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65 of 84 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
second-rate history and first-rate lunacy, June 30, 2009
Several months ago, this book's publicist sent me a pre-publication copy, soliciting a "blurb" for the back-cover jacket and advertising, at the request (she said) of Professor Burns. Frankly, I didn't know (until I consulted Wikipedia) that Burns, at the age of ninety, was still alive and had written his twenty-somethingth book, his first on the Supreme Court. On reading the book, I was flattered to discover that Burns had cited and quoted from four of my own books on Supreme Court history.
However, I declined the request for a blurb, for two reasons. First, the twelve chapters on the history of presidential Supreme Court nominations, from George Washington to George W. Bush, were entirely derivative and added little, if anything, to what previous scholars (most notably, Henry Abraham of the University of Virginia, in his book, Justices and Presidents) had already written on this topic. Like Abraham and other scholars in this field, Burns notes that presidents most often nominate justices who (they hope) will reflect and follow their political ideologies (Sonia Sotomayor being the latest example). Burns also notes that presidents sometimes guess wrong: FDR with Felix Frankfurter, Eisenhower with Earl Warren and William Brennan ("my two biggest mistakes"), and George H. W. Bush with David Souter. There's nothing new in Burns's recounting of this history.
My second reason for declining the blurb request stems from the book's thirteen-page epilogue, entitled "The End of Judicial Supremacy?" I was actually not surprised by what Burns wrote in his epilogue, since his previous books (including biographies of FDR and JFK) championed presidential "leadership" of the liberal variety (I happen to share Burns's politics, but not his prescription in this book). Burns puts this prescription in two sentences: "Confronted by a hostile court repeatedly striking down progressive legislation, a president could declare that there is no place in a modern democracy for unelected judges to veto twenty-first-century laws. The president would announce flatly that he would not accept the Supreme Court's verdicts because the power of judicial emasculation of legislation was not--and never had been--in the Constitution." Burns proposes a constitutional amendment (whose wording he does not elucidate) that would allow presidents to invalidate Supreme Court decisions with which they disagree.
Think about this! Eisenhower could have struck down Brown v. Board of Education, Nixon could have struck down Roe v. Wade, and George W. Bush could have struck down the Court's "enemy combatant" rulings. Burns would probably reply that he doesn't mean to go this far, but that's my reading of his radical proposal for presidential autocracy. Of course, this won't happen, but Burns's proposal itself is grounds for dismissing his book as second-rate history and first-rate lunacy. If Burns had his way, the Constitution's checks and balances, and the separation of powers, would disappear.
Note: I am editing this review on July 6 to alert readers of other reviews that the one posted on July 5 by Stewart Burns was written by James Macgregor Burns's son, who did not disclose that fact in his review. I think it's unethical and inappropriate for family members to review each other's books, and to conceal that relationship. I don't know if JM Burns solicited his son's review, but even if he didn't, it's bad form. Does anyone else agree with me? And does Stewart want to explain why he didn't reveal his familial tie?
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8 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Bad History, Bad Book, August 23, 2009
The only thing I learned is that there is still at least one historian who is stuck in a 1930s time warp, in which the history of the Court is a battle between evil reactionaries who oppose "Progressive" legislation and brave, goodhearted liberals who support such legislation. Every hoary Progressive/New Dealer myth about the Supreme Court and its Justices is trotted out, every liberal shibboleth of the past seventy years repeated.
Consider Burns's depiction of the Justices the early 20th century. Holmes, Brandeis, and Harlan were the liberal heroes, everyone else the reactionary villains.
Thus, Holmes was the "great dissenter" who pitted "pragmatism against conservative dogma." No mention of his hostility to African-American rights, support for eugenics, and so forth. John Marshall Harlan, who helped introduce the liberty of contract doctrine to the Supreme Court, and wrote one of the most important liberty of contract cases, Adair v. United States, is anachronistically described as a "liberal." Brandeis was "an exquisitely tolerant, compassionate and wordly man" with a "zeal for freedom ... in his blood."
The rest of the Court, however, adopted the late Justice Stephen Field's "laissez-faire absolutism." William Day (who dissented in Adair) was a "reliable ally of the court's conservative phalanx." All of the six Justices appointed by William Howard Taft were "stout conservatives." William Van Devanter was the "commander-in-chief of judicial reaction." George Sutherland was the leader of the Court's "extreme right-wing." Pierce Butler, who was perhaps the strongest opponent of the excesses of Prohibition enforcement and the only dissenter in Buck v. Bell (coerced sterilization), is reduced to a right-wing railroad lawyer who showed no "regard for dissidents, or for blacks or workers." And so on.
No serious modern historian of the Court would recognize these cartoon characters. But this book, I'm afraid, is not a serious history.
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Pooe Excuse For a "Scholarly" Book, September 24, 2009
This author is just another shill for the left wing. I chose to read this book fully expecting to find a scholarly, unbiased analysis of the Supreme Court over the history of the republic...instead this book is just another liberal left wing diatribe...whenever the court structure is liberal and re-writing laws to match "contemporary" culture, or ruling against any kind of business, it is a great court, in the author's opinion. If it is conservative in structure, or ruling in favor of businesses, then of course someone has "packed" it. The Teddy Roosevelt appointees, because they ruled in the author's favored political direction, was not packed...the Warren court, politically correct rulings, of course was not packed...the Clinton appointees to the court, of course that was not packing... the Nixon appointees, well it was packed...the Bush appointees, well of course it was packed,the Reagan appointees, again it was packed. Readers should read the last chapter about the "Bush-Cheney" court and the author's true colors will come through, and not bother reading the rest of the book because you will not get anything scholarly out of his analysis. In fact,you are better off trying to find this book at your local library, read the last chapter, then return it...no cost and only a little of your time wasted. Wish I had done that...
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