You're Wrong About - Has the Supreme Court Always Been This Terrible? with Mackenzie Joy Brennan
Episode Date: July 22, 2024What is “originalism,” and what does it have to do with all these bribes? Mackenzie Joy Brennan has some answers.Find Mackenzie online here. Support You're Wrong About:Bonus Episodes on Patr...eonBuy cute merchWhere else to find us:Sarah's other show: You Are Good[YWA co-founder] Mike's other show: Maintenance PhaseLinks:https://www.mkzjoybrennan.com/https://www.teepublic.com/stores/youre-wrong-abouthttps://www.paypal.com/paypalme/yourewrongaboutpodhttps://www.podpage.com/you-are-goodhttp://maintenancephase.comSupport the Show.
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What even are words, if not a way to massage the average voter's brain into a jelly?
Welcome to You're Wrong About, the podcast where sometimes we ask, what is happening
and why is this allowed to be happening?
Today, I am talking to Mackenzie Joy Brennan,
attorney and constitutional scholar
about the Supreme Court,
some recent decisions of theirs you may have noticed,
is there a constitutional right to abortion?
No, and how many crimes can the president commit?
Most of them.
One of the difficult things, in my opinion, about being an American is that you can tell
something terrible is going on, but if you don't have the legal vocabulary to name what
you see happening according to the terminology chosen by the profession of the people making
it happen, you can feel too ignorant to be allowed
to have an opinion about it.
Or at least, that's how I feel sometimes.
That is why we are talking today with Mackenzie
about the Supreme Court, what it is, how it works,
what powers it claims to have, and what
it claims to derive them from.
And one of the central themes in the Supreme Court's claim to power
is the concept of originalism.
The idea that the nine justices sworn in for life
are uniquely able to interpret the desires and beliefs
of the founding fathers,
and that this, if it were possible,
would be the correct way to run a country.
The real driving question of this episode for me
is what is the Supreme
Court and is it destined to be the thing it is now?
And the answer is no.
The world looks a certain way today, but it doesn't have to look that way forever.
And it didn't look that way in the past.
We have that power.
Thank you for listening.
Welcome to Your Wrong About, the podcast where sometimes we just ask a question of mine that
I really want an answer for. And our guest today to help us in that quest is Mackenzie Joy Brennan.
Mackenzie, hello.
Hi, I'm so excited to be doing this, except for what brings us here.
Yes.
I mean, yeah, the last eight years potentially happened because somebody wished on a monkey's
paw that they would have something to write about as like a journalist or something covering America.
Oh my god, right?
Yeah, it's one of those things that, and I say this because I do abortion law as well,
the only thing I would like more than doing this type of work is not having a job, you
know, not having to represent people, not having to talk about this.
Yes, you're like Alan Grant in Jurassic Park.
Exactly.
Except not really, because I think he really wants to be on a dig intimidating a child.
Oh, for sure.
So I wanted you to answer my question, which I suspect is a question many of us have,
especially lately, which is, has the Supreme Court always been this terrible?
Does it have to be this terrible?
And what was it like before if there was one?
Those are great questions.
I want to preface everything with,
don't take anything I'm saying as back in the good old days,
because generally that type of reasoning,
especially with government,
means a lot of us lose our rights. So, you know, take everything I say in terms of where we started
out in the halcyon days of constitutional democracy with a grain of salt because I know that,
we know that, but what I will say is that there's been a real turn in politicization of the court
and in my humble opinion, I think
that really started with Robert Bork
and with the introduction of originalism.
So those are the threads that I was
thinking we could kind of trace through to answer what
the heck is going on today and why we're here.
I would love that.
OK.
Also, to start, I would love for you
to talk a little bit
about what your profession within the law is.
What is the law while we're on it?
What is your relationship to the Supreme Court?
Which is a weird question to be asking
as if I'm accusing you of having gone out with it.
Abusive relationship.
Yeah, take both of those however you want.
Right, so it's really sad to answer your last question first because I always saw the judicial
branches like the last bastion of civility, some sort of rule of law. You know, it's harder,
or it was for many years harder, to overturn precedent and that could be a good and a bad thing,
but that there was some degree of like objectivity and we must rely on this and we wear robes
and that's great.
So yeah, I went to law school in New York and worked for the New York Supreme Court
for a couple years under a judge there doing all sorts of civil law stuff, family law,
guardianship.
He was great, but I got the sense that like I was working for somebody who was an exception that
proved the rule a little bit that like,
oh damn, judges bring a lot more of their own biases and freedom to what they're doing.
And so then I did a hard pivot and started doing more media commentary work,
came back to my home state of Arizona just in time for all this abortion stuff to happen in Arizona.
Now I am still taking abortion cases, but most of what I do is media work and I'm with
Abortion Access Front right now. So that's my relationship with the law on a very personal
level. My late dad also wrote about originalism and his life's mission was debunking it. So he left that mantle behind for me to pick up
and here we are doing that.
It's gotten worse.
So there's a little bit of a family of superheroes
kind of equality to all this.
I love that.
Yeah, except that like nobody really cares
about our plaintiff call in the night
that this is all nonsense.
I care, I care about the constitution.
It has good parts. It's like Brian De Palma's
body double. Like you wouldn't say unequivocally it was a good movie, but you're like, listen,
there's great parts.
Totally. And I feel like that's, I know you and I talked about this a little bit before,
but that's what a lot of us on the more liberal side of things have kind of lost the opportunity
to do that like,
oh, the Constitution really was designed.
Yes, it was written by very flawed people and there are
necessary amendments that have been made over the years and even more so that we haven't made.
But there's a lot of good to it and they kind of knew what they were doing in terms of making it able to grow. We just have let
the rule of law really get co-opted by people who have not taken it that way and have co-opted it.
