Tuesday, January 31, 2023

Facebook’s Radical Bias: It Must Die

 Dan Pfeiffer, a long-time Democratic political player has provided an analysis of how the Democrats usually fail in matching the Republican’s messaging machine in his book Battling the Big Lie: How Fox, Facebook, and the MAGA Media Are Destroying America.  He provides a number of interesting insights that merit discussion.  Here we will describe his dark view of Facebook and his assertion that its quest for ever-greater profit has produced an operation designed to circulate the fear and hatred that motivates the radical right.

Facebook’s strategy is to keep its users engaged on the platform as long as possible each and every day.  The more the platform can observe our likes, dislikes, and interests the better able it is to direct advertisers to us and make more money.  It has demonstrated that any public purpose it serves is only incidental to its quest for profit.  Pfeiffer argues that Facebook is not fixable.  Its structure is designed to preferentially circulate disinformation and things that create outrage.

“The Facebook algorithm decides what nearly three billion users see when they open the Facebook app or log on to the site.  How it works is one of Silicon Valley’s great secrets.  But here is the shortest, most simplified version: Facebook does not show you everything your Facebook friends post.  Instead, the ever-evolving artificial intelligence-powered algorithm shows you the posts you are most likely to engage with based on the massive amounts of your personal data Facebook Hoovered up when you weren’t paying attention.  Facebook wants to show you engaging content because it wants to keep you on the platform for as long as possible in order to suck up more of your data and show you as many ads as possible.”

“More often, the content that generates engagement on Facebook is outrage bait; and outrage is the language of Trumpism.  Trolling, unsubtle racist fearmongering, and conspiracy theories dominate the platform because they are shared and liked by people who agree with them and comment on them and because they are disliked by those who are outraged by them.”

Facebook might provide a pleasant experience to its users, but that is not an explicit goal.  It does not care whether your visit to the site generates happiness or hatred, as long as you stay online.

“In other words, Facebook values all engagement the same.  Dislikes are the same as likes.  Hate is valued the same as love.  Calling something out as obviously racist or homophobic spreads the offending piece of content nonetheless.   Fact-checking conspiracy theory means more engagement and, therefore, more people exposed to the conspiracy.  Damned if you do, damned if you don’t.  Heads, Mark Zuckerberg wins.  Tails, America loses.”

The data indicates that radical politics is the winner on this type of platform.

“A National Public Radio analysis of data from NewsWhip found that, in May 2021, Ben Shapiro’s Daily Wire ‘generated more Facebook engagement on its articles than the New York Times, the Washington Post, NBC News and CNN combined’.”

From data generated by Kevin Roose.

“Facebook posts by Breitbart received nearly three times as many shares as the official pages of every Democratic senator combined.”

Mark Zuckerberg went through the motions of trying to control the amount of disinformation and hateful content that was being circulated on his platform after the 2016 election.  But he was under a lot of pressure from the radical right who were among his best customers to leave them alone.  Meanwhile, prior to the 2020 election: 

“The Democrats running for president were promising to look very seriously into breaking up Facebook and raising taxes on corporations and the wealthy.  Trump’s reelection meant a lower tax bill for Zuckerberg and the executives at Facebook, who had all become fabulously wealthy profiting off the destruction of democracy.”

Zuckerberg was moved to come up with a new policy.

“Facebook would not factcheck politicians or political ads.”

“In a campaign between Joe Biden (or any other Democrat) and Donald Trump, who do we think would benefit from being given carte blanche to lie?”

“This new policy had a dramatic impact on the election.  The Facebook CEO was no longer an overly self-conscious liberal trying to avoid poking the bear.  Instead, Facebook, under the counsel of the Republican-leaning policy team, decided to throw in with Trump and the MAGA world.”

In Pfeiffer’s view it is Facebook and its algorithm that enabled Trump and his politics.  And that platform will continue to radicalize our nation. 

