Rafael wrote:
I'm not sure what you define to be "consistent" but setting new precedent and then using it until yet newer precedent is found is not defined as "consistent" to me. Not whatsoever. You are ignoring the temporal context of the word and only focusing on the fact it is "consistently" applied until it is discarded. I'd argue, you're just taking an interpretation (not a necessarily "wrong" interpretation) of the word "consistent" and picking it such that you can declare the way The Constitution is adhered as being consistent.
Again, the dog does not wag the tail. It is pure induction and circular logic to say that "because meaning of The Constitution is debated over, it is evidence that the Constitution is not clear, because if it were, there would be no debate."
MOST of the rules the court has made are consistant over the span of 50-100 years. What you're trying to claim is 'immutable' --however the intent of the constitution was NEVER that the laws and Constitution were immutable. That is why there is room for ammendments, why there is a judicial branch. It is fully expected that the zeitgeist would change and that the winds of change would require a revisting of the interpretation of the laws. The constitution is very specific in some places. (occasionally odd places, but for the most part they're targeted)
Congress shall make NO law....
Other times the language is deliberatly left open. What is Cruel and Unusual in one circumstance is not Cruel and Unusual in another.
You're arguing for a strict constructionist point of view, without really understanding that the construction was intentionally fluid in many cases.
No one is arguing that there are occasions that the interpretations have occasionally stretched the bounds of original intent and somtimes even creduility, however it would be disingenuous to claim they are 'inconsistant' -- what you mean to say is they are inconsistant in some key areas that are near and dear to you, simply because those issues ARE so contentious.