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Justice Scalia, the Death Penalty, and Divine Right

 
 
Matthew Fluxington
20:09 / 10.07.02
There is a very good op/ed piece in the New York Times today which criticizes Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia for his recent comments about the death penalty in which he claims that God gave the leaders of men divine authority; and that democracy undermines divine right of leaders, because it makes it seem that the people choose the leader, not God. Hence, democracy undermines the death penalty.

Clearly, this is disturbing on a great many levels. It certainly isn't pleasing devout Catholics - many of whom are irate because Scalia is going against The Pope's view on the death penalty issue. It's terrifying that this man has the power and influence that he has - remember, this is one of the men who installed George W. Bush into the White House. That this man is a widely respected judge from the highest court in the United States, yet clearly does not believe in even the most basic ideas behind the Constitution is a total outrage.

Here's the NY Times op/ed piece in full for those who do not want to register or pay for the article at a later date:

From Justice Scalia, a Chilling Vision of Religion’s Authority in America

By SEAN WILENTZ

PRINCETON, N.J.

Earlier this year Antonin Scalia decided to share some aspects of his worldview with the public. His inspiration seems to have been the death penalty: recent debates with his colleagues on the Supreme Court and his general reflections on the legitimacy of the state taking to itself the power to kill a citizen. Justice Scalia spoke on these matters at the University of Chicago Divinity School in January, beginning with the ritual disclaimer that "my views on the subject have nothing to do with how I vote in capital cases"; his remarks appeared in the May issue of First Things: The Journal of Religion and Public Life. They are supplemented by his dissent to the court's decision on June 20 that mentally retarded people should not be executed. Justice Scalia's remarks show bitterness against democracy, strong dislike for the Constitution's approach to religion and eager advocacy for the submission of the individual to the state. It is a chilling mixture for an American.

Because Mr. Scalia is on the Supreme Court, and because President Bush has held him up as an example of judicial greatness, his writings deserve careful attention.

Mr. Scalia seems to believe strongly that a person's religious faith is something that he or she (as a Roman Catholic like Mr. Scalia) must take whole from church doctrine and obey. In his talk in Chicago, Mr. Scalia noted with relief that the Catholic Church's recent opinion that the death penalty was very rarely permissible was not "binding" on Catholics. If it had been, Mr. Scalia said, this teaching would have led the church to "effectively urge the retirement of Catholics from public life," given that the federal government and 38 states "believe the death penalty is sometimes just."

Mr. Scalia apparently believes that Catholics, at least, would be unable to uphold, as citizens, views that contradict church doctrine. This is exactly the stereotype of Catholicism as papist mind control that Catholics have struggled against throughout the modern era and that John F. Kennedy did so much to overcome. But Mr. Scalia sees submission as desirable — and possibly the very definition of faith. He quotes St. Paul, "For there is no power but of God: the powers that be are ordained of God."

"The Lord," Mr. Scalia explained in Chicago, "repaid — did justice — through His minister, the state."

This view, according to Mr. Scalia, once represented the consensus "not just of Christian or religious thought, but of secular thought regarding the powers of the state." He said, "That consensus has been upset, I think, by the emergence of democracy." And now, alarmingly, Mr. Scalia wishes to rally the devout against democracy's errors. "The reaction of people of faith to this tendency of democracy to obscure the divine authority behind government should not be resignation to it, but the resolution to combat it as effectively as possible," he said in Chicago.

Mr. Scalia is right about one thing. Modern democracy did upset the divine authority of the state. That has usually been considered by Americans to have been a step forward. The great 17th-century dissenter Roger Williams declared that government derived no authority whatsoever from God, but was "merely human and civil." Thomas Jefferson put matters bluntly in 1779: "[O]ur civil rights have no dependence on our religious opinions any more than on opinions in physics or geometry."

That view prevailed among the framers at Philadelphia in 1787. Throughout their debates, even when they prayed for divine guidance, they rejected the idea that political authority lay with anyone or anything other than the sovereign people. The only extended discussion of religion in the Federalist Papers has James Madison listing zeal in religious opinion as one of "the latent causes of faction" that cause men "to vex and oppress each other" and that need institutional checks.

There have always been Americans who have thought as Justice Scalia does now. In 1781 a Massachusetts minister, Jonas Clark, preached that religion is "the source of liberty, the soul of government and the life of a people." But ever since the Revolution, this has been a minority view, even an eccentric one, among Americans. It has had no appreciable place in our constitutional history because the framers rejected it.

They had many reasons for doing so, not least the factionalism mentioned by Madison. They had an idea that sovereignty rested with a free people, even if some among those people didn't believe in God, or in the same God, or in the same way.

