Seraph wrote:Coito, I do respect - even admire - the energy and endurance with which you look things up and cite them, more often than not complete with links, but I am less than impressed with what you make of the material you find. The minority opinion of the judges is one such example. The judges may not be libertarians in your conception, and I am not sufficiently familiar with their background to tell if they are in mine, but their opinion (in as far as the objection is not based on doubts about the efficacy of random breath testing) is pure libertarianism. It is an opinion that I expect typically, though not exclusively from libertarians such as you, Mistermack and Warren Dew, and none of you have disappointed me in this regard. If anything surprised me along those lines, it is your support for airport checks.
Not based on doubts about efficacy??? First paragraph of the dissenting opinion:
However, the findings of the trial court, based on an extensive record and affirmed by the Michigan Court of Appeals, indicate that the net effect of sobriety checkpoints on traffic safety is infinitesimal and possibly negative.
Moreover, Thurgood Marshall was one of the dissenting Justices who joined in that opinion. Here is this so-called "libertarian":
In his early career he was Chief Counsel for the NAACP. His most famous case as a lawyer was "Brown vs. Board of Education," in which he won the argument ending discrimination in schools. He was appointed to the US Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit by John F. Kennedy, and to the US Supreme Court by Lyndon Johnson. He is best remembered for his jurisprudence on civil rights and criminal procedure.
William Brennan was on the Court from 1956 to 1990 - During his term on the Supreme Court, he was known for being a leader of the
judicially liberal wing of the Court. He was known for his outspoken
progressive views, including opposition to the death penalty and support for abortion rights. He authored several landmark case opinions, including Baker v. Carr, establishing the "one person, one vote" principle, and New York Times v. Sullivan, which required "actual malice" in a libel suit against those deemed "public figures".
The dissenting opinion in Michigan v Sitz was not written by "Libertarians," - it is a LIBERAL opinion - written by the most progressive Justices on the Supreme Court in the last 60 years!
You want to whitewash it with some fingerpointing that it is a "libertarian" opinion, because it allows you to just dismiss it out of hand - hand-wave it away as if the opinion is just some unreasonable libertarian screed. It isn't. Read it.
And for the same reason - being opposed to surprise sobriety checkpoints does not mean one is doing so from a "libertarian" perspective. I'm not even sure all libertarians would be against it. Libertarians tend to be quite pro-law enforcement - it's one of the few areas they suggest the State should have legitimate power.
But, one can certainly approach the issue of sobriety check points from the standpoint of (a) interpretation of constitutional law, or (b) civil liberties and civil rights, or (c) the rights of criminal defendants, etc. and not merely some "libertarian" view.
Now - you're in favor of the checkpoints - I assume you agree with the conservative view on the subject - right? You think it's no big deal, and a de minimus intrusion on civil rights - you think that the effectiveness (supposedly, according to law enforcement) of these suspicionless stops is enough to warrant stopping people for no reason and searching them, right? You're in good company .... William Rhenquist -- Antonin Scalia -- Sandra Day O'Connor - Byron White.....good liberals those, ay? They agree with you! LOL