American Legal History
Note: I am using this space for comments, brainstorming, and outlining for the time being

I set out to assault originalism using key moments in the creation of the United States constitution as evidence that originalism leads to absurdity. From that conclusion, I planned on arguing - along standard lines - that originalism is best understood as cover for political claims that would sound "off" if stated plainly. My plan was simple: borrow from Jack Rakove's "Original Meaning" a summary of the secondary literature, retell a few key points in Michael Kamman's "A Machine That Would Go of Itself," and rely on what I remember from class to point me to the pieces of Madison's notes that Professor Moglen had effectively sanctioned. But I encountered a dilemma.

The Dilemma: If the constitution should be interpreted as a system of arrangements, then originalism lacks bite, for the arrangements of yesteryear should not be expected to resolve today's conflicts. Yet, if the constitution is merely a system of arrangements, then nothing should legally constrain political entrepreneurs from questioning and indeed undermining constitutional law for the sake of a more efficient set of arrangements. This is clearly not the case - though political entrepreneurs of an anti-constitutionalist stripe have emerged throughout American history, the uniquely republican character of American constitutional thought and legal doctrine remains intact. Thus, there appears to be some kernel of the United States constitution that defies the demands efficiency makes to update the nation's founding arrangement without limit. How can such a kernel be explained? The answer, I believe, must recognize an underlying faith throughout the American legal tradition in some version of originalism.

This short essay explores the makeup of that kernel.

What is the kernel? It is a set of beliefs justified by faith as opposed to the set of arrangements justified by efficiency common to most constitutional doctrines

What is the set of beliefs? Distrust of authority, and from this distrust, faith in federalism

Objection: Isn't this "faith" really just an arrangement that no longer makes sense? (idea being that federalism made sense as an arrangement for even a large nation for the reasons Madison put forth in Fed Paper 10, but technology and population growth have rendered Madison's arguments irrelevant)

Answer
No. (a.) compare Madison's arguments with the system codified in the constitution (seems like factions are very possible; indeed, the electoral college looks like an institution created to house faction leaders - unrealistic to expect the state's to choose electors lacking national "faction-like" appeal); (b.) Madison's understanding of federalism - and indeed his understanding of what the constitution did to the existential nature of the states - was not uniformly shared in his day or any other; (c.) it is very unclear if the type of federalism Madison advocated was needed to actualize the efficiency-based arrangements contemplated by the rest of the constitution (ratification would have surely been easier with a more state-friendly approach, and efficiency would have preferred a stronger centralized state; neither demand required the actual solution)

Conclusion: Belief in American-styled federalism is an article of faith throughout the American legal tradition and indeed much of society. If this faith is indeed the unchanging kernel of the constitution, then any attempt to move away from it would necessarily be revolutionary (the result, if such a movement were successful, would no longer be the United States of America as previously understood; this is different from, say, a change in tax policy). But, the demands of efficiency have become ever more pressing in the 21st century. And a generation of M&A minded individualists is set to take over the levers of power. If the foregoing analysis is correct, the next generation of political leaders will challenge doctrines traditionally supported by the belief in federalism, and if this generation succeeds, it will signal the end of constitutional limitation on technocratic governmental innovation.

Of course, "efficiency" makes no demands; that is the job of capitalists. Defeat of federalism by technocratic efficiency-hawks would resolve the question, "democracy and capitalism, or democracy or capitalism?" in favor of the latter.

-- JeffreyGlass - 05 Nov 2016

 

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r1 - 05 Nov 2016 - 13:43:11 - JeffreyGlass
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