Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
How Amy Coney Barrett could save America
How Amy Coney Barrett could save America
Feb 11, 2026 7:58 AM

Although Amy Coney Barrett has only been a Supreme Court justice for a matter of days, she has the potential to act as the harbinger of a renewed America. She is not only potentially a new role model for working women, but she may also serve as the apostle who introduces Americans to a refreshingly positive view of their own Constitution. In the process, she may reverse the nation’s headlong rush to embrace socialism.

With her unassailable credentials, personal popularity, and winsome persona, Justice Barrett (as we may now call her) represents what Noam Chomsky calls “the threat of a good example.” Such a respectable individual may induce impressionable young minds to entertain less-than-hostile thoughts about the U.S. Constitution – a document that then-Professor Barack Obama told public radio“reflectedthefundamental flaw of this countrythat continues to this day.”

“Nothing threatens the progressive project more than the existence of a Supreme Court that adheres to the Constitution,” wrote David Harsanyi at National Review. “It’s really that simple.” By definition, the Constitution necessarily forecloses efforts to “fundamentally transform America.” It rules out sweeping, top-down government programs financed by massive wealth redistribution. Thus, it – and its supporters – must go.

When allegations that ACB is a charismatic fanatic seeking to outlaw contraception fell flat, her opponents attempted to poison the well about her judicial philosophy: originalism. Sen. Angus King, an independent who caucuses with the Democrats, implied that originalism would outlaw interracial marriages (presumably like that of the court’s most prominent originalist, Clarence Thomas). Former Labor Secretary Robert Reich hinted that originalism considers “Black Americans to be 3/5 of a white person” – a libel as dated as it is erroneous. But no one equaled the rhetorical gales of Sen. Ed Markey, D-Mass., who fulminated:

Originalism is racist. Originalism is sexist. Originalism is homophobic. For originalists, LGBT stands for, “Let’s go back in time.” … Originalism is just a fancy word for discrimination.

Perhaps most ironically, Sen. Markey stated that originalism “has e a hazy smokescreen for judicial activism by so-called conservatives to achieve from the bench what they cannot plish through the ballot box.”

Amy Coney Barrett's nomination is illegitimate.

I vote no. /PHQZhbPduX

— Ed Markey (@SenMarkey) October 26, 2020

His words are the mirror image of reality. The secularization of U.S. public education, nationwide abortion-on-demand, redefining fundamental relationships, amending the 1964 Civil Rights Act to mercial activity involving sexuality or gender identity – none of these passed, or could have passed, Congress. “For the past 50 years, the Supreme Court has almost e an unchallengeable, unreviewable super-legislature,” said Tony Perkins, president of the Family Research Council, shortly after Barrett’s ascension to that court.

Recasting justices’ policy preferences as constitutional law is precisely what originalism seeks to prevent. As Barrett explained on the second day of her confirmation hearings:

I interpret the Constitution as a law, that I interpret its text as text and I understand it to have the meaning that it had at the time people ratified it. So that meaning doesn’t change over time. And it’s not up to me to update it or infuse my own policy views into it.

This is the interpretive method the founders expected their successors to use. As James Madison wrote, “In the exposition of laws, and even of Constitutions, how many important errors may be produced by mere innovations in the use of words and phrases, if not controlled by a recurrence to the original and authentic meaning attached to them!”

A predictable, stable, and impartial administration of the rule of law undergirds any successful nation. If the meaning of the law depends on whim, or is subject to deviation with each iteration of the court, chaos follows. Of what consequence is the legal doctrine of stare decisis if the Constitution itself remains infinitely elastic?

The sight of a woman being sworn in by an African American, however, proves our founding document is not inflexible nor wedded to discriminatory views of the past. The Constitution contained a self-correcting mechanism. The amendment process allowed the American people to create “a more perfect union” through the democratic process – one that requires a supermajority specifically to prevent a paper-thin majority from suppressing minority rights. In time, the American people recognized African Americans’ and women’s right to vote. They further swept artificial barriers into the dustbin of history by allowing more people to offer their God-given talents in a system of free and mutually beneficial exchange.

Generations of Americans have been denied this appreciation of America’s constitutional order. Academia ritually denounces our system as irredeemably racist, sexist, and corrupt. And recent surveys show that an overarchingly negative view of the United States correlates with a high level of support for socialism and Marxism.

The carefully chosen words that Amy Coney Barrett offered after she took her oath of office powerfully perforated our nation’s masochistic consensus. “I love the Constitution and the democratic republic that it establishes,” she said. “And I will devote myself to preserving it.”