“Whether Donald Trump is on Facebook or not is beside the point.  With or without him, his message dominates the platform.  While Democrats were celebrating on Twitter, the Right was dominating Facebook.  No matter his original intent, Mark Zuckerberg had built a pro-Trump platform.  No matter what they tell themselves, the people working for Facebook are working to push Trumpism.  Without Facebook, there is no Trump.  Without Facebook, there is no January 6 insurrection.  And if Trump is reelected president in 2024, it will be because of Facebook.”

We have had enough of this.  It is time for Facebook to end.

 

Wednesday, January 25, 2023

The Conservative Bias of Liberal Media

 Dan Pfeiffer, a long-time Democratic political player has provided an analysis of how the Democrats usually fail in matching the Republican’s messaging machine in his book Battling the Big Lie: How Fox, Facebook, and the MAGA Media Are Destroying America.  He provides a number of interesting insights that merit discussion.  Here we will examine his claim that the proclaimed liberal bias that supposedly dominates major press entities is a myth.  He argues that the way the press operates today produces instead a conservative bias in coverage.

The notion of a liberal bias in news coverage has been easy to sell.  Reporters of news at a competent organization require background knowledge in a number of areas, thus demanding significant formal education.  They must be able to use words wisely, forming them into coherent sentences.  The sentences must be organized into an article that conveys information accurately and efficiently.  These are the hallmarks of an “elite liberal” who is most likely Democratic leaning in their personal life.  Educational attainment is a strong marker for political leanings.  There may have been a time when their actually was such a bias in reporting, but any such period is long past.  In Pfeiffer’s view, political coverage is today dominated by a conservative disinformation machine that has no counter from the Left or from national media.

“The entire right-wing disinformation apparatus was built on a Big Lie told many years ago that persists to this day.”

“The idea that media is biased against conservatives is the justification for the right-wing disinformation machine.  The Federalist, Breitbart, and Sean Hannity are necessary, the thinking goes, to push back against the overwhelmingly liberal bias of the mainstream media.  Almost as a condition of membership into the party, Republican politicians are required to blame their problems on ‘liberal bias.’  Struggling in the polls?  Blame liberal bias.  Failed to repeal Obamacare?  Blame liberal Bias.”

Pfeiffer concedes that while incorrect, the claims of bias have been very effective.

“The Right hammers this point home so relentlessly that everyone in politics believes it to be true.  Reporters, editors, and publishers are so convinced of their own bias that they swerve out of their lane to adjust for it.  Democrats are convinced that those in the media are our friends and teammates, and we are in shock every time a media outlet disappoints us.  And Republican voters are so convinced of the bias that they might reflexively dismiss a New York Times article claiming that the sky is blue and the grass is green.”

There is a fundamental reason why no party should depend on mainstream media as an ally.

“The mainstream media’s dominant bias is not ideological, it’s attitudinal.  The media crave conflict over all else; they love a crisis.  There’s an old saying: ‘If it bleeds, it leads.’  This refers to the tendency of local television news to prioritize crime and traffic accidents over all other topics.  In political news, clashes, showdowns, and circular firing squads get all the attention.  After all, a functioning government is not sexy.”

“Why might this dynamic benefit the Right?  Well, with a small handful of exceptions over the years, the major conflict in politics comes down to this: Democrats are trying to make government work, and Republicans are using whatever power they have to break it.  Coverage that Disproportionately focuses on the things that are broken versus the things that work benefits the antigovernment party. 

The most significant result of the Republican assault on the “biased” mainstream media is that they are so afraid of being accused of bias that they actually go easier on Republican politicians than Democratic ones.  The appropriate comparison for Pfeiffer was the treatment the press gave Donald Trump in 2020 when the world was going to hell and the treatment Biden received in 2021 when the world was not going to hell.

