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A Supreme Court Conversation

from: Dahlia Lithwick
to: Walter Dellinger

Are We All Legal Realists Now?

Posted Friday, June 22, 2007, at 6:01 PM ET

Dear Walter,

Welcome back to this, the best part of having the best job in the world. Can this possibly be our sixth year doing an end-of-the-Supreme-Court's-term analysis? Good grief. I think that makes it our constitutional iron anniversary. Will Monday morning find you back at Sutton's Drugstore? Or will you be joining me on Maryland Ave., where the press corps increasingly obsesses over grumpy dissenters who keep reading things aloud from the bench?

So much to talk about this week, including, I suppose, the fact that there is so little to talk about, given the record low number of cases heard this term. Is that a problem in your view?



We are both, of course, on tenterhooks awaiting the big desegregation/affirmative-action rulings, and I am anxious to hear what the guys at Sutton's have to say about the implications of that. There are also some interesting cases to come down dealing, among other things, with campaign-finance reform; taxpayer standing to sue the president over religion; and of course, whether "Bong Hits 4 Jesus" represents important, protected student speech.

Meanwhile, the Legal Commentariat's search for the One Big Theme for the 2006 term seems to have settled on this: The Roberts court is hopelessly split down purely ideological lines, and earlier promises of minimalism, restraint, and collegiality are pretty much down the toilet. Here's Jeff Toobin's assessment. Here's Eddie Lazarus'. Here is Jan Crawford Greenburg on the epic battle between the Roberts court and the Stevens court. And to anchor this take to specific cases, here is Tony Mauro on last week's decision in Bowles v. Russell, a case that appears to be symptomatic of the crabbed hyper-technical way the Roberts Five will hereinafter deal with habeas petitioners. So, is it true that the enduring lesson of the 2006 term is that, as Toobin suggests, "When it comes to the incendiary political issues that end up in the Supreme Court, what matters is not the quality of the arguments but the identity of the justices"? Are we all legal realists now?

But before we get to the Big Themes, let's do something we've been wanting to do for years. Walter, you are not just one of the finest appellate advocates in the bar, you're also a rocking constitutional-law professor. And every year you and I write these end-of-term reflections assuming (wrongly) that everyone who reads them went to law school. Since we still have some hours to kill before Monday's decisions, I wonder if I can impose upon you to teach our nonlawyer readers enough constitutional law to get them through the week. It seems rather a Slate-y endeavor—"The U.S. Constitution: Just the Juicy Bits." So, what say you, Obi-Wan?

Yours,
Dahlia

from: Dahlia Lithwick
to: Walter Dellinger

Are We All Legal Realists Now?

Posted Friday, June 22, 2007, at 6:01 PM ET
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Walter Dellinger is an attorney in Washington, D.C. and the Douglas B. Maggs professor of law at Duke. Dahlia Lithwick is a Slate senior editor. Stuart Taylor, a New York Times reporter from 1980-88, writes for National Journal and Newsweek.
Illustration by Rob Donnelly. Photograph of Justice Antonin Scalia on Slate's home page by Alex Wong/Getty Images.
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Remarks from the Fray:

This decision is a disappointment. Not in its result, because I strongly believe this is the correct decision. What is disappointing is that the Supremes chose to issue another decision that doesn't announce a guiding principle, and which applies only the present case. This reminds me of a classic Calvin & Hobbes cartoon, in which our heroes created an army of Snow Goons to battle the evil Susie Derkins. But the Snow Goons eventually turn on Calvin & Hobbes. After finally defeating the Snow Goons, Calvin says to Hobbes, "Well, we sure learned a valuable lesson today. And that lesson is this: Snow Goons are bad news!" To which Hobbes replies, "That's a lesson that ought not to have any applicability elsewhere in life."

This is a Snow Goons decision. It stands for the extremely narrow proposition that school districts can forbid expressions that appear to advocate recreational drug use. What about other messages that are contrary to the educational mission of the school? We don't know, because the Supreme Court is only interested in resolving for us the extremely pressing issue of whether "BONG HiTS 4 JESUS" is acceptable speech in an educational environment. Heaven help any school administrator who looks to this decision for guidance. […] Next year's landmark decision: "METH 4 MOSES"

--CaLawyer

(To reply, click here.)