Sort of one of the first questions of this show is how long has originalism been around? Because
the name really does seem to imply that this is implies to me this episode should really be called
You're Wrong About the Legal System Sarah,
implies to me that it's been around since the beginning because it's called originalism. You just were like, well, it's old, right?
Right. That is the first intentional hoodwink because it really gained popularity in the 1980s.
A lot of people credit Robert Bork. And I think I paralleled before
that it's like when a country calls themselves like People's Republic or Democratic Republic,
just a mask that they're really not doing that. And originalism in using those words,
it gives it a certain degree of clout. And as I was researching this, I saw some places
now calling it constitutionalism, which
is even more brazen.
What even are words, if not a way to massage the average voter's brain into a jelly?
Oh my god.
I mean, you gotta hand it to conservatives that they really know how to play their semantic
games and it is working.
Yeah, the Clean Air Act.
Yeah, and even like Pro-Life.
No Child Left Behind, yeah.
No Child Left Behind, yeah.
But anyway, yeah, so Robert Borek
was the granddaddy of originalism,
and before he introduced that word,
he had a storied past in the more political sphere. I want to send you a picture of him because
he's everything that you would think of somebody. I'm going to quote from his book first and his
book is called Slouching Towards Gamora. No! Why? Is he like, move over, Chontidian? Yeah,
yeah. He's gonna rewrite the manifesto.
So he invade against liberals.
I'd call it electric Borkelo, but he didn't ask me.
Oh, I hate that.
He invade against liberals and premarital sex
and working mothers, saying,
a decline runs across our entire culture
and the rot is spreading.
Hmm. Okay.
I'm going to, okay, do I send it in the chat? This super hot pic?
Yeah.
Okay. All right. He's on his way.
Okay. Oh boy. Oh yeah. See, I recognize this face now that I see it. He looks like he plays
Abraham Lincoln for like town 4th of July events
Yeah, or we could say like Confederate general foil. Yeah
Civil war Civil War hair and beard. Yeah, so he also was part of
What was called the Saturday Night Massacre? And so that was when Nixon was being investigated for Watergate
massacre and so that was when Nixon was being investigated for Watergate, he tried to fire the special prosecutors who were looking into Watergate.
And so like three successive DOJ folks were asked by Nixon to fire the special prosecutor
and they all refused except for he got to the third in line who was Bork, who was at
the time Deputy Attorney General.
Put a cert in his mouth and said, well, Bobby, what do you say?
Right?
So Bork was the one who agreed to do it.
He obeyed Nixon and fired Archibald Cox.
So that was his first time in the public eye.
Then by the time Reagan, because of course it was Reagan, nominated him to the
Supreme Court in 1987. He had also spoken out against the Civil Rights Act of 1964.
Mm.
And the SCOTUS cases that established the right to contraception, because obviously
that is part of the rot that is bringing us to Gamora.
Well, yes. Yeah.
So that's his proud history.
He was not approved to the Supreme Court.
Isn't it fascinating that that used to happen?
I mean, not in a while, but yeah.
And he lost with the largest margin at the time
for a nominee losing,
which meant that people cross party lines,
which is, wow, quaint.
Which they also don't do. don't do any longer, really.
Yeah, and I remember that George W. Bush had a sort of notoriously underqualified
nominee who was not appointed.
And there was a feeling for me, at least at the time of like the executive branch
is going to pull some shit, but there are, yeah, the Supreme Court is, at the time, felt like a moderating force.
And I mean, it would seem to me that kind of the reason you have a judicial branch is
so that they're not in the pocket of whoever's president.
But I guess we don't believe that anymore.
Exactly.
And I think that that's kind of the paradigm that I believed we were in for a
while. And I think we were more so in that world.
Yeah. It had to have been more so than this. Because I mean, just look at it.
Totally.
Yeah. Because we would have noticed.
And like looking as you should looking at the Constitution, you can see that like there
is a world with checks and balances that should
and could exist under our structure. So like, why not? But Bork opened a door because conservatives
were so, so angry. And they turned his name into a verb that means to get like vilified
and defamed. Oh, no. So like if somebody gets Borked.
Well, and so aside from what you mentioned, was there a particular reason that at least
people cited? Because I know it's often more complex than a single thing. But what was
the sense people had about why he wasn't confirmed?
Too political that he was too partisan.
That doesn't happen anymore.
Right? Isn't that wild? That like, I think the relationship that he had with Nixon and
specifically with Watergate. The fact that he was questioning legislation that was on the
books from Congress and questioning settled Supreme Court precedent because
it approved contraception.
I feel like today they'd be like, good for you, what was Nixon like?
Also though on the other hand Nixon was the one who signed federal funding for Planned
Parenthood.
So it's like, they're all terrible, but they're also, we're reaching new levels of
terrible as we go.
There are aspects of American culture, or, you know, specifically government, that were
designed to be unjust from the very beginning.
But there are also parts that were designed
at least with an intention toward justice
and we can actually try and use those.
There's still, there's life in the old girl yet.
Absolutely.
One of the things that my dad cited
in some of his research is there are ample discussions
of the framers talking about natural rights
that they have not yet discovered that future societies as people become more civilized, if you will,
will discover more rights and dignities that humans deserve and that the document is supposed
to live with and embrace those things.
So, I mean, if that's not them speaking to progress within this constitutional scheme,
I don't know how else you interpret that statement,
but like it's there.
Yeah.
What is the constitution and then what is the Supreme Court?
Okay, oh boy.
So it's like talking to a baker and being like,
what is flour?
And they're like, I don't, wow.
Yeah, so the constitution is, into a baker and being like, what is flour? And they're like, wow. Yeah.
So the Constitution is, I think, our most important
foundational document.
It lays out a whole bunch of freedoms.
And there was a big debate when they
were drafting the Constitution about,
should we write out the rights that we want to be protected?
