The
Glorification of Antonin Scalia
By Tom Carter
February
16, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
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"WSWS"
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The sickening
tributes across the official US political and media
spectrum to Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia,
who died suddenly on Saturday at the age of 79, are
a barometer of the putrefaction of American
democracy.
The
universal deference towards Scalia from what passes
for the “liberal” faction of the establishment is
particularly repulsive. The statements of the
Democratic presidential candidates, the supposed
“socialist” Bernie Sanders no less than Hillary
Clinton—echoing similarly sycophantic drivel from
the likes of the New York Times—are
monuments to political cowardice.
One would
say these people lack the courage of their
convictions if they had any convictions to lack!
They have
sprung into action to join their Republican
counterparts in hailing Scalia as a towering figure
in American jurisprudence. Virtually every
description of the deceased justice includes the
words “brilliant” and “intellectual.” One is
reminded of the programmed acclamation of Sergeant
Raymond Shaw recited by his brainwashed fellow
soldiers in the film The Manchurian Candidate:
“Raymond Shaw is the kindest, bravest, warmest, most
wonderful human being I've ever known in my life.”
Sanders
took time off from his hollow calls for a “political
revolution” to demonstrate his political obeisance
to the ruling class, declaring, “While I differed
with Justice Scalia’s views and jurisprudence, he
was a brilliant, colorful and outspoken member of
the Supreme Court.”
Clinton
praised Scalia as “a dedicated public servant who
brought energy and passion to the bench.”
President
Obama called Scalia a “towering legal figure.” The
New York Times’ Ross Douthat hailed Scalia
for “putting originalist principle above a partisan
conservatism,” and for his “combination of
brilliance, eloquence, and good timing.”
No one
dares say what needs to be said. The object of their
veneration was a black-robed thug and sadist who
used his position on the bench to attack the basic
civil liberties laid down in the US Constitution and
Bill of Rights—separation of church and state; due
process; protection from arbitrary arrest, search
and seizure; the right to trial by jury; protection
from cruel and unusual punishment; the right to
vote.
His
supposed juridical brilliance boiled down to
starting with the political outcome he desired
(invariably reactionary) and then cobbling together
pseudo-legal arguments to justify his ruling—often
with flagrant disregard for legal precedent and the
unambiguous language of statutes and constitutional
provisions.
In one case
last year, Scalia argued that a police officer did
not use “deadly force” when he climbed onto an
overpass and used an assault rifle to kill an
unarmed man fleeing in a car. According to Scalia’s
reasoning, it was not deadly force because the
officer claimed to have been aiming at the car, not
the person in the car.
Perhaps the
most infamous example of this method—absurdly
described in the media as “constitutional
originalism”—was the 2000 Supreme Court decision
Scalia engineered to halt the counting of votes in
Florida and hand the White House to the loser of the
election, Republican candidate George W. Bush.
The 5-4
decision to steal the election all but acknowledged
its own speciousness when it declared that the
justifications it advanced could not be applied to
any future cases. In his separate concurring
opinion, Scalia declared that the Constitution did
not give the people the right to elect the
president.
At the time
of the theft of the 2000 elections, the World
Socialist Web Site wrote that the Supreme
Court’s decision to stop the counting of votes, and
the acceptance of that ruling by the Democrats and
the entire political establishment, demonstrated
that there was no longer any significant
constituency for democratic rights within the
American ruling class. The reaction to Scalia’s
death is a measure of the further erosion of
democratic sentiment in the ruling elite.
Scalia
personified the decay of bourgeois democracy in the
United States over a protracted period of time.
Appointed to the bench by Ronald Reagan, he
flourished and exerted increasing influence in the
decades of political reaction, militarism and Wall
Street criminality that ensued, continuing without a
hitch under Obama. Not only in the anti-democratic
substance of his rulings, but also in his methods
and bearing, he embodied the promotion by the ruling
elite of backwardness, prejudice and outright
cruelty.
He was
corrupt and made no bones about his corruption,
proudly voting to remove limits on corporate bribes
in elections and flaunting his private outings with
Vice President Dick Cheney while the latter was a
party in a case before the court. He was a bully,
making a practice of baiting and harassing lawyers
who came before him.
Throughout
his career, Scalia consistently advocated positions
that can only be described as barbarous and
fascistic. Fittingly, his last judicial act was to
deny a stay of execution. He was a figure who
relished the power and trappings of the state,
openly defending torture and internment camps.
Scalia
worked tirelessly to break down constitutional and
democratic limits on state power, infiltrating
fascistic doctrines into Supreme Court
jurisprudence. His theory of executive power,
according to which the American president has
unlimited and unreviewable powers for the duration
of the “war on terror,” resurrects Nazi jurist Carl
Schmitt’s “state of exception” doctrine in all but
name.
Scalia’s
mere presence on the court testified to the advanced
decay of American democracy. That decay is linked,
on the one hand, to the extreme growth of social
inequality, accompanied by the rampant parasitism
and criminality of the ruling class, and on the
other hand to unending war, which has its domestic
reflection in the build up of the repressive state
apparatus that Scalia championed.
The
bitterness of the disputes over his replacement is a
reflection of the importance of his role in American
politics over three decades during which the
political establishment shifted violently to the
right.
The
deference shown to such a figure from all quarters
of the political establishment should be taken as a
warning by the working class. The ruling elite fears
above all the growth of social opposition and class
struggle. It exalts the legacy of Scalia because it
is preparing police state methods to defend its
power and property against an insurgent working
class.
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