Let’s be honest, the ACLU has never defended all freedoms for all people; For example, it rarely, if ever, defends the Second or Tenth Amendments
If the American Civil Liberties Union was ever a champion of its
supposed namesake — civil liberties — it no longer is.
Thus writes
Benny Huang.
The Wall Street
Journal reports
that the ACLU has quietly drafted new guidelines that address which
legal battles it will wade into. Civil liberties are now being balanced
with other considerations.
In an eight-page memo,
the ACLU agonized over whether and when to lend a helping hand to
people it clearly despises. It did not categorically reject the
possibility that the organization would defend deplorables’ civil
liberties, but it left itself plenty of weaselly escape hatches.
It’s complicated, you see. Really, really complicated.
I suspect that the ACLU has always quietly exercised discretion when
choosing its cases even if it didn’t say so publicly. To be sure, even
these guidelines were for ACLU eyes only, a clear indication that the
organization still wants to be perceived as stalwart defenders of the
Bill of Rights.
Maintaining the organization’s public image is paramount. As former ACLU president Nadine Strossen said in a recent interview, “The ACLU defends all fundamental freedoms for all people.”
But it doesn’t and, let’s be honest, it never has. For example, the
ACLU has never filed a Second Amendment lawsuit. Their Bill of Rights
apparently includes only nine amendments. Or is it eight? Despite the
federal government’s extreme overreach, the ACLU rarely sues the federal
government for violating the tenth amendment. The ACLU does however
fight valiantly for “a woman’s right to choose” (to kill her unborn
baby) even though that one doesn’t appear anywhere in the Constitution.
Clearly there’s an agenda here beyond motherhood and apple pie.
The ACLU is now admitting that there are lots of factors that need to
be considered before taking a case. The first question that needs to be
asked is whose rights are being trampled? Is it good people or bad
people? Its own side or the other side? Supposed oppressors or the
supposed oppressed?
… While the memo stresses that the ACLU might still decide to take on such cases, it isn’t automatic.
And so the great climbdown begins. The ACLU, that great
defender of free speech even when it’s inconvenient, is now affixing
caveats.
But at least it’s finally admitting what I have been saying for a
long time, namely that there’s a conflict between fundamental
constitutional principles — free speech, free exercise of religion, a
free press — and what they like to call “justice,” which is nothing more
than code for their political agenda.
And make no mistake about it, their agenda creates a lot of “tension”
— a word that appears eight times in memo — with Madisonian rights. The
ACLU will now approach this tension gingerly, hoping that no one
notices that it’s deserted its core mission of defending the Bill of
Rights. People will just have to understand that its members failed to
defend our supposedly inalienable rights only after serious deliberation
that made plenty of allowances for, as they call it, “nuanced and
intentional consideration of the competing interests.”
At the core of these guidelines is the tacit admission that the
ACLU’s “values” are in fact antithetical to the Constitution. On this we
can agree. Clearly the ACLU has arrived at a time for choosing even if
it doesn’t want to admit it.
Throughout our history there have always been constitutional
violations and in every case they were defended by people who believed
they had other, more important interests to uphold, such as the
protection of public morals, the dignity of the family unit, or wartime
necessity, to name a few.
This last justification for ignoring the Constitution is what
eventually gave birth in 1917 to the National Civil Liberties Bureau
(CLB), forerunner to the ACLU. It was a tumultuous time, with the United
States committing itself to war in Europe over the stringent opposition
of socialists, communists, and anarchists. Citing the need to mobilize
the country for “the war to end all wars,” the U.S. government cracked
down on dissent. The CLB argued (correctly) that there was no wartime
exception to the civil liberties safeguarded in the Constitution.
[The ACLU memo] is obviously a veiled reference to the recent Masterpiece Cake
Shop decision, which was, at the time this document was written, on its
way to the Supreme Court. The memo is clearly implying that Colorado
really was violating two of the First Amendment’s clauses — free speech
and free exercise of religion — but the ACLU just doesn’t care.
“Equality” was more important.
In any other context I have no doubt that the ACLU, with its
expansive view of speech, would have come to the aid of an artisan
compelled to use his talents to create a message of which he
disapproves. But not when it’s a Christian baker who doesn’t want to
custom-design a cake for homosexual nuptials. “Gays” good, Christians
bad.
It would have been bad enough if the ACLU had refused to take on the
Christian baker’s case because of other, competing, anti-constitutional
values. But it went further than that. It litigated the case from the other side. Not
content to stand on the sidelines while Jack Phillips’s constitutional
rights were being savaged, the ACLU decided to jump in and get some
blood on its own knuckles.
Not that it would ever admit this openly. In court the ACLU attorneys argued that Jack Phillips’s rights were not being violated, which is a more compelling argument than “Yeah, but so what?”
… The ACLU is suffering from a bad case of cognitive dissonance, trying
to navigate a course between what it thinks it stands for and what it
actually stands for. It can have the Constitution or it can have its
agenda, but it can’t have both.
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