At Notre Dame Law School, Barrett won the “Distinguished Professor of the Year” awardthree times. Her greatest teaching opportunity lies in front of her.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Wealth creation and the Reformed confessional tradition
I have been working as part of the Moral Markets project for the past couple of years, and as the formal end of the project looms, some of the outputs of the project ing to fruition. This includes a recent article that I co-authored, “The Moral Status of Wealth Creation in Early-Modern Reformed Confessions.” This piece appears as part of a special issue of Reformation & Renaissance Review co-edited by Wim Decock and Andrew M. McGinnis on the theme, “Interconfessional...
LeBron James repeats communist China’s party line
In last week’s Acton Commentary I expressed my hope that LeBron James wouldn’t just shut up and dribble in the wake of NBA appeasement and a coordinated sports media blackout regarding the protest movement in Hong Kong. As an NBA all-time great, plished businessman, and outspoken activist he was uniquely positioned to stand up for Hong Kong even if it meant standing up to the NBA, team owners, munist regime in China, and the NBA’s Chinese sponsors. I had not...
Rev. Richard Turnbull: Brexit deal, last step before freedom?
UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson has negotiated a new agreement to leave the European Union on October 31. A British observer, who has read the plan, says it embodies a significant improvement over the deal former PM Theresa May saw defeated thrice by historic margins in Parliament. “Overall, these improvements represent a real step in the direction of free trade and hence are to be ed,” writes Rev. Richard Turnbull, in a new essay written for the Acton Institute’s Religion...
Book review: ‘Apostles of Empire: The Jesuits and New France’
In a new piece published at The Catholic World Report, Acton’s Samuel Gregg reviews “Apostles of Empire: The Jesuits and New France,” by Bronwen McShea, Associate Research Scholar with Princeton University’s James Madison Program. In “Apostles of Empire,” McShea details the history of Jesuit missionary efforts that took place in North America during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries and brings attention to how the Jesuits’ missionary efforts were coupled with the advancement of French political and economic ambitions. Gregg writes:...
Fact check: 5 facts about the fourth Democratic debate of 2019
The largest number of candidates to date filled the stage at Otterbein University in Westerville, Ohio, for the fourth Democratic presidential debate last night. They offered a number of statements and assessments that bear further scrutiny. 1. Which will benefit workers more: A Universal Basic e or $15 minimum wage? Senator Cory Booker: Ihope that my friend, Andrew Yang, e out for this – doing more for workers than UBI [Universal Basic e] would actually be just raising the minimum...
Acton Line podcast: Communist China dunks on NBA; Robert Doar on poverty in America
On October 4, Daryl Morey, manager of the Houston Rockets, posted a tweet that included the words “Fight for Freedom, Stand with Hong Kong.” Afterwards, China severed several partnerships they had with the Rockets in retaliation, leading Morey to delete his tweet and apologize for it and also prompting missioner Adam Silver to issue a statement declaring that the NBA does not regulate the speech of its players. Since then, however, the NBA has made attempts to appease China. So...
Rev. Richard Turnbull: Parliament’s moral failure on Brexit
UK Parliament has twice denied Prime Minister Boris Johnson a vote on a Brexit deal favored by the majority of British citizens. The latest efforts to delay Brexit have created “a modern moral crisis in one of the world’s foremost democratic nations,” writes Rev. Richard Turnbull, director of the Centre for Enterprise, Markets, and Ethics (CEME) in Oxford. Turnbull chronicles the head-spinning events that have taken place in Westminster since Parliament’s rare Saturday session in a new article for he...
Alejandro Chafuen in Forbes: Young Europeans’ views of totalitarianism
Alejandro Chafuen, Acton’s Managing Director, International, wrote recently in Forbes to give his thoughts on a recent survey that examined young Europeans’ attitudes toward various strains of totalitarianism. Attitudes in different countries vary, of course, and – unsurprisingly munism is viewed more favorably in countries that were never behind the Iron Curtain than in many eastern ones where the historical memory of it lives on. I have been reading most of the fundraising appeals sent out by think tanks and...
Corporate America’s bet on China
In Dan Hugger’s most recent post about the controversy surrounding the NBA’s visit to China, he identifies the crux of the issue: “If even the mildest form of expression of solidarity can provoke the People’s Republic of China to such draconian action as to imperil the well-being of NBA players, why play in China at all?” When I first heard LeBron James’ criticism of Daryl Morey, like many others I thought James was concerned about potential or actual investment from...
A Nobel for a technocratic approach to poverty
In this week’s Acton Commentary, Victor Claar looks at the work of the three economists awardedthe 2019 Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences. Claar, associate professor of economics at Florida Gulf Coast University and an Acton affiliate scholar, says “economists are quite divided on this year’s prize” given to Abhijit Banerjee,Esther DufloandMichael Kremer. As an economist I can tell you that we adore unexpected, counterintuitive results like the ones for textbooks and meals. And researchers like Banerjee, Duflo, and Kremer...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved