The Common Good And The Law

     What happens when the Rule of Law and the Common Good conflict, in that strictly upholding the letter of the law causes a greater harm rather than prevent it, as would be the legitimate aim of the Rule of Law? This question is already addressed with the concept of “necessity” in the Common Law, and to various degrees in different jurisdictions, via what is often termed the “Necessity Defense.”

But this defense of the violation of the strict reading of the law is itself based in the Rule of Law and necessarily limited and generally requiring that the violation of the law, in order to be justified as necessary, must be the alternative to a worse violation of the law.

     The same logic could be extended to an official or a member of the military who may need to take actions that exceed their orders or similar situations where failure to take such actions due to exigent circumstances.

     But overall these are exception to the rule—not a refutation of the rule itself. If going beyond the limitations of the letter of the law is considered necessary, then it becomes incumbent on the person or persons who did so to nonetheless submit themselves to the law or authorities for judgement.   By doing so, one does not elevate themselves above the rules.

     What this does not do is justify ignoring the Rule of Law over some vague and amorphous “Common Good”. This is to relegate necessity of diverging from the letter of the law in order to protect the Rule of Law, into a false-dilemma fallacy that relegates the law as merely a suggestion to be superseded according to the whims of whomever can get away with it, or at least try to. An example of this is an attempt to invoke Thomas Jefferson to defend putting the “Common Good” over legal limitations and restrictions, with the specific example being the prosecution of Aaron Burr, who nonetheless was found innocent of Treason because the law, in fact, did prevail over Jefferson’s self-serving justification for his own actions.

     There is a difference between exceeding the authorization of law due to exigent and dire circumstances in wartime or organized armed revolt, and using the purported “common good” as an excuse to rule by arbitrarily and/or capriciously to subordinate the law itself. Such excuses are the hallmark of the disingenuous Left who justify modern Cultural Marxist ideas of “society justice” by invoking St. Thomas Aquinas.

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Sovereigntism

     One of the most misleading, including self-misleading, things a person can do is try to hard to fit things into preconceived boxes and categories. This can be particularly treacherous in an intellectual sense when self-segregated into an echo chamber. Your humble author believes that even wrong viewpoints can be insightful and/or informative, and thus worth considering, if for no other reason than to refine one’s own views, or at least the arguments therefor. One such interesting idea that many, if not most, have contemplated is “sovereigntism”.

     This political philosophy has been brought up by a Professor at Rutgers an opined upon by an exile from the Right.   Your humble author does not completely agree with either, but both bring up ideas to mull upon, and both are worth a biblio-libation, so as to speak.

     Specifically, the concept of “sovereigntism” is used to attempt to describe Trump and provide a historical basis for his positions. Trump is not really an isolationist, and though he doesn’t have a global or particularly outward looking governing philosophy, is more than willing to obsess over Greenland, Mexico, and Canada. The square to that circle is said to be found in the Lodge Reservations from a bit over a century ago.

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News of the Week (March 9th, 2025)

 

News of the Week for March 9th, 2025


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Firing Line Friday: The Politics of Henry Kissinger

     In the hopes of encouraging a more civil, and illuminating, discourse, here is another episode of William F. Buckley, Jr.’s “Firing Line”.

     With foreign relations in flux in this day and age, let us look back at the era of détente with William F. Buckley, Jr. discussing the politics of Henry Kissinger with Kissinger himself.

     Until next Friday.

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Quick Takes – Nature Rights: Forest Rights At The WEF; Nature vs. Lithium; Ecological Constitutional Rejection

     Another “quick takes” on items where there is too little to say to make a complete article, but is still important enough to comment on.

     The focus this time: Mother Nature sure is contentious by proxy

     First, a little mood music:

     Carrying on…

     Nothing makes you more certain that environmentalism is anti-human as nature rights for forests being championed by the World Economic Forum.

“We must reshape the relationship between capitalism and life itself. A groundbreaking concept is emerging — bestowing legal personality upon forests, enabling them to act as legal persons in global discourse. . . . This approach can guide us toward a renewed dialogue. Our forests are not mere resources but as representatives demanding their rightful voice.”

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The War On Pro-Life Pregnancy Centers

     The proponents of legalized abortion style themselves as “pro-choice” and that the choice of a woman or girl to have an abortion is sacrosanct and must be protected. Of course, that “choice” seems to only be protected in one direction, particularly in Nevada. Even before the overturning of Roe v. Wade, Nevada’s laws protected the right to an abortion such that the legislature was restricted from overturning that. But that protection wasn’t enough.

