The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people.
Amendment Nine.
NOTE: The first ten Amendments (the Bill of Rights) were adopted in 1791.
Among the images, analogies, metaphors, and other figures of speech out of which Con-Law is made, I like to mention the constitutional right to eat food and breathe air.
Where do you find those in the Constitution? There's no mention of food or air.
Nor family, travel, or privacy, either. Yet each of these are deemed to be "in" the Constitution as firmly as if they had been written in with a quill pen in 1787, despite the gnashing of teeth of those who think that new rights should not be read in where the Framers' intentions do not appear to allow them.
See Moore v. East Cleveland for family, N.Y. v. Soto-Lopez, and Saenz, for travel, and Griswold, Roe, and Lawrence for privacy as well as equality, among others. You don't get cites here because blogging is done off the head, which means I put down what pops up and you go to Findlaw and enter the name to read the case, just as if we were talking, as we are. This is not the law review.
Here is Harvard Law's Prof. Laurence Tribe, author of the leading encyclopedia on Constitutional Law (American Constitutional Law, Foundation Press) responding to a magazine attack that uses something he wrote, a personal memoir following the death of his father and a certain impact it had on him. At the time, Tribe was soon to make his first argument before the Supreme Court, insisting on the public's right to attend public criminal proceedings, in Richmond Newspapers, Inc. v. Virginia (1980).
While the defendant had such a right, the defense moved to exclude the public from attending, hoping to prevent cross-contamination of witnesses in a murder case where family members of the victim might talk to others who were likely to be called as witnesses. Normally witnesses are barred, on a motion to exclude, but not their family members, as here.
Tribe says that he argued that barring victims' families denied them the sense of justice they need to feel before considering a matter more-or-less settled in their hearts and minds. Tribe says that he felt such a comfort in seeing his late father lying in his casket at the wake.
The Ninth Amendment, which reserves unenumerated rights to the people and commands that they not be disparaged for not being expressly written in the document itself, authorizes us to reason beyond the text, Tribe maintained.
Thus when we attempt to define the empty-basket phrases, "due process" and "equal protection of law" we have to fill the basket with meaning as we go along. We fill it with such fruit as family, travel, parentage, privacy, the right of the public to attend criminal trials, and, if necessary, the right to eat food and breathe air. Isn't that a nice way of looking at Con-Law? You could watercolor it if you wanted, and you'd probably learn more than by reading a book. Depends on the book, I guess. I like the visualization method, myself.
If we have a due process right to life, as we do (5th & 14th), then we have these rights as well, as I reason it, Laurence Tribe and Richmond Newspapers, supra, being my authority, right after the Ninth Amendment itself.
See below, for an excerpt from the Court's opinion regarding unenumerated rights found to be implicit in enumerated ones, and recall that to protect the core, one must protect the fringe, although who is to say that today's fringe won't be tomorrow's core. Privacy was once considered fringe, but now would considered core, I believe.
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