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The Supreme Court has been an ABJECT, CATASTROPHIC, SOUL-CRUSHING FAILURE when it comes to the Bill of Rights.


Oh, what a glorious beacon of liberty we built! When our noble founders crafted the judiciary, it was supposed to be PURE DEMOCRACY in its most majestic form, where a simple majority could decide the fate of our sacred freedoms! But no, they cleverly designed it so that not even a rampaging mob of 51% could casually torch the Bill of Rights. We had layers of appeals, state courts, federal courts, and finally the Supreme Court as the ultimate guardian.

What a brilliant plan.  Except… oops.

Instead, we’ve handed these self-anointed gods in black robes the keys to the kingdom, and they’ve spent decades engaged in the world’s most expensive game of judicial group-think, sipping from the fountain of their own brilliance while “interpreting” our rights into oblivion through endless arguments and semantic gymnastics.

They’ve taken crystal-clear, unambiguous words written by men who had just fought a revolution against tyranny and twisted them into a pretzel of legalistic nightmares that would make even a contortionist blush. “Shall not be infringed”? Cute. “Unreasonable searches and seizures”? Adorable. These robed overlords have rewritten the Bill of Rights so thoroughly in some cases that it’s barely recognizable, like watching someone take the Mona Lisa and turn it into abstract finger-painting while calling it “progress.”

And the process? A single case can drag through the appellate labyrinth for decades, a lifetime of waiting while your rights rot in legal purgatory. Justice delayed isn’t just denied; it’s publicly executed in slow motion while we all pretend this is “due process.”

Look at what they’ve done:  They’ve banned kids from praying in public schools because apparently the government’s sacred mission is to protect innocent ears from the horrifying sound of “Dear God.” Heaven forbid a child whispers a prayer, quick, call the ACLU! The state has no business restricting prayer anywhere, but these black-robed geniuses decided otherwise. Bravo. (Engel v. Vitale (1962) 370 U.S. 421; School Dist. of Abington Township v. Schempp (1963) 374 U.S. 203; Lee v. Weisman (1992) 505 U.S. 577; Santa Fe Indep. Sch. Dist. v. Doe (2000) 530 U.S. 290.)  

The Second Amendment? What a hilarious joke it’s become. You can “exercise” that right… provided you grovel before a swarm of bureaucrats, prove you’re “worthy,” pay their unconstitutional extortion fees, and accept whatever neutered, ineffective pop-gun they graciously allow you to own. (District of Columbia v. Heller (2008) 554 U.S. 570; McDonald v. Chicago (2010) 561 U.S. 742; N.Y. State Rifle & Pistol Assn., Inc. v. Bruen (2022) 597 U.S. 1.) Virtually every gun law on the books is a blatant middle finger to the Constitution, laws that could never have survived an honest amendment process. But the Supreme Court waved its magic wand and made tyrannical gun-grabbing not only possible, but fashionable. How convenient.  

Our once-ironclad protections against unwarranted police searches? Shattered. It all started with Terry v. Ohio, that fateful “just a little exception” that opened the floodgates to a thousand more. (Terry v. Ohio (1968) 392 U.S. 1.) Now privacy is a quaint relic from a bygone era. The government can track your every move, read your emails, scan your texts, and listen to your calls using whatever shiny new technology they dream up. “Papers, please” has evolved into “We already know everything about you, citizen.” (See Smith v. Maryland (1979) 442 U.S. 735; Carpenter v. United States (2018) 585 U.S. 296.)  

And let’s not forget the Burger Court in the 1970s, those visionary heroes who invented a brand-new constitutional right to unrestricted abortion out of thin air, dubbing it “privacy” even though the word appears nowhere in the actual Constitution. It was popular enough to maybe pass in some states, but good luck getting a real amendment through the proper political process. So they just… made it up. Judicial legislation at its finest. (Roe v. Wade (1973) 410 U.S. 113; Planned Parenthood of Southeastern Pa. v. Casey (1992) 505 U.S. 833; overruled by Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization (2022) 597 U.S. 215.)  

Congratulations, America.

We are no longer the land of the free or the home of the brave. We’ve allowed nine lawyers in fancy dresses to amend the Constitution by sheer judicial fiat, bypassing every safeguard the Founders put in place.

Our founding fathers, who risked everything to escape exactly this kind of arrogant tyranny, would be spinning in their graves so violently they’d generate electricity.

Frankly? They’d have hanged some of these judges.  And honestly? Looking at the smoking ruins of our Bill of Rights… it’s getting harder to argue they were wrong.  What a spectacular disaster.


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