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Wednesday, May 27, 2009

I suppose I have to write about this.

California Constitution and Prop 8

Jerry,

When you write

"The California Supreme Court has decided that the California State Constitution is Constitutional under California State Constitutional Law. Hardly a surprise."

you are, I think, being a bit ingenuous. The question was not whether a provision in the State Constitution is constitutional (which invites infinite loops of self-reference and thoughts of Godel) but whether a proposed provision is consonant with existing and unquestioned provisions of the State Constitution.

Many have argued that it is not.

That is what the court needed to consider. Obviously, you agree with the court's decision. But we should be clear as to what was at issue.

Sincerely,

Joseph

I will confess to being arch, but hardly disingenuous. The Court, having revised the Constitution by judicial fiat without any legislative action whatever, was now asked to decide whether an amendment passed by a vote of the people was an amendment or a revision. That was the point of law on which the opponents of Proposition 8 sued. But note that the Court first revised the Constitution by overturning what had been considered pretty well settled for over a hundred years.

This has nothing to do with the propriety or merits of gay marriage; it has to do with law. The legislature of the State of California had already made civil union pretty well equivalent to marriage so far as the rights of the two parties were concerned. Had the legislature then simply declared it public law that a civil union could be called a marriage and that the state could issue a marriage license, that would have been one thing, and it might even have been possible to maintain that an amendment overturning that legislation was in fact a revision. It is not an argument I would support, but it could be argued with some persuasiveness; but since the whole thing was begun by a drastic revision by the courts without legislative action, it was a different situation entirely.

We now have to consider what happens if a state of the union decides to allow polygamy and/or polyandry and/or multiple marriage as in say Heinlein's "Line Marriage" as described in The Moon is a Harsh Mistress. If a state does that, what must the other states do regarding full faith and credit? And is it constitutional? Utah wrote into its state constitution that it would not allow polygamy, but state constitutions can be amended; what if Utah does that? Or, less likely but not impossible, a Muslim group manages to get a law allowing polygamy? Or if a state legislature, possibly in jest, authorizes marriage at age 10 (I believe marriage at age 14 with parental consent was legal in several states when I was growing up)?

The problem with allowing state and federal courts to amend constitutions without action of the legislature or people is that there seems to be no limit to what they can do; and once the notion is out that anything can be legal, the society may not be able to recover from the resulting loss of respect and awe for constitutions and the amending process.

The dread secret is that almost any form of government can work, and there is little a priori to show which is better. "Your fathers swore allegiance to my father, and you to me, and I am the son of the king" is no less absurd than "Fifty percent plus one of those who bothered to vote have chosen me to rule," and neither proposition has more apparent merit than "We are the best and the brightest, as were our parents; we are the natural rulers of this land, don't you agree?" Or "The Army has chosen me to be Emperor. Hail me, or dread the fury of the Legions."

Governments work so long as people will allow them to work. The primary -- elemental -- political act is that someone gives an order and it is obeyed. The primary necessity for government is that the loser of the selection process -- whether election by adult suffrage, election by manhood suffrage, election by an aristocratic elite, hereditary aristocracy, monarchy -- that the losers of the selection process stand down and submit. There is a certain degree of magic in that. The United States has been fortunate that for most of its history the losers of elections have submitted, and they did so back in the times when there were qualifications for being a voter as well as in more "progressive" times when place of birth and age are the only qualifications. When people begin to question the reason for obedience, a republic is in danger, because there will inevitably arise an issue people feel very strongly about.

Abortion is one of those: a court, without any legislative authority, found that not only had there been a "right to choose" lurking in the Constitution of 1789 as Amended, but that this right superseded the Constitution itself which gave no authority to Congress or the Federal Government on the subject of abortion -- and when that Constitution was adopted and the relevant amendments were adopted, every state in the land and the Federal government as well had severe restrictions or absolute prohibition on abortion. Clearly any state could have simply repealed all its laws against abortion; but none had done so. The Court acted without legislation. The result may have been right and proper and moral; but it did not strengthen faith in constitutional rule.

Gay marriage is another of those issues best left to state legislatures -- and, we note, at least one state has acted legislatively in the matter. The proponents and opponents of Proposition 8 (which for those few who don't know, successfully overturned a California Supreme Court finding of a right to gay marriage in the state constitution by amending the state constitution to forbid gay marriage) all feel very strongly on the issue. I am far more concerned that there be a rule of law, and that matters be settled by constitutional means, and bringing up a law suit to find an amendment to the constitution unconstitutional is not, in my judgment, helpful.

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On Sotomayor

She is likely to be about as good as we are likely to get, and far better than I had expected. Of course she leans liberal; anyone Obama nominates will. But she appears to have a legal turn of mind and be sound in reasoning.

I did find this:

COPYRIGHT CASE

* Freelance journalists had sued the New York Times Company for copyright infringement because the Times included in an electronic database the work of the authors it had published.

Sotomayor as a trial judge ruled that the publisher had the right to license the work of the freelancers, in a decision that limited the copyright rights of the authors.

Her decision was reversed on appeal, and the Supreme Court in 2001 upheld the reversal.

and

The case was initially heard in the district court of judge Sonia Sotomayor, who held that the publishers were within their rights according to the Copyright Act of 1976. This decision was reversed on appeal, and the Supreme Court affirmed the appellate court's reversal.

This is the Tasini case. Francis Hamit knows far more than I do. I have asked him for a comment.

