Below is the text version of Taking the Ninth Amendment Seriously: A Review of Calvin R. Massey’s Silent Rights: The Ninth Amendment and the Constitution’s Unenumerated Rights [1995], 24 Hastings Const. L. Q. 757 (1997). This submitted draft version may differ slightly from version published.

Taking the Ninth Amendment Seriously: Review of Calvin R. Massey, Silent Rights: The Ninth Amendment and the Constitution’s Unenumerated Rights (Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1995)

 

By N. Stephan Kinsella[1]

Abstract:  In this review, Mr. Kinsella details and critiques Calvin R. Massey’s recent book on the Ninth Amendment.  Massey points out that many modern constitutional theorists hold that the Ninth Amendment cannot be read as a source of rights that can be used to strike down legislation, but only as a rule of construction that prevents construing the Bill of Rights to imply the existence of federal powers beyond those enumerated.  However, Massey argues, because of the modern expansion of federal powers and current constitutional jurisprudence, it is now “impossible” to achieve the amendment’s original function of limiting the implied powers of the federal government.  Massey suggests that, under a theory of “constitutional cy pres,” the original government-limiting purpose of the Ninth Amendment can nevertheless be achieved if it is read as a source of unenumerated rights that can be used to trump legislation.  Massey goes on to argue that these unenumerated rights include both natural rights and positive rights protected in state constitutions.

Kinsella argues that Massey’s theory has little constitutional support, and that this theory would undermine the principle of federalism, itself one of the original purposes of the Constitution.  Kinsella concludes by suggesting better approaches to constitutional interpretation or reform, such as the approaches of Randy Barnett and Marshall DeRosa. [click to continue…]

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Three Great Practical Things in my Life

by Stephan Kinsella on January 17, 2012

in Culture

I’m not talking about personal matters like getting married or having a child or having great parents. Or, intellectually, on the level of reading Mises or Hoppe or Rothbard (or meeting the latter two, for that matter). But three great practical things that stand out that have made big differences for me:

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Favorite Podcast Bumper Music

by Stephan Kinsella on December 28, 2011

in Culture

I listen to a lot of podcasts and am very impressed by some of the intro/theme music (I think it’s sometimes called bumper music) they came up with. It’s such an incredible skill to me. Hear are my favorite ones, in descending order:

  1. KERA Think. Just love it. Soothing and pleasant, just the right length. Wow. (It’s also one of my favorite podcasts.) Recent episode; listen at 0 to 10 seconds; and the transition at 14:02 to 14:50;
  2. Slate podcasts, e.g. the Culture Gabfest. Recent episode;
  3. Cato’s daily podcast. Recent episode;
  4. Free Talk Live’s varied metal openings (example);
  5. The awesome opening to Sex, Lies, and Anarchy, clips from the uber-cool song Shiny Toy Guns.

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Steve Mendelsohn: The God of Death and the Death of God

December 13, 2011 Culture

My friend and former patent lawyer colleague Steve Mendelsohn sent me the essay below (Steve doesn’t have his own blog, so this is posted here with his permission). One of his other pieces is the funny “Confessions of a Law School Asshole,” published when he was a law student at U. Penn in The Penn [...]

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My Epitaph

December 12, 2011 personal

My parents’ recent selection of their tombstones got me ta thinkin’. I think the epitaph I’d like would be: Father, Husband, Libertarian.

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Hoppe’s Argumentation Ethics and Kinsella’s Estoppel Discussed in Hebrew

December 9, 2011 Uncategorized

Guy Kedem sent me a link to his article Dialogical Libertarianism: Ultimate Foundation of Ethics, which is a Hebrew-language discussion of Hoppe’s argumentation ethics and my estoppel theory of libertarian rights. For more on argumentation ethics, see my “Argumentation Ethics and Liberty: A Concise Guide,” Mises Daily (May 27, 2011) (includes “Discourse Ethics and Liberty: [...]

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Hoppe on the plight of newcomers in a fully owned world

November 19, 2011 Libertarianism

Great passage that I’ve always liked from Hans-Hermann Hoppe’s The Economics and Ethics of Private Property, p. 417-18: In fact, what strikes Conway as a counterintuitive implication of the homesteading ethic, and then leads him to reject it, can easily be interpreted quite differently. It is true, as Conway says, that this ethic would allow [...]

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Obligations of the Depositary

November 18, 2011 Austrian Economics

From the Louisiana Civil Code: Art. 2931.  Use of the thing deposited The depositary may not use the thing deposited without the express or implied permission of the depositor. Consider this in light of advocates of fractional-reserve banking, who claim that the customer who lends money to a “bank” can naturally be referred to as [...]

