This mono mind must not connect
Purer nature will contain me
Free fall in air I will surpass
--The Fixx
Last week the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, which sent the question of whether abortions should be legal to the various states. Today, in the case of West Virginia v. EPA, the high court ruled that the Environmental Protection Agency was not specifically authorized by Congress to limit greenhouse gas emissions when the agency was established in 1970.
The court essentially sends the issue back to Congress. If it wants to enact sweeping regulations to curb greenhouse gas emissions, then Congress must do so through the legislative process.
The ruling makes it more difficult for climate change activists to circumvent the constitutional law-making process.
In both of these cases, the Supreme Court strikes blows against overreach. In Roe, it was the court itself writing law. In West Virginia, it was the executive branch working through one of its agencies (although one could argue that it was the rogue administrative, or deep, state acting out its own agenda.
The court's decisions place responsibility for both issues with elected legislators and, ultimately, with the voters who elect them.
This, of course, is consistent with the intent of our founding ancestors.
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