Levinson and Balkin on the Dred Scott case

dscott.jpgLongtime University of Texas Law Professor Sandy Levinson has teamed up with Jack Balkin of Balkinization fame to author a new SSRN paper, 13 Ways of Looking at Dred Scott. For a provocative abstract, check the following out:

Dred Scott v. Sanford is a classic case that is relevant to almost every important question of contemporary constitutional theory.
Dred Scott connected race to social status, to citizenship, and to being a part of the American people. One hundred fifty years later these connections still haunt us; and the twin questions of who is truly American and who American belongs to still roil our national debates.
Dred Scott is a case about threats to national security and whether the Constitution is a suicide pact. It concerns whether the Constitution follows the flag and whether constitutional rights obtain in federally held lands overseas. And it asks whether, as Chief Justice Taney famously said of blacks, there are indeed some people who have no rights we Americans are bound to respect.
Dred Scott remains the most salient example in debates over the legitimacy of substantive due process. It subverts our intuitions about the relative merits of originalism and living constitutionalism. It symbolizes the problem of constitutional evil and the question whether responsibility for great injustices lies in the Constitution itself or in the judges who apply it.
Finally, Dred Scott encapsulates the central problems of judicial review in a constitutional democracy. On the one hand, Dred Scott raises perennial questions about the judicial role in cases of profound moral and political disagreement, and about judicial responsibility for the backlash and political upheaval that may result from judicial review. On the other hand, the political context of the Dred Scott decision suggests that the Supreme Court rarely strays far from the wishes of the dominant national political coalition. It raises the unsettling possibility that, given larger social and political forces, what courts do in highly contested cases is far less important than we imagine.

An underappreciated cost of regulation

Sirius%20Radio.jpgRuss Roberts has a common sense post over at Cafe Hayek explaining why the federal government should not oppose the proposed merger of satellite radio companies XM and Sirius, both of which are enduring blistering competition with each other and a wide variety of other available entertainment options. As usual, even though this isn’t a close call as to whether the merger should be approved, the Federal Communications Commission is already showing some resistance to it.
One thing that Roberts doesn’t mention in his post is that the FCC’s threatened resistance is particularly incongrous because the regulatory agency dictated the playing field in satellite radio by only licensing two companies in the first place. So, instead of allowing a reasonably free market to sort out the winners and losers, the FCC’s regulatory wand made sure that there would only be two companies competing in the market, neither of which is anywhere close to turning a profit. Of course, it didn’t help that XM and Sirius have had to expend considerable funds and management time in opposing attempts by the National Association of Broadcasters and the recording industry to manipulate regulations in their favor and against satellite radio.
Which brings me to my point. Many folks believe that, inasmuch as established businesses generally abhor regulation, that must mean that regulation is good for the consumer. However, the reality is that established businesses typically use a part of their resources to deal with and manipulate regulation to their advantage and against that of new companies that seek to compete against the established businesses. A big, well-established business can absorb the high cost of regulation and pass it along to the consumer. A thinly-leveraged start-up does not have that luxury.

Who is Houston’s most successful
professional football player?

Larry%20Izzo.jpgIn terms of championship rings, it isn’t even a close call — the Patriots’ long-time linebacker and special teams ace, Larry Izzo, who has played on all three of the Patriots Super Bowl winners and who the team recently signed to another contract.
Izzo is pure Houston, having played collegiately at Rice from 1992-95 after starring in Texas high school football at The Woodlands, where he continues to live during the off-seaon. Izzo is an example of the specialized type of player that has become common in the NFL, which has limited rosters that place a premium on good special team players. Izzo is one of the best special teamers and has led the Patriots in special teams tackles in five of his six seasons in New England. Izzo has now completed 11 seasons in the NFL (he played his first five seasons in Miami).
Izzo’s career is of special interest to me because he put on one of the best single-game performances of any football player that I’ve ever seen while playing in a big game for The Woodlands High School against Westfield High School in 1991. Former Texas A&M coach Emory Bellard was coaching Westfield, which was loaded. The Woodlands had a pretty good team, too, but not as good as Westfield. Playing both ways at fullback and linebacker, as well as on most special teams, Izzo dominated the game, running and tackling with equal ferocity. He literally willed The Woodlands team to a close win in a game that Westfield would have won handily had Izzo not played.
Izzo is not among the most physically gifted football players that I’ve ever seen, but he is one of best football players that I’ve ever seen.