Such a belief in the worth of people independent of religious considerations (whether their own or those of the state) has distinguished secular democracy. This seems to irritate Mr. Scalia. It seems to indicate a humanist egotism that might lead a person to think individual lives are so valuable that it is not the privilege of the state to take them. "Indeed, it seems to me," Mr. Scalia said in Chicago, "that the more Christian a country is the less likely it is to regard the death penalty as immoral. Abolition has taken its firmest hold in post-Christian Europe, and has least support in the churchgoing United States. I attribute that to the fact that for the believing Christian, death is no big deal."

This might imply that the death penalty would have little deterrent effect for the faithful. It might also imply that devout Christians have fewer moral scruples about disregarding the Old Testament's injunction against killing. ("For the nonbeliever, on the other hand, to deprive a man of his life is to end his existence," Mr. Scalia said sarcastically. "What a horrible act!") But that is not quite Mr. Scalia's point. He wants us to know that Catholics and perhaps other religiously minded people have the moral sense to hold their own wills as slight things compared to those of God and His minister, the state — with the partial exception of judges.

In Chicago, Mr. Scalia argued strenuously that in America a judge who morally opposed the death penalty ought to resign. "Of course," Mr. Scalia said, "if he feels strongly enough he can go beyond mere resignation and lead a political campaign to abolish the death penalty — and if that fails, lead a revolution."

But leading a revolution would inevitably bring some interference with the application of laws, not to mention all the other atrocities that typically attend revolutions. Only a judge could think it better to play Robespierre than to issue too ambitious an opinion.

One senses that Mr. Scalia's true priority is to get secular humanists off the federal bench. In his dissent to Atkins v. Virginia, the recent decision against executing mentally retarded criminals, Mr. Scalia wrote, "Seldom has an opinion of this Court rested so obviously upon nothing but the personal views of its members." The ones he had in mind were not all the members, just the six who disagreed with him. Mr. Scalia dissents vigorously against them for letting their personal notions infect the law.

In Chicago Mr. Scalia asserted, not for the first time, that he is a strict constructionist, taking the Constitution as it is, not as he might want it to be. Yet he wants to give it a religious sense that is directly counter to the abundantly expressed wishes of the men who wrote the Constitution. That is not properly called strict constructionism; it is opportunism, and it threatens democracy. His defense of his private prejudices, even if they may occasionally overlap the opinions of others, should not be mislabeled conservatism. Justice Scalia seeks to abandon the intent of the Constitution's framers and impose views about government and divinity that no previous justice, no matter how conservative, has ever embraced.

(Sean Wilentz, co-author of "The Kingdom of Matthias," directs the American studies program at Princeton.)
 
 
Hieronymus
01:05 / 11.07.02
Absolutely terrifying Flux. Thank you for posting that. It continues to amaze me how the same organizations that are pro-life are maddeningly pro-capital punishment. Life is only sacred if you're a child or are white & wealthy or, obviously, you keep your nose clean, your head down and do not question the divine authority of the state.

I'd address this in more thought-out detail but I have to go outside and kick something over.
 
 
alas
17:12 / 16.07.02
there's just enough scalia in the bush administration to make comparisons to _the handmaid's tale_ pretty frighteningly apt. but maybe maybe maybe the us is getting ready to swing the other way for awhile?

i don't know what else to say--except for the fact that it's heartening that the NY times, which has been pretty conservative of late, in my view, pushlished this piece, not some much more left-leaning publication like _the nation_ (sorry, can't be bothered with html-ing today, which I inevitably mess up, anyway.)
 
 
w1rebaby
17:41 / 16.07.02
thanks for linking to that

the major thing that struck me while reading it was: curious how Muslim theocrats are branded dangerous and evil for rejecting democracy in favour of obedience to "divine authority", yet this man remains. Also, didn't the divine right of kings (governments) fall out of favour some centuries ago?
 
 
Jack Fear
18:01 / 16.07.02
Other choice bits from Scalia's speech:

--Rejects the notion of the Constitution as a "living document," calling it instead "dead--or, as I prefer to think of it, enduring."

--Refers to the notion of "evolving standards of decency" as a fallacy.

Those two tidbits are just abhorrent: but there are two glaring instances of self-contradiction.

Firstly, for all his talk of submission to authority and drawing his notions of just retribution from specifically Catholic dogma, he explicitly rejects a Papal encyclical against capital punishment--which, in effect, makes him a heretic.

Secondly, he rails against the very notion of civil disobedience--"which proceeds on the assumption that what the individual citizen considers an unjust law—even if it does not compel him to act unjustly—need not be obeyed." He cites St. Paul in his argument against civil disobedience.

