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Clarence Thomas and the Lost Constitution

4.19 (163 ratings by Goodreads)

English

By (author): Myron Magnet

When Clarence Thomas joined the Supreme Court in 1991, he found with dismay that it was interpreting a very different Constitution from the one the framers had writtenthe one that had established a federal government manned by the peoples own elected representatives, charged with protecting citizens inborn rights while leaving them free to work out their individual happiness themselves, in their families, communities, and states. He found that his predecessors on the Court were complicit in the first step of this transformation, when in the 1870s they defanged the Civil War amendments intended to give full citizenship to his fellow black Americans. In the next generation, Woodrow Wilson, dismissing the framers and their work as obsolete, set out to replace laws made by the peoples representatives with rules made by highly educated, modern, supposedly nonpartisan experts, an idea Franklin Roosevelt supersized in the New Deal agencies that he acknowledged had no constitutional warrant. Then, under Chief Justice Earl Warren in the 1950s and 1960s, the Nine set about realizing Wilsons dream of a Supreme Court sitting as a permanent constitutional convention, conjuring up laws out of smoke and mirrors and justifying them as expressions of the spirit of the age.

But Thomas, who joined the Court after eight years running one of the myriad administrative agencies that the Great Society had piled on top of FDRs batch, had deep misgivings about the new governmental order. He shared the framers vision of free, self-governing citizens forging their own fate. And from his own experience growing up in segregated Savannah, flirting with and rejecting black radicalism at college, and running an agency that supposedly advanced equality, he doubted that unelected experts and justices really did understand the moral arc of the universe better than the people themselves, or that the rules and rulings they issued made lives better rather than worse. So in the hundreds of opinions he has written in more than a quarter century on the Courtthe most important of them explained in these pages in clear, non-lawyerly languagehe has questioned the constitutional underpinnings of the new order and tried to restore the limited, self-governing original one, as more legitimate, more just, and more free than the one that grew up in its stead. The Court now seems set to move down the trail he blazed.

A free, self-governing nation needs independent-minded, self-reliant citizens, and Thomass biography, vividly recounted here, produced just the kind of character that the founders assumed would always mark Americans. Americas future depends on the power of its culture and institutions to form ever more citizens of this stamp. See more
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Product Details
  • Dimensions: 152 x 228mm
  • Publication Date: 20 Jun 2019
  • Publisher: Encounter BooksUSA
  • Publication City/Country: United States
  • Language: English
  • ISBN13: 9781641770521

About Myron Magnet

Myron Magnet author of The Founders at Home: The Building of America 17351817 was the editor of the Manhattan Institutes City Journal and is now its editor-at-large. He was awarded the National Humanities Medal in 2008.

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