“…Dana Milbank of the Washington Post found some actual data demonstrating how badly the media has swerved out of its lane to appease its right-wing critics.  Milbank asked an artificial intelligence company to analyze two hundred thousand articles and compare President Biden’s coverage in 2021 with Donald trump’s coverage in 2020…Surely his coverage was worse than Biden’s.”

“It was not.  As Milbank wrote:

In 2020, Trump presided over a worst-in-world pandemic response that caused hundreds of thousands of unnecessary deaths; held a super spreader event in the White House and got covid-19 himself; praised QAnon adherents; embraced violent white supremacists; waged a racist campaign against Black Lives Matter demonstrators; attempted to discredit mail-in voting; and refused to accept his defeat in a free and fair election, leading eventually to the violence of Jan 6 and causing tens of millions to accept the ‘big lie,’ the worst of more than 30,000 he told in office.

And yet, Trump got press coverage as favorable as, or better than, Biden is getting today.”

This is not the first demonstration of how the mainstream press coddles Republicans and torments Democrats.  Paul Starr produced an article for the New York Review of Books providing details on press performance during 2016 election campaign.  The article, Fallf rom Grace, reviewed the book Network Propaganda: Manipulation, Disinformation, and Radicalization in American Politics by Yochai Benkler, Robert Faris, and Hal Roberts.

A conclusion presented was that balance and fairness were two different things.  Although most of the media had good intentions, their interest in “fairness” led them to foolishly highlight many of the outrageous claims emerging from the far-right.

“In 2016, Benkler and his colleagues argue, the right was able to ‘harness’ the press to its cause because of journalists’ preoccupation with ‘balance’ and eagerness for scoops. They note that the press had an institutional problem: How would it maintain balance if reporters did hard-hitting stories about Trump? Borrowing from a study by Thomas E. Patterson, they conclude that the solution was to run equally hard-hitting stories about Hillary Clinton. Journalists ‘performed’ neutrality with harshly negative coverage of both candidates.”

The media countered many articles about real Trump misbehaviors with even more articles about “alleged” Clinton misbehaviors.  The net result was that Hillary Clinton was accorded more negative coverage than Donald Trump

“In fact, according to Patterson’s analysis, negative coverage of Clinton outpaced positive coverage 62 percent to 38 percent, while coverage of Trump was 56 percent negative to 44 percent positive.”

So much for “liberal bias” in mainstream media.

 

Wednesday, January 18, 2023

Covid Infections, Long Covid, Mortality, and Morbidity: Take Care

 The attitude towards possible Covid infection has relaxed considerably over the past year.  People seem willing to accept a Covid encounter if the risk to life is small.  Most people don’t seem to be aware of the fact that Covid differs from the flu in that while the respiratory system is the normal point of access for both, the flu remains active there while the Covid virus can migrate to the rest of the body’s organs and do damage.  The brain and cardiovascular system appear to be of particular interest to the virus.  A significant number of infected people will have long-term health issues after the initial infection has dissipated.  This effect has earned the designation “long Covid.”  The level of long Covid incidence seems to depend on who is surveying the population and what is the threshold for concern.  The state of knowledge of long Covid as of a year ago was discussed in The Covid Pandemic Has Been Terrible, but We Do Not Yet Know How Terrible.  The concern at the time was that the costs and resources needed to treat an ever-growing number of long Covid sufferers could produce a medical catastrophe.  That concern has not gone away.

Jason Gale provided an interesting assessment of the current state of knowledge in an article for Bloomberg Businessweek: Long Covid’s Effects Go Beyond Respiratory Issues.  That is the online title, the one in the paper edition had the more intriguing title Covid Cluster Bomb.  Gale begins with this lede.

“The coronavirus can attack multiple organs and weaken overall immunity for months. Its impacts are evident in global death rates that remain high.”

“Virus-damaged organs and compromised immune systems are just part of Covid’s public-health legacy; there’s also a litany of secondary effects still being measured, ranging from increases in mental illness to delays in getting cancer treatment. Some doctors also blame Covid for worsening the effects of other diseases, as with the cases of flu and respiratory syncytial virus [RSV] now mobbing children’s hospitals.”  