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Wozinski: “A Priori of Justice”

November 17, 2011 Mises Blog Posts

Jakub Wozinski, who previously published “Hayek and Departure from Praxeology” in Libertarian Papers, asked me to post the draft of his working paper “A Priori of Justice,” the text of which is appended below (RTF; PDF). His note is below. Feel free to email comments to him or leave them in the comments field below. [...]

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“Why ‘Intellectual Property’ is not Genuine Property,” Adam Smith Forum, Moscow

November 15, 2011 Intellectual Property

As I noted in a previous post, the 3rd Adam Smith Forum was held earlier this month (Nov. 12, 2011) in Moscow. This event was organized by the Center for the Philosophy of Freedom, the Libertarian Party of Russia, and others. The Chairman of the ASF Steering Committee was economist Pavel Usanov, head of the [...]

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The problem of particularistic ethics or, why everyone really has to admit the validity of the universalizability principle

November 10, 2011 Uncategorized

From The Meaning of Morality. As I write in an upcoming paper (“The Ethical Case Against Intellectual Property,” Griffith Law Review, Symposium on Law and Anarchy: Legal Order and the Idea of a Stateless Society (Symposium Editor, Gary Chartier; forthcoming 2012)): First, as Professor Hoppe has argued, the assignment of ownership to a given resource [...]

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Samuel Read on Legal Positivism and Capitalism in 1829

November 4, 2011 Libertarianism

I recently emailed a question to the Mises email list. The subject line: “Legal foundations and presuppositions of economic analysis.” An edited version: I am looking for economic articles or textbooks that explicitly discuss the legal assumptions that economic analysis rests on. For example economists take for granted certain legal institutional features and concepts such [...]

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Private Property and Wittgenstein’s Beetle

November 1, 2011 Libertarianism

I noted in “What Libertarianism Is” (n.1): The term “private” property rights is sometimes used by libertarians, which I have always found odd, since property rights are necessarily public, not private, in the sense that the borders or boundaries of property must be publicly visible so that nonowners can avoid trespass. For more on this [...]

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Speaking on “Why Intellectual Property is not Genuine Property” at Adam Smith Forum, Moscow

October 30, 2011 Intellectual Property

The 3rd Adam Smith Forum is being held Nov. 12, 2011 in Moscow. This is an impressive event, organized by the Center for the Philosophy of Freedom, the Libertarian Party of Russia, and others. The Chairman of the ASF Steering Committee is economist Pavel Usanov, head of the Hayek Institute for Economy and Law; Andrey [...]

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Papal Infallibility and Catholic Socialism

October 26, 2011 Culture

Jeff Tucker and Tom Woods had excellent criticisms of The Vatican’s Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace released a document Monday, calling for a world economic authority and condemning the “idolatry of the market.” But were I still a devout Catholic, of the opinion that the Church was infallible when speaking through its pope ex [...]

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Stolen Property and Unjust Enrichment

October 26, 2011 Libertarianism

Interesting recent case: Man Tracks Down Classic Camaro Stolen 16 Years Ago: Edward Neely of Jefferson, Mo. has his baby back. Or at least his stolen 1969 Camaro. Nicknamed “Chelsey Pearl,” Neely purchased the car when he was 18. In 1995, the car was stolen, and hadn’t been seen since. That is, until he spotted [...]

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Marx was right about capitalism

October 26, 2011 Austrian Economics

Hoppe has explained how Marx was “essentially correct” in his theory of history and class analysis. His main mistake was his understanding of exploitation, which was based on a flawed understanding of the labor theory of value. As Hoppe argues, drawing on Rothbardian libertarian and Austrian insights, the only meaningful exploitation is aggression against private [...]

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Batting about voluntary slavery

October 25, 2011 Libertarianism

Some of my comments on a thread on facebook:   Jeremiah Dyke Making moves! In design phase for a math product and hat idea. Found my manufactures! Discussing details. Also working on a paper involving the defense of voluntary slavery. Stephan Kinsella ?David Gordon,Jeremiah Dyke Thomas L. Knapp I agree with David Gordon I disagree [...]

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Interesting and Esoteric Words of the Slate Podcast Literati: October 19, 2011

October 23, 2011 Culture

Latest notable terms from this and last week’s Slate Culture Gabfest (feel free to email me suggestions or leave them in the comments to the main page, which keeps a running collection of the terms from this series of posts). And added to the list of terms I’m waiting to hear: stigmergic and Cockaigne.

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