Now, pardon me, but was not St. Paul himself a follower of an executed criminal, a deserter, and thus a criminal himself?
 
 
invisible_al
20:01 / 16.07.02
Well thats me, despite everything thats happened in the last year or so, shocked. What the fuck is going on here, who let this man anywhere near the bench? And the supreme court at that.

>He quotes St. Paul, "For there is no power but of God: the powers >that be are ordained of God."
>"The Lord," Mr. Scalia explained in Chicago, "repaid — did justice — >through His minister, the state."

You WHAT? Divine right of rulers? Well at least he seems to be pretty far out as far as even the right wing get? Right? Or has it got the point in the state where the right wing don't have to be 'in the closet' about this kind of thing. Quoting St. Paul always sets off warning bells as he was a reactionary, even if he was a revolutionary at one point.

What is the count now, three years or so to go.....just checked it's, as I write, 918 days to go.
 
 
Jack Fear
11:20 / 17.07.02
But of course Justice Scalia's tenure on the bench has nothing to do with Bush's term in office--remember, he's there 'til he either dies or decides to retire...
 
 
Matthew Fluxington
12:27 / 17.07.02
What the fuck is going on here, who let this man anywhere near the bench? And the supreme court at that.

Ronald Reagan put him on the Supreme Court in 1986. Nuff said, really.
 
 
MJ-12
15:20 / 17.07.02
But of course Justice Scalia's tenure on the bench has nothing to do with Bush's term in office--remember, he's there 'til he either dies or decides to retire...

...or he gets caught trying to knock over a liquor store. There's always hope.
 
 
odd jest on horn
01:35 / 18.07.02
offtopic:
Can't Tom get into seriously deep shit for having that article verbatim on his site? Copyright anyone?
 
 
We're The Great Old Ones Now
07:32 / 18.07.02
[offtopic] It's not ideal, but since there is a link to the NYT, since the article is accredited, and since the NYT service is free, I don't think he's in any immediate danger. A series of quotes with comment might have been cleaner than clean, legally, but I think suing a message board which is discussing your article in depth is probably counter-productive anyway...
 
 
YNH
18:33 / 18.07.02
I think it's actually fair use, or would be if it came to that.
 
 
Baz Auckland
19:16 / 11.01.03
Illinois Commutes All Death Sentences!

Woohoo!

"Because the Illinois death penalty system is arbitrary and capricious — and therefore immoral — I (the gov.) no longer shall tinker with the machinery of death," he said.
 
 
bjacques
17:31 / 12.01.03
And a Republican governor at that. As a slap at people like Justice Scalia, Gov. Ryan even used the phrase "tinker with the machinery of death" of the late Supreme Court Justice Harry Blackmun who, in 1994, reversed his lifelong support for the death penalty.

Ryan's act wasn't about leniency, but to stop the state of Illinois from killing innocent people, a point which a lot of people missed. Of the 112 convicted killers, only 4 walked, and that's because the cops beat confessions out of them. He'd been leaning in this direction for years.

While even supporters of the death penalty, in whatever state, have admitted mistakes are made, they've tried to shorten the time limit for appeals, to as short as 4 or 6 years. But one web page I visited said it's taken an average of 11 years to clear someone who was on Death Row. So, execute somebody quickly enough and the issue of innocence is swept safely under the rug. Plus, the state saves money on appeals or even feeding the condemned any longer. And the Supreme Court backs the states up every time.

Scalia calls himself a "strict constructionist" on the US Constitution, which should mean interpreting it very narrowly, but people so describing themselves are narrow only as regards rights of citizens, not powers granted to the federal government. Anyway, Scalia would have to address the troublesome language of the Second Amendment, and make all gun owners enlist in their respective state's National Guards. That would be political suicide--not for Scalia, but for the party that put him in.

One thing, though. Catholic anti-abortion groups in the US do tend to be anti-death penalty; it's the Protestant groups, especially Southern Baptists, who are less consistent. They like to nudge God's elbow if He's not dealing out divine retribution fast enough for them. Both Catholics and Protestants have been more than willing to scare women away from clinics, even if they weren't going for abortions, but some have stood on my side of the gate too.
 
 
zarathustra_k
00:36 / 15.01.03
------Secondly, he rails against the very notion of civil disobedience--"which proceeds on the assumption that what the individual citizen considers an unjust law—even if it does not compel him to act unjustly—need not be obeyed." He cites St. Paul in his argument against civil disobedience.------

Good point, Scalia also has a soft spot for anti-abortionists who use civil disobedience and other forms of democratic activism.
 
  
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