Or by writing out the list of fundamental rights,
do we kind of beg the question down the line that, oh man, they forgot something. If they
took all this time to write out these rights and they didn't include XYZ, that probably
means they didn't intend to protect XYZ. But it's impossible to enumerate all of the
things that people have freedom to do, let alone contemplating
that document, living with a society as time goes on. So they kind of struck a balance.
And you can't write out the right to breathe, the right to sleep, the right to turn left.
There's so many things that are so basic.
The right to wash or not wash your chicken. Right.
I exercise that right all the time.
So the balance that they struck was, we'll have kind of catch-alls and we'll leave some
of the way that we term these rights open to interpretation and able to grow and adapt.
I'm maybe getting ahead of myself, but one of the most important
ones is the Ninth Amendment, which basically says, you know, don't worry about this whole
argument that we had between the Federalists and Anti-Federalists. Anything that is not
enumerated in this Constitution should not be interpreted to take away those rights from
the people. All those rights that aren't included are retained by the people unless somebody
says otherwise. Oh, and Bill of Rights are the first 10 amendments. But it also outlines in the articles some of the powers that
are delegated to different branches of government. And that brings us to the Supreme Court.
Supreme Court is basically there to resolve conflicts on an appellate scale, or there's
some cases over which they have what's called original jurisdiction, or they're the first ones to hear the case, yada yada. But the biggest
thing for our purposes is they have the power to interpret the Constitution and resolve
questions of constitutional interpretation. So that probably brings us to this power that
they've wielded more brazenly in the last couple of decades, if you ask me.
Okay, so we have the US Supreme Court, which I feel like we're all used to calling SCOTUS
now. We all have to talk about SCOTUS all day long, which makes me feel like we're all
characters on Veep in a way. There aren't any other Supreme Courts, are they? Like for
counties?
Yeah, there's not really a uniform structure, for example in New York.
God damn it.
I know, right? It's bananas. And this is what happens when you do the states' rights thing.
So many bad things stem from states' rights.
But yeah, so like in New York, for example, the highest court is not the
Supreme Court, it's the New York Court of Appeals.
They were like, we're not calling it Supreme. You know what it's like? It's like when they
named Alan on, they were like, we need a name for friends and loved ones of alcoholics.
It'll be related to alcoholics anonymous, but very different. What should we call it?
Let's call it Alan on.
It's super confusing. Yeah. Everyone will be confused for the rest of time, but we did it. We really did it. Let's call it Al-Anon. Let's make it super confusing. Yeah. Everyone will be confused for the rest of time, but we did it. We really did it.
It's bananas. And then because there are state courts and federal courts, and the federal courts
have circuits and they have below the circuit courts, which are like for different regions
of the US, there are district courts. But then in some states they also have like state district courts or that's the word that they use. So, but the US Supreme Court is the highest court
for everyone. Unless you go international. Yeah.
And when you say appellate, well, here's what we'll do. I will try to explain what I think
that means.
Perfect. Yeah.
So what I learned from law and order, because they say this in every episode of law and
order is that when you're arrested
You have the right to remain silent and you also have a right to an attorney. Although I didn't learn until
adulthood that people
Only started having that right after arrest in like what?
1964 yeah with the Miranda case
Yeah, and you also don't have a right to an attorney in lots of other types of cases
It's really just like as a criminal defendant, which is also messed up if you think of custodial cases or yeah domestic violence
Yeah, anyways, but go ahead but those things don't matter because they don't matter to women. So, you know, yeah
Yeah, and so that you have these basic rights as a criminal defendant and my very very general understanding
Although this warrants a whole other episode is that we had to
some extent an expansion of defendants rights in the 1960s
because of the Warren court, which was the Supreme Court
under Chief Justice Earl Warren.
You're doing very well. Yeah, that's correct.
Doing it. Yeah.
Okay, so that the Warren court in the sixties was relatively liberal and then that we've since then have been living kind of in the quote unquote victims rights backlash to that.
I think I probably know this because we did an episode with Rachel Monroe on victims rights.
Yeah. And it's another case of like a misnomer and a willful misnomer that it's really not
about victims' rights and it's just a co-opting of-
It's about prosecutions' rights.
Yeah.
I think that there's kind of been a war between progressive and regressive, if I can call
them those things.
I like that.
Okay.
Because conservative implies-
Restraint. Okay, because conservative implies, you know restraint like I'm in a literal sense being conservative when I reuse leftovers
Yeah, but like that's not you know
The party's ideology is so much about waste that it feels a little bit weird to call it that at this point
It's not even that they're trying to retain values that existed in the framers days
It's that they're trying to
be as regressive and bigoted as possible and find an excuse to do that. It's a double edged
sword because it's like the way that the framers wrote it gave a lot of room to add definition.
Like what does liberty mean if not privacy and autonomy? But also, yeah, it's not defined
so that technically allows people to define it super narrowly,
too.
This is why founding documents are so difficult, I guess.
Yeah.
And liberty, I mean, a lot of our personal freedom and bodily autonomy rights within
the last, you know, 50 years have come through the liberty part of the due process clause,
where it says that you can't be deprived of life, liberty, or of the due process clause, where it says that
you can't be deprived of life, liberty, or property without due process of law.
The older, more progressive courts, ironically, have taken that liberty phrase and paired
it with things like the Ninth Amendment and other protections of privacy, ironically like
the Third Amendment, that like the founders didn't want you to house people in your home
so they probably don't want people searching your body for contraceptives or knowing if
you went to the doctor or keeping you from getting married.
So all of those types of cases hinge on how we define liberty in the due process clause.
Take abortion or gay marriage.
They're not telling anybody
to get that. They're just protecting those who want to. And that's where this whole weird
theocratic morality that started with Reagan and Daddy Bork, our favorite guy, started
to kind of poison our collective view of morality in government too, and make it way more Judeo-Christian regressive.
