Screeling wrote:
That is ridiculous. The Constitution was not written with imagery and symbolism. As DFK says, words have meanings, and the signers agreed to those meanings when they signed their names to the document. If those "honest enquirers" interpreting the document do not do so through the lens of the history of its adoption (which necessarily includes language), then they are not honest nor unbiased.
Technically,
all language is "imagery and symbolism." Words do not have
inherent meanings, every sentence you ever say or hear requires interpretation for it to have any meaning at all.
Now, the constitution is not abstract. The drift in language should not change the meanings of the articles that it contains. However, there are an infinite number of possible legal situations to which the constitution can apply. Compounding that, many, perhaps even most, of those situations could not apply at the time the constitution was signed, due to changes in society, scientific understanding and technology. As such, not every article of the constitution or its amendments has a meaning that is obviously clear when applied to a specific situation. This cannot and could not ever be any different. There is no document you could write that would make the intent clear and obvious in every possible situation. Even the original writers would have different ideas in their heads at the time of writing as to how the various articles would have applied at any given time.
Anyone who thinks that courts are not needed to "interpret" the constitution is living in a dream world with an idealized fictionalization of how language and law work.
That doesn't mean that courts have not, on occasion, been so far outside the possible interpretations so as to render decisions completely contrary to the intent of the constitution -- it
does happen. But let's not even for a moment pretend that most such situations are cut and dried, with obvious meaning. If they were, supreme court decisions would be rapid and unanimous most of the time.