How Courts Failed the Constitution: Clark Neily on “Terms of Engagement”


Published on Feb 5, 2014 by ReasonTV

“The judge will actually collaborate with the government in coming up with hypothetical justifications for a law in order to bend over backwards and uphold whatever the government is doing,” says Clark Neily, attorney at the Institute for Justice and author of the new book, Terms of Engagement: How Our Courts Should Enforce the Constitution’s Promise of Limited Government. “You don’t get a neutral arbiter.”

Neily sat down with Reason TV’s Zach Weissmueller to discuss what Neily describes as an ongoing pattern of “judicial abdication” in America.The judiciary, he says, was meant to stand as a bulwark against the tyranny of the majority, a defender of individual rights. Instead, it has become a mere enabler of legislators and government agencies. Neily argues that charges of “judicial activism” are overblown in a time when what’s needed is greater “judicial engagement,” or, a real grappling with the meaning of the Constitution and its application as a check on government power.

Approximately 9 minutes. Produced by Zach Weissmueller. Shot by Tracy Oppenheimer, Lexy Garcia, and Gabrielle Cole.

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One thought on “How Courts Failed the Constitution: Clark Neily on “Terms of Engagement”

  1. I wish Clark the best – I lived this until about 6 years ago when I just got tired of the corruption that seemed to permiate our Courts – the real class acts (good Judges) were smothered by the “for-sale” scum that just never ended – it also follows suit, with the police, wherein the same thing (un-bridled corruption) has spilled into our streets.

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