If you wanted to go back and really find foundations of progressive values in the Constitution,
a lot of the state conventions and constitutional conventions at a federal level, talked about things like privacy
and right to create your family.
Abortion was super common.
It was actually like more common per capita
before what's called the quickening
at the time of the framing than it is now.
And they talk about protecting women, children, and animals.
And so it's like, yeah, if you actually want to look at the Constitution, there's plenty
of arguments to make, but that's not what quote unquote originalists are doing.
Right.
Where are we now?
What has the Supreme Court been up to for the last few years?
Because I, like many people, have a general sense of like, well, I don't think it's good.
And everything I hear seems to be terrible, but I also can't say that I've been following
it closely.
Cause it's painful to do that.
Yeah.
So just give me all my pain right now and then we'll go back to the eighties where I'll
be safe.
Rip the bandaid.
Okay.
So let's do like greatest hits of this last term.
Do they get summers off?
Yeah, they do.
God damn it. It's come on you guys.
Seriously. Yeah, so I feel like it's worth noting also that a fair amount of the current
justices are either not duly appointed or have done things criminal to unethical in nature that in any other government
job would bar you from serving.
So...
Well, it's not good.
Yeah.
Do you want to do decisions or the people?
Well, yeah, let's do it.
Let's start with our cast of characters.
Okay, fun.
So like we have credible sexual misconduct and then perjury about the facts
surrounding that misconduct in the Senate hearings with both Thomas and Kavanaugh. You
also have gross conduct in what is a job interview from the same two because Thomas in his Senate
hearing where he talked about the Anita Hill accusations called it a lynching, which is
bananas to say that
in a job interview when your victim was also black. She was a black woman. So like, how
are you, how dare you? And then Kavanaugh in his job interview, yelling and crying about
how much he likes beer. I wouldn't get hired if I did that. It's not technically against
the law, but worth saying.
It feels like it's an important part of the GOP rulebook to very strongly enforce morals
that you then don't follow, yeah.
Yeah, and that actually comes up in the next section of what should be disqualifying conduct,
which is improper appointments.
Gorsuch's appointment resulted from a violation of Article 1 when the Senate did not give
a hearing to a properly nominated appointee from a party that they didn't want to hear.
So that was Garland.
So Gorsuch didn't do anything in his hearing, but his seat should have properly been heard
with the Garland appointment.
So that's one.
And then you take the reasoning that the McConnell Senate
used to deny Garland a hearing.
And that was that it was like too close to an election
because it was a number of months
before a presidential election.
But when Ginsburg died, it was roughly a month,
I want to say a little less than a month
before a presidential election.
And McConnell's Senate in that case
was fine having an appointment
hearing.
Yeah. And that one was extra bad because it was like only a couple years difference. It
was like, come on, we all remember this.
So like by your own rules, you made Amy Coney Barrett's appointment improper. And so that
takes us to how many? Four of them with questionable traits and
then not refusing heavily vested interest and demonstrated bias and then bribery applies
to Alito, Thomas and Kennedy who retired to give Kavanaugh a seat. We've all heard a fair
amount about like the Thomas bribery nonsense that he's been getting bought off by a big
right-wing donor.
Karly I mean, like, gave him an RV or something?
I mean, it's like a ton of other stuff.
But yeah.
Yeah.
And vacations and paid for his grandson's tuition or something.
And then Alito apparently has nothing to do with the stop the steal flag that was hanging at his house
because his wife has bodily autonomy and he doesn't interfere in that.
Well, I suppose it's hardly relevant. I mean, God.
Right?
It's like, I just think that if you're going to be a criminal, you should just commit and like,
there's nothing less attractive than hypocrisy.
They're a hair away from just doing that because in this term, and maybe this is a good segue,
they said that bribing a federal official is okay.
What?
That was one of their holdings.
Yeah.
That kind of snuck in there.
Because what I, yeah, and what I, you know, what I got was the headline, which is that
they're like, well, crimes are okay if you need to commit them to be president, which
is like. That's huge!
Right.
Yeah.
And you just don't necessarily think about how much that covers, but it's like in the
breakdown of the details that the shock factor really comes in.
Yeah, I mean it makes everything that Nixon did in Watergate legal now.
Whoa, is Nixon?
I guess he already was pardoned by Ford, but we can just pardon him again.
But yeah, like that's wild. And also, like, within the theme of originalism, how crazy
is it that, like, they're bringing us close to a monarchy and acting like they're adhering
to the Constitution. The whole point of our country's formation is that we didn't want
a king.
Yeah, I may not be a great student, but I do remember that part.
Right? It's fundamental.
I guess it's nice because like one silver lining and I realize I'm really grasping here is that
this degree of government malfeasance is so transparent and cartoonish that like,
you can't really ignore it and you can't feel like it's too complicated for you to grasp because
it's just like just so corrupt right on its face that like maybe it's kind of empowering to feel
like you know I don't know I think there's throughout recent history there's been a lot
of emperors new clothes about it and that's harder to maintain these days. Yep for better or worse it
was a like a watershed moment so people who maybe didn't hear the quiet part before, now they do.
What they do with that is another matter.
But it certainly has pushed some people to like, wait a second, I'm not okay with this.
This is a bridge too far.
I don't know.
When the Supreme Court reviews, I guess, a case? Like, what's the procedure there? A big element of that is deciding whether they want to leave a case B where it was,
which is kind of a ratification of what the lower court did, because it's like, they heard
it correctly or their analysis is fine enough that we don't have to mess with it. Sometimes
they decide to do that if they don't want to touch an issue also, and I feel like that is common for political
reasons that maybe something is a hot button issue. The inverse of that is now you're seeing
the court like they have granted cert to some trans ban cases for next term. Yeah, so I mean there are all
sorts of different things within those umbrellas that they can do. They can
remand something so they can say that we're not gonna rule on it but we'll
send it back to the lower court for like rehearing the case and sometimes they'll
give instructions on how to do that. Sometimes they'll say that something
isn't ripe yet.