I'm not a constitutional scholar, but how can Dellinger say that there is no harm to the taxpayers in Hein, and so no standing? Isn't the precedent, upheld by the FEC ruling, that spending money is a form of speech? And so isn't saying it's okay to spend my tax money on something sort of a tacit way of saying I agree with or I approve of what it is being spent on? So if my tax money is being spent to support religious institutions that I don't support or agree with, isn't that a violation of my first amendment rights? I mean isn't the harm that the government is essentially forcing me to support particular religious institutions that I might not agree with? Or by Dellinger's argument, would my case only have merit if I argued that having to support a specific religious institution with my tax money was violating my freedom to practice religion (or not) in the way I want.

I realize that there's a potential problem with the argument I've laid out b/c it opens the door to saying that spending tax dollars on anything that I don't approve of is a violation of my right to free speech. But I would think that there's probably a fairly clear way to distinguish between spending in general and spending that targets only specific religious institutions. Also, my argument isn't that the court should necessarily find for the taxpayer group in this case, but that I think that if the legislature or the executive branch is going to ask me to contribute money to religious groups...then I should at least be able to have the judiciary decide if they're doing it in a constitutional way.

--SlateSurfer

(To reply, click here.)

It looks like the student made a minor mistake. Instead of unfolding the banner at or near the school grounds, he should have purchased 15 seconds of add time on the local TV station, with video showing the banner and a somber voice advising viewers to call the school principal and ask why he opposes the banner.

--rrfan

(To reply, click here.)

With regard to the 1st Amendment's Establishment Clause, Dellinger writes, "Government prayer, bad . . . private prayer, good." Where, pray tell, does Dellinger find a prohibition on "government" in the 1st Amendment? Of course "the government" can be petitioned for a redress of grievances, but the key word in the text is "Congress" -- not "the state" and not "the government". The amendment places a limit on the actions of Congress, not on "government" in general. And "Congress" means "Congress" -- it doesn't mean "the Executive branch" or anything else that isn't Congress.

--Tori_Fox-Hunter

(To reply, click here.)

The courts always have trouble with humor. They're serious places filled with serious people in serious clothes doing serious things. Judges demand - and expect -respect, and don't tolerate jokes. Even when they talk about humor, they fall back on Important Satirists like Jonathan Swift, and don't discuss the equally subversive, but much funnier, Moliere.

So Lenny Bruce gets convicted of obscenity and George Carlin gets banned from the airwaves, but the American Nazi Party can march in Skokie and Saving Private Ryan can go on network TV. And if you want to convince a court that your speech deserves protection, you're much better off if there's a serious purpose, no matter how odious, than if you're trying to be funny.

The thing is, the First Amendment doesn't say "Congress shall make no law . . . abridging the freedom of serious speech," or "core political speech" or anything like that. Still, just as Chief Justice Roberts interpolated a pro-drug message into a nonsense phrase, judges seem to interpolate seriousness language into the First Amendment. It makes me think that maybe, just maybe, we would have been better off if Ben Franklin had been involved in the drafting of the Bill of Rights, rather than the other, very serious Founding Fathers. He, at least, understood the value of a good joke.

--randy-khan

(To reply, click here.)

Both Walter and Dahlia are taking the position that it isn't at all clear that "Bong hits 4 Jesus" advocates for illegal drug use. Perhaps I'm being naive, but I personally can't think of anything that "bong hits" could be referring to except smoking marijuana. What else would a high school student possibly mean by that phrase? If Walter and Dahlia were right, it would mean that school administrators would be prohibited from making reasonable inferences about colloquial phrases, and only the most explicit endorsements of illegal activity could be prohibited. To take an example almost anyone would find offensive, what if a student wore a T-shirt depicting a hooded figure holding a noose with the phrase "string em up high", and claimed that its referring to a pinata; could that be prohibited pursuant to Walter and Dahlia's interpretation of the law?

--Aagcobb

(To reply, click here.)

Dellinger's argument that the other branches should have a coequal or similar authority to interpret the Constitution as the judiciary is a very bad argument. […] This presents a slippery slope to all sorts of bad consequences, including Executive officials feeling they have the right to disobey judicial interpretations of the Constitution as well as laws of Congress that they don't agree with-- even if the President signed those laws rather than vetoing them!

The Bush Administration has effectively demonstrated these problems to a greater extent than could ever be imagined. Attempts are made to rely on standing and jurisdiction doctrines to keep matters out of court, and then the Executive Branch comes up with completely unreasonable and ridiculous interpretations of the law that are insulated from challenge. Signing statements are used to neuter statutes that are signed into law by the President.

Chief Justice Marshall in Marbury v. Madison had it right. It is entirely the province of the judiciary to say what the law is. Any other approach leads to a potential dictatorship.

--Dilan Esper

(To reply, click here.)

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