Thursday, July 07, 2022

“High standards of historical scholarship” and the Supreme Court

Last month I wrote about how one of the recent big U.S. Supreme Court decisions clearly misstated the facts of the case at issue, and about the troubling implications of such misstatements.

As Ian Milhiser had argued at Vox, if events had actually occurred as the decision described, previous precedents would have applied. The majority opinion’s false description of circumstances therefore muddled what exactly it allowed while overruling past decisions.

Obviously the majority of justices on this court wanted to reverse those decisions. And I think their willingness to do so based on obviously false factual statements undermined the authority of the court and the law.

Yesterday the Organization of American Historians, the American Historical Association, and other groups of history professionals issued a joint statement criticizing how another recent Supreme Court decision, Dobbs v. Jackson, badly misrepresented the more distant past:
Historians might note that the Court’s majority opinion refers to “history” sixty-seven times, claiming that “an unbroken tradition of prohibiting abortion on pain of criminal punishment persisted from the earliest days of the common law until 1973.”

Our brief shows plentiful evidence, however, of the long legal tradition, extending from the common law to the mid-1800s (and far longer in some American states, including Mississippi), of tolerating termination of pregnancy before occurrence of “quickening,” the time when a woman first felt fetal movement. The majority of the court dismisses that reality because it was eventually—although quite gradually—superseded by criminalization. In so doing the court denies the strong presence in US “history and traditions” at least from the Revolution to the Civil War of women’s ability to terminate pregnancy before the third to fourth month without intervention by the state.

These misrepresentations are now enshrined in a text that becomes authoritative for legal reference and citation in the future. . . . The OAH and AHA consider it imperative that historical evidence and argument be presented according to high standards of historical scholarship. The Court’s majority opinion in Dobbs v. Jackson does not meet those standards, and has therefore established a flawed and troubling precedent.
In essence, the historic trend to bar or even criminalize abortions that gained steam in the late 1800s didn’t fit with the conservative justices’ claim to follow precedents from when the Constitution was written—“originalism,” so-called. They couldn’t claim that later generations had become more enlightened because people might then want to apply the same insight to other matters. So those justices simply proclaimed that the historical record really did fit their claims.

As the historical organizations say, the result is distorted history that’s nonetheless “authoritative for legal reference.” This Supreme Court is asking us Americans to base our system of laws on claims that are demonstrably not true.

2 comments:

  1. The draft Dobbs opinion was leaked back in early MAY.

    So why in God's name did the OAH/AHA wait until now to publish this damning critique of Justice Alito's distortions of the evidence?

    I realize that the chances that evidence and reason would sway any SCOTUS votes were vanishingly small, but there was at least SOME chance that the historians' critique could have had an impact had it been issued before the ruling had been set in stone.

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  2. Historians submitted a friend-of-the-court brief during the argument phase. This statement points out that document and reiterates its conclusion. So there’s nothing such a statement a month ago could have added to the justices’ deliberations that they didn’t already have.

    Indeed, it seems clear that the justices who decided this case didn’t care about expert consensus on historical or medical facts. They wanted to reach a certain conclusion, one they had tacitly promised to the organizations and executives who put them forward for their job while denying to the legislators who confirmed them.

    That meant the historical organizations’ statement could influence only public opinion in the response to the decision. I don’t think an extra month would have had any advantage in that effort, and it would have brought the disadvantage of people being able to complain the organizations were critiquing a leaked draft, not the actual decision.

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