So try coming back with this case in a while
if you have different plaintiffs, yada, yada.
This is sounding stunningly similar
to what it's like to submit a piece
to a magazine or something, you know?
Cause we have like editors who are like,
yeah, this is a good concept, but it's not a story yet. Like make some calls, see what you find or whatever. They're like, this is a good concept, but it's not a story yet,
like make some calls, see what you find or whatever.
They're like, or like, we'll totally ignore you
and you just have to live with that.
Right.
Or they're like, this is like interesting,
but it's not like something that it makes sense to put
in our fall issue, you know, try a, whatever.
Yep.
Is like, I know that they don't have to decide everything
that comes to them. But I do, I think have this still sort of instinctive sense that
like surely what we hear about is like a representation.
Right, like a balanced sense of what is going on in the country and
Yeah, exactly. That it's somehow representative of the bigger picture when really it's like,
no, no, there has to be an element of like, what's advantageous for us to talk about right now?
Absolutely. Like, they didn't have to touch any of these things.
Yeah. And that would be less surprising if they didn't insist on having lifetime appointments
and food, right? Robes, which like, I just don't like it's a wild amount of power. I
know I talk about this too much, but yeah,
and just the sort of pomp and circumstance,
they have like a big red curtain and stuff too.
It's like, do this in a VFW hall if they're so confident,
you know, like this is too much ceremony.
It's like the Vatican.
It totally is.
And it's all just like inching us closer to that monarchy, but with a crazy disproportionate
amount of power in the court.
Because when the Dobbs case was initially moving through the courts, and that was the
one that overturned Roe v. Wade, it was a big deal that they granted cert to that.
Because if they hadn't re-looked at Roe v. Wade, it would have stayed settled law.
And that's what precedent should do.
Like they kind of want to have it both ways, at least historically, by being like,
we are here to serve the Constitution. Well, I guess this is originalism,
that the originalist argument, as far as I can tell, is saying we are here to serve the Constitution.
We merely, you know, and it's kind of like the idea that a preacher is your conduit to God.
Exactly. Like we're just the messengers. We know what they were saying.
We are simply doing what the Constitution says. And it happens to say...
Exactly what we believe.
That we should do this thing that was never relevant for the past,
you know, 51 years or whatever.
Yep. Absolutely. And that doesn't stick with precedent, which like by the Supreme
Court's own rules, you really should only overturn precedent if it's not proven workable,
and if new information or new science has come out that makes it inapplicable. Lower
courts are struggling to apply it. So like none of those things apply in these weird over-turnings that they've been doing on political bases.
But originalism, yeah.
Okay, so we have kind of a near-miss with Bork, and then, yeah, how do we get from there
to now?
Yeah, like I think Scalia was really the one...
The return of Bork.
Mm-hmm.
Bork strikes back.
That is Borked up. Um, yeah, so Scalia brought originalism to the court with a vengeance.
And I think one of the best examples of like how absurd calling it originalism is, is Scalia's opinion in DC versus Heller.
Are you familiar with that case?
No.
versus Heller. Are you familiar with that case?
No.
So that's the one that kind of redefined the Second Amendment
as having an individual right to firearms, which
Whoops.
Yeah, oopsie, except it was intentional.
But that's another one, kind of like the term originalism,
that has not been around forever.
The Second Amendment was seen as like a town militia type right and that's its own
episode in and of itself, but in establishing this like individual rights conception, probably
because he was in bed with the NRA, he quoted from the dissent written by the minority of the
Pennsylvania State Convention to the Constitutional Convention. Oh.
So, like, that is such cherry picking.
I didn't know there was a minority opinion in the Constitutional Convention.
And, like, not even the convention at large, but the Pennsylvania State Convention.
Right. Okay. We got a real Eagles fan here.
Apparently. Man. And that's the thing, like, you can find anything to
support your own weird little biases if you look hard enough. And in the Supreme Court
cases, like, the counsel come to you with that research already done. So somebody probably
handed them, hey, look at this one excerpt from the minority dissent in Pennsylvania
that says individual right right basically original intent. how, quote unquote, originalism operates and how Scalia brought that to the court and did
it with such pride that people just kind of bought it.
They're like, oh yeah, okay, originalism, right to firearms.
But I feel like here's a good quote from Justice Brennan, who is no relation, tragically, of
mine.
But I'd like to pretend he was. He described
originalism as arrogance cloaked his humility. I think that says it, yeah.
Yeah, that's a read by Brennan. What are your thoughts on that quote and sort of
how does that illuminate it for you? The arrogance piece is pretending that they
know the intention and I think where maybe for a while you could argue that they really did believe that original
intent said blank and that the framers even intended for original intent to be used because
that's also a novel idea.
Nothing in the Constitution says, look to our society as the guide and put disproportionate
power in the 1700s.
Right. They seem to really, based on what you're saying, to be extremely oriented towards
the future.
Yeah.
So it's very funny to sort of take something that's very focused on the future and the
idea that we're sort of keeping this a bit loose. I mean, it's like writing a syllabus
and being like, here are some ideas for how I want this class to go,
but you the students are gonna tell me
what you want to learn.
And it'll kind of develop on its own.
And then acting as if that syllabus was written
in the spirit of, oh boy, it says no loud foods.
So I mean, how do we define loud, right?
Like, silk and tofu is made out of soybeans,
which are allowed to harvest
when you use a combine for it. So when you think about it.
And like we found a receipt in the pocket of somebody who wrote the syllabus and they
went to this restaurant once. So this is probably all they meant.
