Eye-catching title, isn't it? And the sad part is, it's not too far from what happened. I don't like to put political stuff on my blog, but I can't keep my mouth shut about this. Check out the whole story here.
There's a shorter version of the story here that I didn't want to use as the main link, but it still has a quote that I had to include.
"With today's decision, no one's property is safe," said Roger Pilon, director of the Center for Constitutional Studies, at the Cato Institute, a Washington think tank. "Any time a government official thinks someone else can make better use of your property than you're doing, he can order it condemned and transferred," Pilon said in a statement. |
I know the Constitution is deliberately vague on a lot of points. The government is supposed to be able to think of new things and cal them "public use," simply because it would be unreasonable to make them change the constitution every time a new type of public use was thought up (there were no such thing as railroads when the Constitution was first written, for instance). But the Supreme Court exists to make sure the government doesn't overstep its bounds. This is exactly the kind of thing the Supreme Court is supposed to
stop them from doing. Now if we want to stop things like this from happening, the only way to do it is to pass laws restricting what kind of public uses are acceptable. And of course governments won't want to do that, because they hardly ever pass laws to restrict their own powers. And even if they did, they would have to make a new law every time a new kind of "public work" was invented that they might need land for. It's a whole big mess for everybody.
Damn it, Supreme Court, why couldn't you just do your job?