The greatest concern is that a Covid infection can produce long-term morbidities (illnesses) that can lead to early death long after the initial encounter.

“Unlike influenza, which attacks the lining of the airways, SARS-CoV-2 resembles a multisystem cluster bomb. ‘That’s a total game changer, because it’s not just your lungs,’ says Sonia Sharma, an associate professor at the Center for Autoimmunity and Inflammation at the La Jolla Institute for Immunology, near San Diego. ‘You’ve got a battle going on between the virus and your immune system, and that battle can happen in almost any organ’.”

“In the most insidious cases, Covid silently inflames and damages tissues or causes clotting abnormalities before manifesting as cardiovascular disease, diabetes, kidney impairment or brain damage. Multiple studies show former Covid patients who had disease at all levels of severity have an increased risk of dying or being hospitalized for complications 6 to 12 months later. An estimated 7.7 million to 23 million Americans are affected by long Covid, the Department of Health and Human Services said in a report in November.”

Detailed studies of effects on specific organs are beginning to become available.  Consider the affects of infection on kidneys.

“In the year after a Covid infection, patients experienced a decline in kidney function equivalent to that from four years of normal aging, according to research by epidemiologist Ziyad Al-Aly, director of the Clinical Epidemiology Center at the Veterans Affairs St. Louis Health Care System in Missouri. Even nonhospitalized Covid patients with no preexisting renal problems have almost a twofold higher risk of developing end-stage kidney disease, compared with someone who’s never had Covid.”

Similar effects seem to be occurring in other organs leading to life-threatening illnesses.

“Compared with noninfected counterparts, survivors have about a 63% increased risk of an array of potentially deadly cardiovascular problems, including abnormal heartbeat, inflammation, clots, strokes, heart attacks and heart failure in the year after recovering from the illness’s acute phase, according to a study by Al-Aly and colleagues, published in February. ‘Once the inflammatory process rages through, it’s like a war zone in some patients,’ says Andreas Bart, medical director of the Center for Inherited Heart Diseases at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore. ‘They might not have died immediately from Covid but from the complications of acute Covid disease’.”

A Lancet article, Long-term mortality followingSARS-CoV-2 infection: A national cohort study from Estonia, supports these results and indicates even incidences of cancer are more frequent after a Covid infection, and that older people with age-weakened immune systems are the most vulnerable.

“Importantly, as per our results, increased mortality among those infected with SARS-CoV-2 extends beyond early (acute COVID) period. We observed an excess of cardiovascular, cancer, respiratory and other diseases related mortality extending over a year among the older SARS-CoV-2 cases. We believe this to be a significant finding. After the acute disease period, the older SARS-CoV-2 cases were at increased risk for respiratory diseases, malignant neoplasms, and cardiovascular deaths.”

With present attitudes toward Covid, it is likely that eventually everyone will be infected, many people several times.  This from Gale.

“While vaccination has been shown to attenuate the disease initially caused by SARS-CoV-2, repeated infections appear to compound the risk of harm, a study published in November in the journal Nature Medicine showed. Three in five Americans had been infected with the coronavirus at least once as of February, up from 33% a year ago. ‘You’re talking really large numbers and lots of people who were exposed, but may not even know they were affected,’ says Harlan Krumholz, director of Yale University’s Center for Outcomes Research and Evaluation. A proportion of patients may develop complications much later. ‘That’s going to also take a major toll—maybe a bigger toll than even the pandemic itself,’ he says.” 

Old people, let the young do dumb things on the assumption that they will live forever, but for us some appropriate masking and social distancing is still a good idea.

