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- Newsgroups: sci.math
- Path: sparky!uunet!hela.iti.org!cs.widener.edu!ukma!cyeomans
- From: cyeomans@ms.uky.edu (Charles Yeomans)
- Subject: Re: Godel and the US constitution
- References: <1992Sep1.203402.4257@magnus.acs.ohio-state.edu>
- <1992Sep02.134107.33391@watson.ibm.com>
- <ARA.92Sep3053902@camelot.ai.mit.edu>
- Message-ID: <1992Sep3.114520.21990@ms.uky.edu>
- Date: Thu, 3 Sep 1992 15:45:20 GMT
- Organization: University Of Kentucky, Dept. of Math Sciences
- Lines: 53
-
- In article <ARA.92Sep3053902@camelot.ai.mit.edu> ara@zurich.ai.mit.edu (Allan Adler) writes:
- >Maybe Lincoln got away with a lot of abuses of power, but that doesn't
- >mean that they were consitutional or that they are now consitutional.
- >For example, mention has been made of Lincoln suspending habeas corpus.
- >During WWII there was a Supreme Court decision that the army did not
- >have the right to suspend habeas corpin Hawaii even though it was
- >under martial law.
- >
- The Constitution explicitly gives the president the power to suspend
- habeas corpus when martial law has been declared. But the army has no
- such power unless the president himself calls for it.
-
- >There are lots of examples of imperfect implementation of the constitution.
- >For example, in around 1797, COngress passed the Alien and Sedition Acts,
- >which were clearly unconstitutional (if you look at the debates, the
- >first thing that happened after the bill was read was that someone asked
- >that the bill of rights be read), but they passed it anyway and the
- >supreme court never declared it unconstitutional. Instead, the bill
- >had a built in expiration date of 1801, I think. It was passed while
- >Adams was president and it was used by Federalists to put Republicans
- >in jail.Adams' vice president was a Republican, namely Jefferson, even
- >though Adams was a Federalist. After the Republicans won the election,
- >they used the law to put Federalists in jail. The states Virginia
- >and Kentucky both decided that the law was null and void in their
- >borders, something that would again be regarded as unconstitutional,
- >since for example states do not have the right to declare civil rights
- >decisions and legislation null and void in their own states.
- >
- >But to return to my point, the real danger to the constitution is not
- >the provisions it makes and the possible loopholes that could allow
- >a dictatorship to come into being, but in the more real possibility
- >that the provisions of the constitution will be ignored and interpreted
- >out of existence. For example, we have freedom of speech. Now, there
- >was during the debates on the Alien and Sedition Acts someone who got
- >up and said that of course we have free speech but is freedom
- >of speech the right to vilify and calumnize public officials, attributing
- >to them the worst of motives and scandalous behavior? Well, he convinced
- >his colleagues that it didn't. And now people will argue that freedom of
- >the press does not mean the right to print porn. The Bush Administration
- >during the recent Supreme Court case about prayer at the graduation in
- >Providence had its lawyers present briefs to the Court arguing that the
- >amendment "Congress shall make no law respecting the establishment of religion"
- >did not mean the US could not have a state religion! These examples only
-
- Ah, an interesting point. It is indeed the case that the COnstitutionn
- only restricts COngress from the establishment of religion - at least as
- of the time of the Bill of Rights. But the 14th amendment is generally
- interpreted as having incorporated many of these rights.
- >
-
- Charles Yeomans
- cyeomans@ms.uky.edu
- yeomans@austin.onu.edu
-