Magna Carta Neglexerunt
My pastor likes to speculate about watershed historical
moments, and the enormous and varied breadth of his reading provides more than
adequate examples. Sometimes these
little chestnuts will pop up during coffee or while folding beds for his
charitable church’s programs.
Last week’s coffee provided this observation, which he
attributed to an obscure paper offered by an equally obscure academic: “I believe it was W. H. Munro who pointed out
that the real promise of civilized treatment began with the development of the
contract.”
Would that be the contract between Noah and God not to flood
the earth again; signature by rainbow?
“No, of course not. God
and gods need not adhere to contracts, nor would those with divine rights.”
What about the General Assembly?
“Ha! Yes, I should
add ‘nor those who believe they are acting divinely.’ The Magna Carta might be as good a starting
point as any.”
Wasn’t that way back in 1200 or so?
“Indeed, 1215. The
Barons trumped the King’s power to have them arrested without reason by forcing
his signature/seal at Runnymede in 1215 to a document protecting the rights of
those accused. They vowed to swear
allegiance to the King if he would acknowledge it officially.”
Did he?
“Yes, and they kept their end of the contract. Quite a moment indeed. I believe that House of Lords Member Denning
in the late 1800’s remarked it was “the
greatest constitutional document of all times – the foundation of the freedom
of the individual against the arbitrary authority of the despot.”
Constitutional?
Constitutions are contracts?
“Now you’re catching on.
Constitutions carefully describe the basic principles and laws of a nation, state, or social group,
and in turn determine the powers and duties of the government and the guaranteed
rights to the people in it. That, my
friend, is a contract written for present and future generations.”
So, Quinn’s
latest refusal to pay legislators until they brought in an appropriate pension
reform bill was breaking a contract?
“In a sense,
for you see a judge can be interpreter as well as arbiter. Judge Neil Cohen found the clause stating legislators’
salaries ‘cannot be changed while serving’ to mean ‘cannot be diminished, not
just increased.’ That was originally
meant to prevent their voting a fiscal escalation for themselves. The judge used, shall we say, the other side
of the sword.”
Thane Madigan |
And yet the
very legislators who were vindicated this week have returned to working on cuts
to promised pensions for retirees and public workers?
“Yes, from what I understand Pension Committee members have said
they are still working toward a deal, using a framework that would end the
automatic 3 percent cost-of-living increases, compounded annually, that
retirees currently receive.”
But isn’t that hypocrisy?
“No, it’s acting divinely.”
"All hail, [Madigan]! Hail to thee, Thane of [the 11th Legislative District]!
ReplyDelete"All hail, [Madigan]! Hail to thee, [Speaker of the House of Representatives]!
"All hail, [Madigan], that shalt be king hereafter!"
Dear Lord Madigan and thralls,
ReplyDeleteDo unto others as you would have them do unto you.
Sincerely,
God (via Ken)