 

Tuesday, January 3, 2023

Common Law and Constitutional Interpretation

 In the article Originalism’s Charade from the New York Review, David Cole provided a thorough trashing of originalism as a method of performing constitutional interpretation (see Constitutional Law and Originalism: Assemble Your Biases, Formulate a Justification).  In so doing, he destroyed the legal theory designed to support radical conservative political reasoning.  He then pointed out that those supporting a more flexible constitutional interpretation needed a comparable, easily explained framework with which to counter conservatives.  He used a review of a book by James E. Fleming, “Constructing Basic Liberties: A Defense of Substantive Due Process,” to illustrate an appropriate approach: common law constitutional interpretation.

This methodology would have been well understood by the framers of the Constitution because it was consistent with English law, the system under which they were living, and had always lived.  Under this system, referred to as “common law,” statutory law was supplemented by a judicial procedure in which the vagueness of statutes could be elucidated by judicial rulings based on judicial precedents and public appraisal thereof.  Additional legal rulings could be generated in the same manner whenever disputes arose that were not explicitly covered by statutory law.  This is precisely the approach that all judges have had to take when facing a new legal situation: follow judicial precedents informed by public response, and vary rulings when precedent no longer provides an adequate response.  Constitutional interpretation can be carried out in precisely the same manner, an approach that arguably is what the Constitution’s authors expected. 

“Scalia and other originalists have routinely charged that this failure to spell out with specificity an alternative theory of constitutional interpretation means that judges using these methods are free to impose their own personal value judgments.”

“But there is a familiar and sensible alternative—familiar because every judge and justice in the history of the United States has employed it most of the time, even the few who profess on occasion to be originalists. This method starts with the text of the Constitution but recognizes that the ways its broad and open-ended provisions apply will be elucidated gradually over time as judges confront particular cases and seek to make sense of what has gone before, analogize from precedent to contemporary circumstances, and explain their reasoning to provide guidance for the future. The University of Chicago law professor David Strauss has called this method ‘common law constitutional interpretation.’ It’s what judges at every level have always done when they confront new cases not fully covered by past decisions. When the Supreme Court takes up, for example, whether the Constitution precludes regulation of content on the Internet or whether Congress can require individuals to purchase health insurance, it does not simply try to divine what the founding generation would have understood about something they never thought about, but instead looks to its own precedents on the relevant provision, identifies the principles that unite them, and explains how it understands them to apply to the new circumstance. Those explanations are then subject to the test of public scrutiny, academic critique, and subsequent review.”

When constitutional law is taught to budding legal scholars, they are not trained to memorize and analyze the precise wording in the Constitution, they are trained to understand the legal reasoning in the hundreds of judicial cases that have supported the evolution of our society under the umbrella of the written Constitution.  It is this process that has allowed our nation to progress and to prosper.

“For this reason, when law professors teach constitutional law, we assign casebooks, composed of hundreds of significant decisions handed down over more than two centuries, not eighteenth-century dictionaries. It is the Court’s evolving decisions, much more than the ‘original meaning,’ that define what the Constitution means today. While interpretation of the First Amendment may start with the words ‘Congress shall make no law,’ the meaning of free speech is not to be found in those words’ ‘original meaning,’ but in the hundreds of cases that the Supreme Court has decided over the years, employing an incremental common law method that has resulted in a far more robust First Amendment today than the framers envisioned.”

Originalism is a radical political construct designed to limit progress in our society and in our economy.  There is a better way.

 

Sunday, January 1, 2023

Constitutional Law and Originalism: Assemble Your Biases, Formulate a Justification

 The Supreme Court produced momentous decisions in its last session.  The most consequential was the overturning of Roe v. Wade using logic that could be used to overturn any right that society has gained since the Civil War.  The unpopular rulings, and the potential for more rights restrictions to follow, unleashed an outcry labeling the conservative Republican-selected justices as little better than political operatives.  These operatives of course had a legal theory to fall back on to justify their actions:  originalism.  Avowed political operatives have been honing this philosophy for decades in preparation for the time when a majority of suitably indoctrinated justices could take control of the Supreme Court and perform their political duties.  David Cole provided an appropriate drubbing of originalism’s conservative intents in an article in the New York Review of Books: Originalism’s Charade.  His take is prompted by a review of the book “Worse Than Nothing: The Dangerous Fallacy of Originalism” by Erwin Chemerinsky.