     This past Fall, a measure to enshrine the most extreme procedures with full dearth of limits was passed by the voters, and will become part of the state’s Constitution when passed again, as seems likely, in the Fall of next year. But even that isn’t enough for some. A bill, AB 101, has been introduced to the Nevada Assembly the belies the use of “choice” by attacking pregnancy centers that do not perform or refer people for abortions by labelling them “deceptive” in that “health care” and “pregnancy” is presumed to be one and the same. It reads, in part:

  1. A health care facility shall not make or disseminate, or cause to be made or disseminated, to the public in any newspaper or   other publication, in   any advertising device, over the Internet or   in any other manner a   statement that the health care facility knows or should know is deceptive concerning any service that is or is not offered by the health care facility.
  2. For the purposes of subsection 1, a statement is deceptive if the   statement includes, without   limitation, assertions to   mislead persons to believe   that the health   care facility provides   a health care service that the facility does not actually provide.

     The bill would empower the Attorney General, currently a Democrat planning to run for Governor in 2026 the power to punish a pro-life pregnancy center because they don’t offer “pregnancy” “healthcare” in the form of abortion services.

     Even worse, it regulates (and restricts) the use of medication to specifically to stop or reverse the initial stages of an abortion, but not cause one.

Upon determining that prescribing, dispensing or administering a medication   to stop or   reverse an abortion   meets generally accepted standards of the practice of medicine,   the Board may, in   consultation with the   State Board of   Osteopathic Medicine, State Board   of Nursing and   State Board of   Pharmacy, adopt regulations authorizing a physician or physician assistant to prescribe, dispense or administer medication to stop or reverse an abortion. Any such regulations must specify:

(a) Each   medication that a   physician or physician   assistant may prescribe, dispense or administer to stop or reverse an abortion; and

(b) The required procedures for prescribing, dispensing or administering a medication specified pursuant to paragraph (a) to stop or reverse an abortion.

     It’s only a “choice” if you choose what they want you to choose.

     The bill can be read here, or below:

Nevada AB101 (2025) by ThePoliticalHat

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The Memeification Of The GOP

     Over the past decade the Republican Party has transformed, for good or ill. For some, it was a purging of the “establishment” and “cuckservatives” and the rise of “fighters”. For others, it was a vehicle for vengeance and and emotional catharsis. Still yet for others, it is a way to grift and exploit the other two. But one thing for sure, it is slowly devolving into the the elephant in the same circus as the clowns—those trolls and meme lords who do it “for the lulz”. In much the manner of 4chan, it has gone from adults who have fun joking around amongst themselves into crap-posting social media obsessives. Oh, just amongst the overly online purported hoi polloi on social media, but by some of our highest elected and appointed officials. How bad has these memeification? So bad that the rape of minors has become fodder for the clown show of influencers and even a Rickroll by the official Twitter/X account of the House Judiciary Committee.

     The tweet was deleted but the internet is forever.

     The Republican Party has gone from a serious party that cared about making America better to one where the only palatable victory is “pwning the libs”. Fighting human trafficking or the pimping out of underage girls is passé and just not emotionally cathartic enough. No, you have to act like an online pre-juvenile joker.

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The Executive, Unitary Or Otherwise

     The system of checks and balances is one of the genius aspects of the Constitution of the United States. Each of the three branches are, or at least ought to be, supreme in their respective sphere with the Constitutional leadership commanding it’s own branch, but none commanding the whole government.

     Between them, Congress via Article I of the Constitution ought to be considered the first among equals, but equal nonetheless. They are constrained by the Constitution via the Supreme Court, and in part by the President via the power of the veto. The Supreme Court is constrained by the Constitution and via statutes enacted by Congress and the discretion of the administrator in chief (i.e. the President).

     The President is unitary executive that enacts the will of Congress, but is restrained by Congress and the Supreme Court alike. As Yuval Levin notes:

“A rough but useful rule of thumb would be that the president does command the executive branch but the executive branch does not command our government.”

     As such, while all executive power is wielded ultimately by the President, that power is not unlimited.   Indeed, ‘twould be an odd interpretation that the Constitution grants plenary power to the President subject to only enumerated or limited exceptions. This flies in the face of the very nature of the 10th Amendment as well as the worldview of the framers, who less than a decade prior were busy fighting for independence from a monarchy with less extensive powers than some would assert for the current President (though maybe not another President).

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News of the Week (March 2nd, 2025)

 

News of the Week for March 2nd, 2025


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Firing Line Friday: Tom Wolfe and The Painted Word

     In the hopes of encouraging a more civil, and illuminating, discourse, here is another episode of William F. Buckley, Jr.’s “Firing Line”.

     The pretentiousness of “art” that is supposed to “make you think” is something that still plagues us today just as much as it did half-a-century ago when William F. Buckley, Jr. and Tom Wolfe discussed the “answer in search of a question” that is the painted word of post-modernist art.

     Until next Friday.

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