Denial too is part of the human condition. You cannot survive living life without denial. What you absolutely must do is learn how to control the vacillation between engaging in “reality” and denial. That too is profound and directly bares on one’s perception of freedom and liberty. It becomes the rule to your true freedom and liberty. ONLY you can answer the question about what “freedom and liberty” represent to you. No one else can do this for you. Period.
    6. Summing “action” to leave and “see the world” is the single greatest thing you can do for yourself. Don’t ask … do it! By the way, actions to leave, renounce citizenship and seeking to live life elsewhere, contain and entail probably the greatest barriers placed by government. As of now you still possess that right to leave though. The State and the tribe will castigate and rebuke you for taking such actions. Screw them! Live the only life you will ever have on your terms, not the terms of others. It’s tough.
    7. The iconoclast, breaking from tribal values, restrictions, force, fraud, coercion, and all that is necessary to “control’ you, reigns current! Even marriage is a subtle form of control. It stultifies the individual. That too is truth!

    Well, I could go on but I do think you are bright (by reading Richman’s writings as well) enough to see the equation, the BIG PICTURE. Yes, I did have trepidations, a barrel full when I decided to leave, but my lust to be free from the jackbooted thugatarians that are so prevalent throughout this world (America especially) wasn’t enough to prevent me from seeking to become one of “the disreputable minority” that Henry Mencken so eloquently observed in his life. It is truly a rare chance to live life on your terms. The individual is presented with the greatest formidable challenge of his or her life! It can be done though. Talking about freedom and liberty is OK—but acting is the solution. No one else can do it for you Mr. Russo. Therein resides truth too.

    I’ll leave you with one final thought when encountering the “masses of asses” who will try and counter what I’ve said and laid out for you. Remember it:

    “Never argue with an idiot; they’ll drag you down to their level and beat you with experience.” ~ anonymous

    May you, Chuck Russo, discover the very best of good fortune. Don’t worry about the mule—just load the wagon! Leave.

    Liberty to you,

    Capt. A., SI
    Principaute de Monaco
    “Anyone who needs to be persuaded to be free, doesn’t deserve to be.” ~ L. Neil Smith

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  15. Capt A,

    Good for you that you found a nice place to live. I tried leaving the US, I went to Venezuela. All that got me was Hugo Chavez & his disaster socialism. I finally came back in early 2000.

    The point is that leaving doesn’t always work, sometimes you have to make your stand where you are.

  16. What is crucial now is for all Americans of good will to come together to work out a common understanding of the Constitution by which everyone’s legislation will be judged. No more of those ugly and embarrassing brawls between liberals and conservatives to get “their man” onto the Court. There cannot be anything more horrific than allowing the Constitution — the palladium of our national unity — to become anyone’s weapon in the culture wars.

    From HERE

  17. What designated Capt A. to sign as Capt.? Surely he is not retired military who sucked at the tit for 20 or more years and now receives a check at my expense

  18. To: mack,

    You were educated in the American public school system. My good man, your parents failed to teach propriety and good manners as well … it’s evident. It seeps through, dolt. As indicated when writing at the FEE site: “Be nice. Keep it clean. Stay on topic. No spam.”

    Think: Forty-one years, airline pilot = captain.

    Now, back to work slave! May the American government’s yoke grow heavier and the lash cut deep. It’s deserved in your case.

    Capt. A.
    Principaute de Monaco
    “Anyone who needs to be persuaded to be free, doesn’t deserve to be.” ~ L. Neil Smith

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  20. Thanks for posting, I really liked that post, wish you would post more

