One question about which I would love to see Judge Roberts' reasoning would be, To what extent do individuals have the right to make their own medical decisions, and why? Unfortunately this would be an inappropriate confirmation question; any of the germane subquestions would be far too likely to have direct bearing on cases that could come before the court in the future. But his thinking on this matter would be (IMHO) very illuminating: this is closely associated with the question of the rights of individuals when they do not have any obvious conflict with the rights of other individuals or the duties of the state, and therefore of his broader approach to questions such as privacy. Sullivan's third question broaches this indirectly, though, so it may answer the matter well enough.
Questions for Roberts
One question about which I would love to see Judge Roberts' reasoning would be, To what extent do individuals have the right to make their own medical decisions, and why? Unfortunately this would be an inappropriate confirmation question; any of the germane subquestions would be far too likely to have direct bearing on cases that could come before the court in the future. But his thinking on this matter would be (IMHO) very illuminating: this is closely associated with the question of the rights of individuals when they do not have any obvious conflict with the rights of other individuals or the duties of the state, and therefore of his broader approach to questions such as privacy. Sullivan's third question broaches this indirectly, though, so it may answer the matter well enough.

September 12 2005, 17:49:19 UTC 10 years ago
Well, I believe in the importance of judicial independence. However, the recent backlash to judges legislating from the bench is understandable.
Somehow the judges must be kept in the realm of interpreting and enforcing laws, not making them.
September 12 2005, 21:15:30 UTC 10 years ago
September 12 2005, 23:25:16 UTC 10 years ago
in a social environment where the protection of individual and minority rights is politically unpopular (and this ignored by both the executive and legislative brances of the government), it becomes even more important for the judiciary to take on this role.
doesn't it?
September 12 2005, 23:38:39 UTC 10 years ago
On the other hand, I don't agree with some members of the Republican party that this means that the court should simply let the Congress do whatever it wants; both the Legislature and the Executive have been rapacious gatherers of any powers they can get their hands on in the past few decades, and one important role of the court is to smack them when they overreach. (e.g., the Executive suspending habeas corpus, or the Legislature trying to decide individual cases at law or impose punishments by bill of attainder - which it could be argued that many of our "minimum sentencing" laws are. My point here not being to urge a particular course of action by the court, but to emphasize that issues like this are where the court needs to take a very active role, especially in preserving the institutional boundaries that keep the government working)