:huh: "It's not a flexible interpretation. It's a common interpretation." That doesn't make any sense at all. So if it's not flexible, what is it? Common doesn't replace flexible. It's still a flexible/loose view of the Constitution. Anyways, I did a little digging into this privacy stuff today (as I'm drowned in finals work and can't think worth crap or find time to think at all). This "penumbral rights" notion arose from the SC case Griswold v. Connecticut (and please don't just say Google it and find it yourself; you're the one providing the burden of proof by saying such a thing exists; please link what you are talking about so people are on the same page).
In this case, they said that though privacy isn't expressly mentioned, but alluded to in the Constitution. So first, we can establish that they knew privacy isn't mentioned in the Constitution...anywhere. Second, we are depending on the Justice's interpretation of what they thought the Founder's meant in crafting the Bill of Rights. The other huge problem is that you are totally disregarding the dissenters in this ruling. It was, after all, a 7-2 decision, and Justices take their votes and opinions seriously. Black and Stewart dissented on the vary points I'm making..."that the right to privacy is to be found nowhere in the Constitution." To attempt to interpret the original meaning of what the Founder's intended and say they included a right to privacy is absurd.
If privacy was a right in their minds, then why was privacy not mentioned or given it's own amendment? Would it have been that hard to say "All citizens have a right to privacy." Done. But no, it's not there, and the Bill of Rights is a sound piece of work. Also, when the case was brought forward, the plaintiffs brought it under the 14th Amendment only, not all the other amendments you mentioned there being a right to privacy under. If you also notice, the Justices who voted on this ruling and later rulings and defended a right to privacy are mostly liberals. Later on, in Lawrence v. Texas, Scalia, Rehnquist, and Thomas would all dissent from the opinion that their was a protected right to privacy.
One last thing you are missing in all this that I mentioned in my last post is that the Supreme Court is not a law making entity. Their job is to interpret. Even if they ruled a right to privacy existed, it's not officially law, only precedent. It is the legislative and executive branches that make laws. If I asked you who better represents the people of the United States, which branch would you pick? Legislative, Executive, or Judicial? Being a Political Science major, I don't think this is hard for you to figure out. The legislative branch best represents the people and the will of the people. Interpreting the Constitution is fine, but to depend on nine Justices to determine what is in the people's best interests or what their will is something different entirely.
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