I write this
from outside my apt building, where the weather is just about as perfect as can
be: today started off at 35 degrees and windy, a last gasp of winter that made me
regret leaving my heavy jacket at the office, but by 1 pm it was about 73 degrees
with a constant cool breeze that perfectly balanced the temperature. It’s still
around 70, maybe 69 now, but the sky is cloudless and the wind is extraordinary.
The nearby Catholic school’s bells are ringing – I’ve never been outside long
enough to hear them before. J
The Supreme
Court today, it seems, acted a bit skeptical of the individual mandate that the
government asserted as part of the Affordable Care Act. There are a whole
litany of things to talk about here: how much I think the Commerce Clause has
been twisted and expanded over the years, or how this decision might harm the
Court’s image, especially if it’s 5-4 along partisan lines of Reagan, bush, and
bush II vs Clinton and Obama appointees. But I want to talk about this: our
current national focus is on what a bunch of robed people will be writing down
in a few months. These people command no armies; they can’t summon militas, and
they aren’t (let’s be honest) super intimidating.
What they are is
part of a structure of the rule of law in the US, something that I value
immensely. We are a country where bribes don’t happen as they happen elsewhere;
where coups aren’t possible. Ours is a place where, within 30 seconds of
WHEREEVER you are right now, there is a working, flushing toilet.
That’s amazing.
As we fight and
squabble and lie to each other about who was which way when and why, we forget
the profound blessing to have running water, a working 911 service, and the
opportunity (for most of us) to have known and spent time with our families
growing up. Many children are not so lucky. Just the fact that I can do this –
plop down on the grass and not worry about my backpack being stolen is
worthwhile, however much my neighbors are strangers.
So while
everyone is hankering, I’ll listen to the oral arguments tonight, but I’ll be
smiling, because I live in a place where we hold ourselves to the law, most of
the time, and I’ll remember how much that is something to appreciate and
preserve.
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