William_T._Bianco,_David_T._Canon]_American_Polit

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516 Chapter 14Chapter 14 || The CourtsThe Courts

strongest protection of the First Amendment. So much for “without deviation, without
exception” concerning restricting expression of the “views... [people] have”!)
Critics of strict construction also point out that the Constitution is silent on many
important points (such as a right to privacy) and could not have anticipated the many
legal implications of changes in technology in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries,
such as eavesdropping devices, cloning, and the Internet. Also, although the language of
the First Amendment is relatively clear when it comes to political speech, other equally
important words of the Constitution such as “necessary and proper,” “executive power,”
“equal protection,” and “due process” are open-ended and vague.
Some strict constructionists respond by arguing that, if the words of the Constitution
are not clear, the justices should be guided by what the Founders intended by the
words, a perspective called the original intent or originalist perspective. Clarence
Thomas is the current justice who is most influenced by this view, especially on issues
of federalism.

original intent
The theory that justices should
surmise the intentions of the
Founders when the language of the
Constitution is unclear.

Justice Antonin Scalia had a similar view, arguing that the text of the Constitution
should be closely followed and, if the text is ambiguous, justices should figure out what
the words generally meant to people at the time they were written. This view led Scalia
to some unpopular positions, such as his view that the Sixth Amendment provision
that “in all criminal prosecutions the accused shall enjoy the right... to be confronted
with the witnesses against him” applies even in the case of an accused child molester.
The majority of the Court disagreed and held that it was acceptable to have the child
testify in front of the prosecutor and defense attorney, with the judge, the jury, and
the accused viewing from another room over closed-circuit television because of the
potential trauma the child would experience by having to confront the defendant
face-to-face.^63
Those in the other camp are often described as supporting a living Constitution
perspective on the document (see Chapter 2). They argue that originalism or other
versions of strict construction can “make a nation the prisoner of its past, and reject
any constitutional development save constitutional amendment.”^64 If the justices are
bound to follow the literal words of the Constitution, with the meaning they had when

living Constitution
A way of interpreting the Constitution
that takes into account evolving
national attitudes and circumstances
rather than the text alone.

Mary Beth Tinker and two other
students in the Des Moines, Iowa,
public schools were suspended
for wearing armbands to protest
the Vietnam War. The Supreme
Court ruled in Tinker v. Des Moines
Independent Community School
District (1969) that the First
Amendment protected symbolic
political speech, even in public schools.
Mary Beth is shown here with her
mother and brother.

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