  21. So how does one deal with the reality that our local judges and procecutors use civil codes in a criminal proceeding? The Transportation Code has been a part of Vernon’s Texas Civil Statutes since it was first codified by the Texas Legislature in the 1930s. When one is given a “ticket” for failure to follow the “statutes” which plainly refer to commercial traffic, the venue in the municipal courts is called “criminal.” Even when you can point out that the statutes are civil in nature and do not directly apply to persons not in commercial traffic, the prosecutor ignores the plain languange of the Code and Black’s Law Dictionary which are hereby listed:
    TRANPORTATION: The movement of goods or persons from one place to another, by a carrier.(Black’s Law 6th Ed. p. 1499)
    TRAFFIC: Commerce; trade; sale or exchange of merchandise, bills, money, and the like. The passing or exchange of goods or commodities form one person to another for an equivalent in goods or money. The subjects of transportation on a route, as persons or goods; the passing to and fro of persons, animals, vehicles, or vessels, along a route of transportation, as along a street, highway, etc. (Black’s Law 6th Ed. p. 1495)
    COMMERCIAL MOTOR VEHICLES: means any motor vehicle (other than a motorcycle or passenger car) designed or used primarily for the transportation of property, including any passenger car which has been reconstructed so as to be used, and which is being used, primarily for delivery purposes, with the exception of passenger cars used in the delivery of the United States mails. Vernon’s Texas Civil Statutes 6675a [1][i]
    PASSENGER CAR: means any motor vehicle other than a motorcycle, golf cart, or a bus, as defined in this Act, designed or used primarily for the transportation of persons. Vernon’s Texas Civil Statutes 6675a [1][j]
    In addition, case law establishes the differentiation between who can be regulated and who will fall under the Common Law standards:
    “The use of the highways for the purpose of travel and transportation is not a mere privilege, but a common and fundamental Right of which the public and the individual cannot be rightfully deprived.” Chicago Motor Coach vs. Chicago, 169 NE 22; Ligare vs. Chicago, 28 NE 934; Boon vs. Clark, 214 SSW 607; 25 Am.Jur. (1st) Highways Sect.163
    “The Right of the Citizen to travel upon the public highways and to transport his property thereon, either by horse drawn carriage or by automobile, is not a mere privilege which a city can prohibit or permit at will, but a common Right which he has under the right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.” Thompson vs. Smith, 154 SE 579
    “… For while a Citizen has the Right to travel upon the public highways and to transport his property thereon, that Right does not extend to the use of the highways, either in whole or in part, as a place for private gain. For the latter purpose, no person has a vested right to use the highways of the state, but is a privilege or a license which the legislature may grant or withhold at its discretion.” State vs. Johnson, 243 P. 1073; Cummins vs. Homes, 155 P. 171; Packard vs. Banton, 44 S.Ct. 256; Hadfield vs. Lundin, 98 Wash 516
    “Heretofore the court has held, and we think correctly, that while a Citizen has the Right to travel upon the public highways and to transport his property thereon, that Right does not extend to the use of the highways, either in whole or in part, as a place of business for private gain.” Willis vs. Buck, 263 P. l 982; Barney vs. Board of Railroad Commissioners, 17 P.2d 82
    “The right of the citizen to travel upon the highway and to transport his property thereon, in the ordinary course of life and business, differs radically and obviously from that of one who makes the highway his place of business for private gain in the running of a stagecoach or omnibus.” State vs. City of Spokane, 186 P. 864
    “Personal liberty — or the right to enjoyment of life and liberty — is one of the fundamental or natural rights, which has been protected by its inclusion as a guarantee in the various constitutions, which is not derived from nor dependent on the U.S. Constitution. … It is one of the most sacred and valuable rights [remember the words of Justice Tolman, supra.] as sacred as the right to private property … and is regarded as inalienable.” 16 C.J.S. Const. Law, Sect.202, Pg. 987
    “First, it is well established law that the highways of the state are public property, and their primary and preferred use is for private purposes, and that their use for purposes of gain is special and extraordinary which, generally at least, the legislature may prohibit or condition as it sees fit.” Stephenson vs. Rinford, 287 US 251; Pachard vs Banton, 264 US 140, and cases cited; Frost and F. Trucking Co. vs. Railroad Commission, 271 US 592; Railroad commission vs. Inter-City Forwarding Co., 57 SW.2d 290; Parlett Cooperative vs. Tidewater Lines, 164 A. 313

    So how does one get a dishonest system to be honest about the law versus the statute? The municipal courts are set up to make a lot of money off of unsuspecting travelers and they do a good job of it.
    I have often heard that all politics is local, but the local courts are so corrupt about the only thing you can do with them is abolish them.

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    The dreary Senate hearing on the nomination of Judge Sonia Sotomayor to the U.S. Supreme Court left [...]…

  23. [...] heartening to know that Democrat legislators (not “lawmakers,” law differs from legislation) are planning to make yet more insurance plans illegal by requiring that legal plans cover certain [...]

  24. [...] My lastest TGIF column is here. [...]

  25. Hey, i only just thought i’d write and let you know the actual blog layout is actually messed up on the K-Melon browser. Anyhow keep up the fine work.

  26. [...] Here Wolf stands on more solid ground. If people generally see nothing wrong in taking other people’s things or otherwise depriving them of their liberty, they will undoubtedly get around any constitutional prohibition. A constitution is only as good as people’s understanding of it. No constitution (or law) interprets itself. We can’t program a computer with The True Meaning and have it resolve all constitutional disagreements. People will be doing the interpreting, and no interpretation can be dispositive. (See relevant articles here, here, here, and here.) [...]

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