Of course a trial finding in a copyright case is not definitive; and being reversed is not a disgrace. I found it interesting when I heard that she had presided over Tasini.

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I wish Rush Limbaugh would find himself a physicist advisor. Or at least someone who took college physics. Some of his political analysis of the environmental movement is correct -- see Pournelle's Iron Law of Bureaucracy -- but his rant on painting roofs and roads white or at least a lighter color betrays a rather profound misunderstanding. At least this is a misunderstanding: I doubt it's the willful ignorance we get from many of the global warming alarmists. Rush ought to know better, but many of the global warming alarmists do know better.

He asks where the reflected heat from white roads would go. The answer, of course, is that the UV and visible light components of solar radiation would not be absorbed into the road to be turned in to heat but rather returned to outer space, after which we don't really care where it goes. With darker roads and roofs the UV and visible light components are absorbed and become heat. Now some of that heat is re-radiated toward space. If there is water vapor, methane, or CO2 in the atmosphere over the re-radiating surface, then some or all of the IR radiation will be absorbed as heat; this is the theory of CO2-caused global warming. (It's also how greenhouses work, sort of: visible light and UV come in, are absorbed as heat, and the resulting IR is absorbed by the glass before it can get out. (I say sort of because the insulation and lack of wind in the greenhouse plays a very important part of keeping it warm.)

That theory of CO2-caused warming is known to be flawed: Historically, CO2 levels rise after warming, not before, which isn't astonishing given that the oceans are CO2 sinks, and warm liquids hold less dissolved CO2 than cold ones (as you know from leaving a carbonated drink out to go flat). Freeman Dyson points out that water vapor is so much more efficient as a green-house gas than CO2 that CO2 cannot have much effect in any but cold, dry areas.

Limbaugh is right in saying that many of those on the "climate change" bandwagon are actually motivated by rent and power seeking schemes and neither know nor care about the actual science. I doubt that is true of Chu, who is in a very uncomfortable situation. Of course he wants grants for the national laboratories, and to get those he has to sail pretty close to the edge of real science. I'd like to see the national laboratories kept together too. They're national treasures. But I would fund them through a different process rather than making the Energy Secretary dance to political tunes.

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There isconsiderable mail today, on many subjects including a ramble -- it's not well enough organized to be called an essay -- on rights and courts.

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The following is a press release. I do not usually run press releases here, but this may be of interest.

New PHP/SQL Programming Certificate Series available from the O'Reilly School of Technology

Full Press Release: <http://www.oreilly.com/emails/press/php-sql-programming.html> .

New PHP/SQL Programming Certificate Series available from the O'Reilly School of Technology PHP/SQL Certification Arms Aspiring Software Developers with Valuable Skills for a Web 2.0 World

http://www.oreillyschool.com/ Sebastopol, CA�Some people dismiss the term "Web 2.0" as meaningless buzz or hype--or even yesterday's outmoded concept--but the reality is that the concepts behind Web 2.0 are in full-force in the real world right now. From the smallest start-up business to the 2008 Presidential campaign, many are actively seeking a way to harness these still-relatively-new ideas--collective intelligence, rich user interface, lightweight programming models, and user-contributed data, among others--to revolutionize how they engage the public toward their own goals.

The O'Reilly School of Technology (OST) http://www.oreillyschool.com has announced a new PHP/SQL Programming Certificate <http://www.oreillyschool.com/certificates/php-sql-programming.php> designed to help students move into the Web 2.0 world. The series is comprised of four courses that take students from an introduction to PHP and database programming through seamless Web 2.0 integration.

"Because the Web has evolved to this point, it's not enough to be a web developer with knowledge of only one or two isolated skills. Rather, developing for a Web 2.0 world requires a complete understanding of how the back end, front end, databases, and web services all fit together within the overall business goals of a website or application," says Trish Gray, developer of the new series.

According to Gray, the successful web developer ends up being far more than a programmer--graphic design, database theory, and system administration all begin to bleed over into the traditional tasks of building clean, reusable and portable code. "Add to that the high-level concepts behind Web 2.0 itself, and suddenly the idea of breaking into Web development--or even updating the skills of a current developer--seems daunting," she adds. "Job descriptions give a laundry-list of skills and use the nebulous Web 2.0 term liberally, assuming everyone knows what it means. But where do you begin?"

Gray designed the new OST Certificate Series with these ideas in mind. Many languages and frameworks can add to the skill set she describes, but PHP and SQL were selected because they form part of the open source LAMP-stack framework (specifically, PHP and MySQL: Linux-Apache-MySQL-PHP), a framework that's easy to use, flexible, and free. In addition, they've been around for a relatively long time, they fit perfectly within a web developer's toolbox of web services, APIs, lightweight programming models, AJAX, and other shared code and/or protocols.

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I received mail about one of the items in the Chaos Manor Reports section of this blog; I had sort of forgotten those were there. This place does get complicated. If you have nothing better to do, you might look at the Summary Page for Chaos Manor Reports. If anyone is curious about where Niven and I take our walk when we go up the hill, there's a long photo essay in the reports. It includes pictures of the Dragon House where Carmen Dragon grew up and where his son Daryl ("the Captain") married Toni Tennille.

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There are also photos and noted about my trip to Japan, and other such matters. I have just read over the Japan trip notes and pictures,(1) and(2), and I found them interesting. I had forgotten much of this.

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