Yeah, it feels like a transparently unnecessary degree of fixation on just a handful of people
who, you know, would drop dead if you gave them a
pixie stick or whatever. And I also understand, you know, like I can see how for a lot of us,
the founding fathers are made out to be these sort of demigod type figures, you know, and I believe
that like, you know, I think that this is a cynical political movement, but I believe that there's enough sort of good faith,
plausible deniability about this for citizens
who are raised when we're taught history at all
to see historical Americans as sort of
so much better than us and as these great legends,
that it's easy to sort of trick a well-meaning populace into believing
that this is the most reasonable way to approach the Constitution.
Yeah, and I think the tragedy is that it has forced us to kind of fight on their level and pick out
how terrible elements of that society were in a very real and legitimate way. You know, Jefferson
was no paragon of virtue, especially by modern standards,
but they did design something sustainable. And we shouldn't even be fighting over whether they're
sainted or not. They didn't want us to focus on them. So it's like we don't even need to be having
that argument because they didn't see themselves that way. And so if we want to play the originalist game, we should be focusing on now. So that's like the arrogance piece. And I think time has also showed that
like it goes beyond arrogance and it's just bad faith. It's intentional at this point.
Yeah. And tell me how and where can we see that bad faith in action?
Well, I think that Scalia using the dissent of a minority of one
state, when everything else in the historical record, including
the convention at large did not suggest that there was an
individual right to firearms. That's a pretty good one. And I
think the fact that this court has also overturned so much
precedent, one decision that came out of this last term that
we didn't mention was it overturned so much precedent. One decision that came out of this last term that we didn't mention was it overturned something called Chevron, which was this
decades-old hugely important precedent on agency authority. So places like the
CDC, the FAA, the FDA, all of those under Chevron had the power to interpret and
enforce the rules that they
themselves make.
So that makes sense.
They're the experts, they're the ones who passed these guidelines, they had the authority
to.
And with a conservative majority, this court just overturned that and basically said that
courts can decide if there's some ambiguity in a rule that came out
of an agency that courts can determine over an agency saying that this is how
we meant that to be interpreted. So let's use an example. So Fauci headed
the CDC. That's an agency, right? If the CDC put out guidelines on quarantine
under COVID and said that, you know, TSA agents at airports
should do XYZ and they should quarantine themselves. But there was a question about what the word
quarantine meant. Under Chevron, under this case that has been around forever and had
been cited like thousands of times, if you had confusion about how to interpret those
agency rules, you would defer to the agency. And so then Fauci and his buddies would say, like, this is what we mean when we say quarantine,
and courts would be bound to enforce what the agency says. Now, people can challenge
it more comfortably because there isn't this deference to what agencies say. And the ultimate
arbiter is the court. And so, of course, the court has
handed themselves power to say, like, no, we're the authorities on what the word quarantine means, or
what the FDA means when they say that this is their new medication approval, or the FAA rules.
Like, it's a lot of really scary substance, yeah.
Right, and it feels like this interesting kind of jiu-jitsu
move in a way where you are taking power away
from federal agencies, which classically conservatives
dislike strong federal government.
But then you are simply making another branch
of the federal government the arbiter of what they do. So it seems like you
are supporting the strength of a federal government when in fact you are kicking it over to the inside
men you have put in the Supreme Court to help align the whole theocracy project.
Lauren Henry What you said is absolutely true, but it also
just gums up the gears of everyday agency functioning
because they'll be spending time defending themselves against all of these random challenges
to their rules and interpretations instead of actually focusing on what they are supposed
to do.
Yeah, which you know, you can imagine some of the implications of that pretty easily.
It's not as if federal agencies are
running with very much efficiency to this point.
Exactly. Like they're already on their last legs.
Yeah.
Hoi. Yeah. One of the dissents from this term was really good, and I think it was Kagan.
It was in that Chevron agency case.
One of the rare Supreme Court justices who doesn't, you know,
have any criminal charges that seem like they should be pending.
Yeah, what a thought.
I mean, it was a really powerful season of dissents, if anybody's into it.
HBO's best season ever of dissent.
You've seen severance, you've seen succession.
Now watch dissent.
Oh, my gosh. I would watch it. Yeah. Oh, yeah, we would watch it.
But okay, so Kagan says, judges are not experts in the field and are not part of
either political branch of the government. Those were the days because
that was a quote from the case they overturned. Those were the days when we
knew what we were and knew what we are not. And so she's kind of saying like, we
don't know how to make these decisions. So we shouldn't empower ourselves to make
them, which is what people who are responsible and hold power should do.
Yeah. And to come back to sort of, I don't know, the role of the judge, you know, it
does feel like the magic of trials, the magic of variety of the courtroom, that a lot of
it comes down to our idea of the magic of the judge the courtroom, that a lot of it comes down to our idea of
the magic of the judge, who is this mystical figure who wears a black robe, like, you know,
a religious leader and who sits higher than everybody else and who gets to have these
romantically charged sidebar conversations with counsel.
And, you know, and to decide what happens and what doesn't
and who's sort of the director of the play but also the sort of idol who has to be appeased
it seems like.
Yeah it's the whole like you can't take their name in vain even.
Yeah.
You gotta call them a special name.
Yeah that's that's apt.
That's real weird.
Yeah and that whole that whole monarchy thing.
Yeah it's an enormous amount of power and maybe that can bring us to some action items
related to...
Oh boy.
We have an election.
We are having an election, I hear.
I've heard word on the street.
It's a very stressful time.
I heard that it's Tuesday.
I'm not excited about it.
But yeah, like one of the few things that the executive, which for me, it's helpful to remember that the executive is a branch, not a person.
And so think about what the agenda is of the branch.
And one of my colleagues actually had another great point.
And she was like, which one of these guys would you rather fight with and argue with?
Who do you think would actually hear you and might take some of your points into consideration
rather than just be a megalomaniac?
But food for thought, one of the few powers that an executive does have pretty unilaterally
is nominating federal judges. Yeah.
Not just Supreme Court.
And committing crimes now.
