Messrs. Rivkin and Grossman acclaim the virtues of textualism in a judge (What Kind of a Judge is Neil Gorsuch?).
Juxtaposed with Super Bowl week, it ought to be apparent why such a
philosophy is the only appropriate attitude and methodology for a judge,
certainly one in an appellate position.
Imagine
that on the last play of the Super Bowl with time running out, trailing
by four points, Falcons quarterback Matt Ryan lofts a pass to Julio
Jones in the end zone. Jones catches and holds onto the ball but with
only one foot clearly in bounds. According to Rule 8, Section 1,
Articles 3-4, the on-field referee calls the play incomplete, thus the
Patriots win the game and championship. But wait! In the final two
minutes, there is a mandatory review. The off-field review ref overrules
the play and declares a legal catch, thereby giving the championship to
the Falcons. His reasoning? The NCAA rule legalizing a catch with one
foot in bounds is “more just.” Patriots fans are outraged and march on
NFL headquarters to burn Mr. Goddell in effigy. Falcons supporters
accept the win with sheepish confirmation bias.
The
judgment of the appellate ref is final, but is based on what he thinks
should be the case over the clear text in NFL rules. If this is wrong in
football, why isn’t strict application of the Constitution and laws as
they are written and enacted the proper way to judge a case and to
evaluate a Supreme Court nominee?
Yours truly,
Larry Greenberg
Skokie IL
No comments:
Post a Comment