The simplicity and logic of originalism can be compelling to the conservative reader, but in practice it cannot be implemented without the entry of the personal biases it claims to eliminate.  In its most concise form, the theory claims that the Constitution should be interpreted in terms of its “original meaning,” that intended by the Constitution’s authors.

“This theory rejects the idea that constitutional norms can evolve through judicial decision-making; the only legitimate way to update constitutional law, its proponents insist, is to amend the Constitution, a process requiring supermajorities in Congress and the states that are virtually impossible to achieve.”

“In Worse Than Nothing, Erwin Chemerinsky, the dean of the University of California, Berkeley, School of Law and one of the nation’s leading constitutional scholars, offers a concise, point-by-point refutation of the theory. He argues that it cannot deliver what it promises—and if it could, no one would want what it is selling. Many eminent scholars and jurists have previously exposed originalism’s flaws, including Ronald Dworkin, Stephen Breyer, John Hart Ely, and Bruce Ackerman, but few have done so as clearly, succinctly, and persuasively as Chemerinsky.”

The fundamental weakness of the concept is that “original intent” cannot be determined.  If the framers of the Constitution had wished their legacy to be a document to be followed explicitly until the end of time, they would have included detailed explanations of what they had in mind.  They did not, leaving short phrases with vague terms to be argued over.  Compromise was the order of the day.  More precise declarations might have rendered the eventual agreement on wording unattainable.  Yet, modern-day originalists claim they can provide a clear interpretation.

“Originalists must first decide which historical evidence counts, and as every historian knows, that requires a great deal of judgment. Early versions of originalism referred to the “original intent” of the framers, but little evidence of their intent exists. The records of the Constitutional Convention are sparse; we are left largely to rely on James Madison’s notes, but their objectivity has been questioned.”

“Furthermore, even if we could know precisely what went on behind the closed doors of the Constitutional Convention, the framers did not have authority to bind the nation themselves. The Constitution took effect only upon the votes of the state ratifying conventions, so if any intentions are relevant, it would be theirs. But there is even less evidence available regarding the ratifying conventions. And even if we had verbatim transcripts of each state’s ratifying convention, how does one determine the intent of a collective body—or in this case, of multiple collective bodies? Original intent is a theoretical construct, not a fact in the world.”

After years of criticism, the originalists had to give up on the origins of originalism and construct a new version of their theory

“So the revised version of originalism directs judges instead to the ‘original meaning’ of the Constitution, that is, what its words meant to the public when they were adopted. Original meaning is guided by dictionaries of the time, as well as contemporaneous usage and practice. But dictionaries often provide multiple definitions for a given term, legal meanings can differ from ordinary meanings, and contemporaneous practices often varied greatly, even assuming that the Constitution was meant to codify some of them.”

“Thus, Chemerinsky argues, ‘for most constitutional provisions, there is no “original meaning” to be discovered. Instead, there is a range of possibilities that allows for exactly the judicial discretion that originalism seeks to eliminate’.”

Perhaps the most serious objections to originalism, and certainly the most frightening, arise from considerations of issues that were not directly considered at the time constitutional language was written.

“The Constitution gives Congress the power to create an army and a navy. But can Congress create an air force? Only if one reads the references to ‘army’ and ‘navy’ more broadly, as authorizing standing military forces.”

The Fourteenth Amendment was motivated by the need to provide “equal protection” for freed slaves.  What exactly does “equal protection” mean?  What does it mean to an originalist? 