And apparently, yeah, murdering if they want to, if it's official enough.
I guess, like, how do you, like, if you're like, well, you know, it's, I, they were impacting
my mental state, they were annoying me, so I had to kill them.
I'm, it affected my ability to be president. It's like well, I can't argue with that.
You just kind of have to say it's official, which that seems like the only
requirement that they have and that sounds pretty damn like a monarchy to me.
I don't know what other differences you could point to, but yeah that's a huge
amount of power.
Yeah, I mean it seems like we have these founding documents and
the sort of idea of government that was based out of, you know, the both intelligent and more wishful,
let's say, ideas of a handful of guys who were around during the age of enlightenment,
some of whom, you know, had fortunes and businesses entirely dependent on the age of enlightenment, some of whom had fortunes and businesses
entirely dependent on the labor of hundreds
of enslaved people, that that's what we have to work with.
And I think that it makes sense that we find ourselves
in this really, if we let it be interesting,
this really interesting kind of gray area
of there is so much humanistic potential
in some of these writings,
but also to treat these men like gods
is to actually ignore the very best
of what they had figured out in my opinion,
which is some basic concept of human rights
and the inalienable rights of man,
parentheses, humans.
And that societies are designed to evolve and grow. rights of man, parentheses, humans.
And that societies are designed to evolve and grow.
Yeah. And that like to write something and to expect it to remain immutable and be graven
in stone is, yeah, contrary to like whatever you think of the founding fathers, it's hard
to not admit that that is contrary to the best of what they had to offer.
Nicole Fornear Exactly. Yeah.
Nicole Fornear And then looking at originalism, it's like,
okay, so we're taking the figure of the judge from the littlest ones to the the SCOTUS ones,
these people who are sort of torn between humanity and divinity and who have to sort of maintain
consciousness and responsibility about this great power that they have who have to sort of maintain consciousness and responsibility about this
great power that they have in order to sort of preside over a system that hopefully will
lead toward justice through the participation of every person involved. And what if we just
like tell them that they're the only ones who can know what the Constitution is meant
to say that specifically the Supreme Court justices who are already more powerful than everybody else,
that they just know and they get to just.
Even what wasn't written down, they know,
like without any proof.
They get to just decide.
Like when you put it that way, it sounds insane.
It's like.
You know, just, I don't know,
looking at it from the perspective just of people
in a role
where like, you have to be in a culture of humility, and that this is a philosophy that
among so much else is just, yeah, about arrogance disguised as humility, like good old, your
cousin, Justice Brennan said.
Yeah. Okay. And so is originalism, what do we know about why this rose as sort of a legal
school of thought? And is this, you know, how did, how did this idea get to us? Do we
know?
I mean, it was just persistence, dogged insistence that they are the conduits, first Bork and then
Scalia, and now on the current court you have Alito really playing that role. Thomas tends to
do the same thing as Scalia and Alito, and Gorsuch now as a new addition is very quote-unquote
originalist. So I think it was real political money behind a movement
after Reagan, that whole like theocratic conservative movement started and they put their money
where their mouth is and originalism was the theory that worked for instilling regressive
religious morals in the government.
And I think part of what makes it good to talk about how new it is and how not sainted it is,
is that a big part of it picking up steam was our acceptance collectively,
that it was original intent and that it was a valid way to interpret things.
So I feel like conversations
like this are the best antidote. The lack of conversations like this is probably why
it gained so much power so quickly. Yeah. Beyond, you know, money and politics, etc.
Which is like, I don't know, to me very motivating to think of it in terms of anytime you're
afraid to ask a question because you don't want to seem ignorant or stupid like that makes it easier for terrible ideas to just kind of swim under under the
radar with like an okay sounding name.
And I remember first starting to learn about just general sort of Supreme Court stuff and
it totally working on me.
There's a sort of, you know, this real laundering of the concept where you're like, well, it's called originalism.
It's based on the idea that we should get as close to the intent of the founding fathers
as we can.
And on the face of it, it's like, it doesn't, at least to me, you know, at the time, it
didn't immediately seem terrible.
Like you have to kind of, I think, learn about the implications.
Yeah, like if you did apply it as the name would suggest, you would reach different,
more rational conclusions.
And that's where I think the semantics is so insidious.
So yeah, I think this kind of pushback is good.
Yeah.
You know, there is really a lot of opacity to relatively simple concepts.
Well, especially when you're talking about that feeling of superiority that we get from the judiciary,
making them opaque really serves their end goal of making sure that no one catches on to what they're doing.
So if you throw a lot of legalese at somebody and then the one term they do understand is original intent,
it's like, oh, OK.
You're like, that has to be good.
Tell me if this metaphor makes sense.
I feel like it's like, like the constitution is like grandma's casserole recipe, you
know, and grandma wrote this casserole and she's like, here's a recipe for a
delicious casserole.
These are the things that I put in it, but I don't expect you to always put these
things in it or to be able to buy these things easily
Where you are because I will die and you will live and make this casserole
recipe and give it to your children and your children's children and I don't
imagine that I am able to foresee, you know how much changes and like agriculture and
Whatever, you know, yeah like grandma was really
Thinking it through.
I love it.
She's a benevolent grandma.
She foresees a flexible legacy for her casserole.
Yeah.
And she wants it to be sustainable.
And then fucking 200 years later,
some cooking YouTuber comes along and is like,
the only way to make grandma's casserole recipe is
with french's onions and green beans just like she made it that one time.
Even though they went out of business and if you don't do it this way you go to prison.
Right and it's like but grandma was very clear.
Yeah that was part of the recipe is be flexible.
Yeah but like flexibility is part of the recipe.
And then to come along and be dramatically rigid
about a recipe that was successful because it has a degree
of adaptability to it is silly.
Yes. And I like that it's a random YouTuber who has taken on this
task because that's exactly
like why does this person know what grandma meant?
