From A. S. Haley:
Sub silentio (literally, “under
[the cloak of] silence”) is a legal term of art for the technique of a
court that, say, wants to accomplish something like the overruling of an
earlier case—without having to admit in express words what it is doing.
For whatever political or collegial considerations prevail at the
moment, the court finds it more “convenient” to stop short of saying
what it is doing, while doing it nonetheless. Then, either a few (or
even many) years later, the court can “discover”, say, that the case of W. vs. X was in fact overruled, sub silentio, by the case of Y vs. Z.
Courts also understandably shy away from overturning their own prior
decisions. As Justices O’Connor, Kennedy and Souter noted in declining
to overrule Roe v. Wade in the later case of Planned Parenthood of Southeastern Pa. v. Casey, 505 U.S. 833, 844, 112 S.Ct. 2791, 120 L.Ed.2d 674 (1992), “Liberty finds no refuge in a jurisprudence of doubt.”
Today the United States Supreme Court in effect overruled, without
saying so, its earlier holdings in which it expressly declined to
declare that homosexuals enjoyed a “fundamental right” to practice their
lifestyle without State interference. And the most remarkable thing is
that it did so sub silentio, without even issuing any written opinion!
The Court accomplished this astonishing feat by the simple tactic of exercising its power to review lower court decisions. It denied
review of decisions by three different Circuit Courts of Appeal
striking down bans on same-sex marriages in the states of Indiana,
Oklahoma, Utah, Virginia (three cases) and Wisconsin. Those seven
decisions are now final, and mean that the same courts could in the
future strike down similar laws in six other States within their
jurisdictions: Colorado, Kansas, North Carolina, South Carolina, West
Virginia and Wyoming. . . there is much more to this article and it is worth your time to read!
Read it all here. . .
This is one of the better things I have read on the subtle means by which the pro-gay marriage stance is being promoted -- here by silence that has as much impact as a judicial opinion. In other words, we are back to abortion and to the usurpation of the role of legislation and the public will in favor of judicial action (or, in this case, inaction that is the same as action).
1 comment:
By making a choice not to act, the Supreme Court chose to affirm gay marriage. However, had the Supreme Court chosen to simply overrule all of the states and approve gay marriage for the entire nation, it would still be a bad ruling. The will of the people, millions of voters who wanted to keep traditional marriage, have been voided by the Supreme Court. I am no longer proud of my country or my culture. I am a Christian whose values are contrary to a pagan society, and I believe that ultimately God will punish us for our rejection of His word, His admonishments on immorality, and our descent into wickedness.
Post a Comment