June 25th, 2012

From Justice Alito’s angry dissent in the Supreme Court’s decision invalidating general and mandatory life sentences without parole for juvenile murderers:

Nothing in the Constitution supports this arrogation of legislative authority.

That’s right, Sam.  We certainly don’t want to usurp legislative authority.  Oh, no.  So of course we would never dream of invalidating the Affordable Care Act, right?  Right?

A couple of more serious comments:

1)  Alito would no doubt answer that in the health care cases, the issue is whether the federal government has the authority in the first place.  You can’t usurp authority from a government that doesn’t have it.  But that was also the case with the issue of mandatory life-without-parole sentences for juveniles: if the Eighth Amendment applies, then the state government does not have the authority to impose those sentences.  All of which is to say that “judicial activism,” the hobbyhorse that conservatives have used to complain about judicial decisions since Brown v. Board of Education (and yes — they vehemently complained about that one), is essentially a meaningless trope.  For Alito to use it so casually shows that he’s almost as bad a judge as Scalia, which is going some.

2)  Consider just how narrow the Court’s ruling was in this case.  The Court very pointedly did not say that life-without-parole sentences for juveniles are unconstitutional: it said that imposing such sentences as a matter of course, legislatively determined, without any sort of individualized process, is unconstitutional.  All of the murderers that Alito discusses in his opinion can be locked up for the rest of their lives.  They just need to have someone actually determine that they individually merit such a sentence.  This prospect is so offensive to Alito that he decided to read his dissent from the bench.  Cutting 30 million people off of health insurance, however, is just a day at the office.

8 Responses to “Sauce for the Goose Department: Samuel Alito”

  1. Dennis says:

    “A foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of small minds,
    Adored by little statesmen, philosophers and divines.”
    Ralph Waldo Emerson

    So, Jonathon, let me explain to you why it’s perfectly okay for Slingin’ Sammy Alito to vote to overturn PPACA in its entirety, while simultaneously voting to allow mandatory LWP sentences for juvenile offenders. The cases are entirely different: and we know they are entirely different because Sammy says so.

  2. politicalfootball says:

    In fairness to Justice Alito, if he writes the ACA opinion, he’ll probably want to read that one from the bench, too.

  3. Ken Rhodes says:

    When I was a kid I rooted for the Brooklyn Dodgers, which meant I hated the Gints. When Preacher Roe pitched inside to Willie Mays he was just “moving Willie off the plate.” On the other hand, when Sal Maglie pitched inside to Duke Snider, he was a “viscious headhunter.”

    So yes, your legal points numbered 1 and 2 are well made. But people, even The Supremes, are human, and it’s hard, sometimes impossible, for them to separate themselves objectively from their deeply held sentiments.

  4. Perspecticus says:

    “But that was also the case with the issue of mandatory life-without-parole sentences for juveniles: if the Eighth Amendment applies, then the state government does not have the authority to impose those sentences.”

    I just want to point out that your sentence above is slightly confusing in that it could be read as saying that states cannot impose life sentences on juveniles. I don’t think that is what you meant to say. If so, the Supreme Court struck down MANDATORY life sentences. Juveniles can still be sentenced to life without parole under the decision.

  5. Eli says:

    I’ll just add that much of the sentiment involved in punishment assumes that the offender had free choice in their actions, and thus can be held morally responsible. I would argue this is actually *never* the case, but regardless, at some point the age of the offender clearly limits their capacity for choice. Is this age ten? Maybe five? Surely three. Which is to say that there is no clear line between our own desire to sate our appetite for vengeance and a rational (at least, arguably) determination of conscious agency.


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