“When the Court in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization declared Roe ‘egregiously wrong,’ its reasoning rested squarely on originalism. The Court in Roe had held that outlawing abortion infringed the Fourteenth Amendment’s prohibition on ‘depriv[ing] any person of…liberty…without due process of law.’ That couldn’t be right, five justices in Dobbs concluded, because abortion was a crime in most states when the Fourteenth Amendment was adopted in 1868, and there was no evidence that those who drafted or ratified it understood it to invalidate those laws. Since the amendment did not have that meaning then, it cannot have that meaning now.”

This interpretation provides the potential to return our society 150 years back in time. 

“More significantly, does the equal protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment prohibit racial segregation? If one reads the term ‘equal protection’ in light of contemporaneous practices in 1868, one would conclude that segregation was permissible—as seven of eight Supreme Court justices did in Plessy v. Ferguson (1896). To hold that segregation is prohibited, one must read the guarantee of equal protection at a higher level of generality and apply its principle of equality in a way that the ratifying generation would not have.”

“The same is true for whether the clause prohibits sex discrimination. In 1868, women lacked the vote and were excluded from many professions, including the practice of law. And the immediate aim of the amendment was to protect newly freed slaves, not women. It wasn’t until the 1970s, in the midst of the women’s rights movement, that the Supreme Court interpreted it to presumptively prohibit sex discrimination.” 

The present court is scheduled to decide on affirmative action soon.  It has signaled it is prepared to rule against any race-based consideration with respect to affirmative action even though race-based actions to assist former slaves were deemed acceptable after passage of the Fourteenth Amendment.

“Challengers have argued that the equal protection clause requires ‘color-blindness’ and therefore categorically prohibits any consideration of race in admissions. Defenders of affirmative action—which the Court has repeatedly endorsed, at least in circumscribed form, for about fifty years—argue that the Freedmen’s Bureaus created in the aftermath of the Civil War demonstrate that race-conscious action was not deemed a violation of equal protection where it was adopted to aid newly freed slaves or, depending on one’s level of generality, African Americans or disadvantaged groups…Yet it is likely that the Court’s conservative (and originalist) justices will declare affirmative action unconstitutional by reading the equal protection clause at an even higher level of generality as a ban on all consideration of race, discounting evidence of its more specific meaning when adopted.”

The most obvious characteristic of originalism as a means of constitutional interpretation is that it need be applied only when convenient in attaining political goals.

“Last term, for example, five justices invoked originalism to overturn Roe v. Wade. But the same five voted in Carson v. Makin to require Maine to fund its citizens’ attendance at private religious schools if it funded their attendance at private secular schools. Chemerinsky writes:

For two centuries, the First Amendment to the Constitution was understood to prohibit direct support of any religion.  Conservative Republican justices have been planning on overturning the Constitution in this area for years.”

“With the original meaning against them, the originalist justices in Carson simply ignored the original understanding and instead justified their result by the non-originalist method of extrapolating from two recent decisions that similarly defied the establishment clause’s original meaning.”

How far might this court go in restricting established rights and freedoms?  Consider Clarence Thomas.

“In Dobbs, Thomas wrote separately to argue that the Court should reconsider—on the same originalist grounds it invoked to eliminate the right to abortion—the rights to use contraception, to engage in sexual intimacy with a consenting adult partner, and to marry someone of the same sex. The four justices who joined Thomas in the majority insisted that their decision did not place these other rights in peril, but without explaining how, from an originalist vantage point, they are any different.” 

“Thomas has also advocated abandoning fundamental First Amendment protections for the press and any constitutional rights at all for children, because these rights were not recognized in 1791 or 1868. And he maintains that the establishment clause should apply only to the federal government, leaving states free to fund or even endorse specific religious denominations. The fact that he stands alone on almost all these positions only underscores the illegitimacy of originalism. If a theory cannot be applied consistently without consequences that are untenable even to most of its proponents, it’s an untenable theory. And if those consequences lead its practitioners to abandon the theory on a regular basis, it hardly constrains judicial discretion in a meaningful way.” 

As the Republicans become crazier, Supreme Court decisions will become crazier.

 

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