Quote:
Originally Posted by mosholu
Detbuch:
I believe all judge's decisions regardless of the time period are informed by their own political beliefs and inclinations and if you look at the Supreme Court there have been periods where different ideologies have held sway with different degrees of impact.
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Not as much as one would conclude by how the Court has adjudicated for the past 75 years. The period between the FDR Court to now is the time when adherence to the text of the Constitution was deliberately discarded in favor of desired political outcomes. There are various reasons for that, the main being the prevalence of progressive philosophy in our universities and educational institutions and the efforts of progressive politicians which culminated in the FDR administration all-out attack on the Constitution. This is all well documented and easily researched. That only "radical" Tea Party types and conservative talk radio, and "radical right wing" politicians discuss it, is due, again, to how our elites in the media, and the rest of us for that matter, have been educated, and the gradual acceptance of generations of the status-quo. Current generations have known only this, and accept it as correct.
Though there were some differences in Constitutional interpretation before FDR, they were not major deviations from the Constitution and the greatest problem was the slavery issue. Not that there were not attempts to expand Federal power beyond Constitutional enumerations, some of which may have succeeded to some degree, but there was no great (except for slavery) disagreement on Constitutional authority between those of opposing parties. Even Grover Cleveland, a Democrat, vetoed hundreds of bills (I think it was hundreds--it was a lot) because he considered them to be unconstitutional. Judges were not forced to consider a barrage of assaults on the Constitution because there weren't that many. And when they adjudicated, there was far more faithfulness to Constitutional text and intention.