They don't.
Yeah.
So, okay.
So it has been a horrifying few years.
And what next?
What are we going to do, Mackenzie?
Fix it.
Yeah, let's feel constructive.
I always like really want to end on a positive note, but I think
there are some good things. One really substantive thing that people can do, that politicians
can do, us as a populace, is put pressure on Chief Justice Roberts because he's the
daddy of the whole gang. And so he is allowed to comment publicly on ethics violations, but like he could work
with Congress on a code of conduct on ethics violations. He could also push his subservient
justices to recuse themselves on cases about a president that they clearly have feelings
about.
They clearly all have crushes on.
I mean they do.
Oh my god.
It's the same with how the party is operating.
Like he's not gonna fuck you bro.
I don't know if you're using obscenity in that.
Not only that, but like he's not even gonna smile genuinely at you.
He only does that with Putin.
Roberts is somebody who could actually make a lot of the changes that virtually nobody
else could.
So that, I mean, there's an outlet. Also, Congress is an outlet. And I know that we really focus on
the presidential election, but a lot of the things that haven't happened in the last four years is
because we didn't have enough of a majority behind a lot of issues. So I know it's exhausting and it feels easy to give up
and just walk away from the whole thing,
but really we need more, not less.
Cause things like term limits and getting rid
of the filibuster that could allow us to get term limits,
those are in the hands of our appointed representatives,
whether they be senators or actual reps.
Yeah. And I do sometimes feel like the Grand Circus of national politics can, in a way
also, you know, not intentionally, but that we are so distracted by these giant things
happening that we don't feel much or any control over that it can be easy to be so exhausted
that we don't, you know, have the energy to get involved more locally.
Yeah, sometimes it is really nice to feel like there is an outlet. And in a lot of places,
it is fairly easy to get in contact with your representative's people. Now there are a lot
of different ways to do it. I know I hate making phone calls. So if you want to send
a letter, if you want to send an email, if you want to go to an
event, there are a lot of different ways to exert this pressure and it's all worthwhile.
So find a way that feels right for you and do it.
Make weird collage postcards and send them to your reps.
Do whatever is your right way of advocating, but just do it.
I find it reassuring that in the story you're telling
of originalism, it's like, well, how did we get in this mess?
And it's like, well, we came up with this political approach
to the Constitution in the 80s.
Yeah.
And then it really took off and gathered speed over time.
And within about 30 years, it had sort of expanded
into the most useful legal doctrine of the GOP,
I guess you could say,
and allowed us to have a Supreme Court packed
with criminals and not even in a fun,
like a Scorsese kind of a way.
Yeah. In a annoying way. Creepy way. And a taking your rights away without any any apparent
style kind of a way and that that is a horrifying story but also it tells us
that this is not what justice in this country must be you know. Exactly I think
it's weirdly empowering how short a time span it's been because that also means
the inverse could kind of happen.
Yeah.
Not every terrible process is irreversible and the hollowing out of our Supreme Court
is a reversible process, you know?
Like we can fix that.
There are things that we can fix and also things, you know, things that we can that. There are things that we can fix and also things,
you know, things that we can't fix are still things that we can mitigate. And mitigate
is a fancy legal word for make not so bad.
Yeah, I mean, we have two justices and they're two of the pointedly bad ones who are in their
70s. So, you know, life happens. It's possible that whoever the next president
is will have two appointments. And that could change everything. I mean, it could also take
generations to see a different composition of the court because nominees have gotten
younger since Bork too. But who knows? This time next year or two years from now, it could
be a totally different picture Is it possible that we could not have the lifetime appointment thing anymore?
Yeah, I also think that the lifetime appointment thing
Like has a different meaning in the 18th century than now
Yeah, seriously speaking of original intent you had more churn when people were you know
Getting a blister while walking to work and
then dying of sepsis a week later.
Not that people don't do that in America now, but you know, that's because of lack of access
to medical care and not because we don't know how to treat it.
Yeah, like you combine the life expectancy back then with the fact that they were generally
older appointees and it was kind of like the people who had seen everything in their career for the last
couple years of their working life and then they're gone. Yeah. Yeah. So I think
that's another substantive thing to work on. If my understanding is right, we'd
have to get rid of the filibuster for Supreme Court appointments because that would allow a non-majority party in
Congress to stonewall changes to things like that. So that would kind of be the
first thing to do and then you could change the lifetime appointments or the
size of the court. And those are the two substantive ways that we could mess
with the composition without somebody dying or stepping down.
So yeah, I mean, there are options.
There are definitely options, but we got to vote first.
Oh boy. Yeah, we all have to vote.
And yeah, I just, I, this is maybe not the most reassuring message, but I'll
really take what I can get, you know, and take maybe not comfort necessarily,
but derive energy from the idea that,
like we are cooking with a casserole recipe
that was designed to be revised by the people
and we are the people.
Absolutely.
And I still kind of like that recipe.
Well, Mackenzie, I'm really happy
to be in the kitchen with you.
Tell us, I guess, what you're up to, where people can find you, and also anything that
you recommend for people to feel a little bit less helpless.
Oh boy.
Yeah, on all the socials, sans ex, I am at MKZ Joy Brennan.
I also have a sub stack where I talk true crime media ethics, but that is on a summer
break right now because of the election and trying to focus on election prep both in Arizona
and federally.
And I don't know, just don't lose hope and hold each other close so that we don't all
fall apart.
Thank you for listening to our episode today.
Thank you so much to Mackenzie Joy Brennan for being our wonderful guest.
You can find Mackenzie online at www.mkzjoybrennan.com.
Thank you so much to Miranda Zickler for editing help. Thank you as always to Carolyn Kendrick for editing.
We've got bonus episodes for you on Apple Plus and Patreon.
We love you.
We're happy you listen.
We're happy you're here.
And we're gonna see you in two weeks. You