The road we're going down? If we are in fact on that road, then give me an example. What part of the constitution has become meaningless due to loose interpretation? — frank
And this responds to
@Michael's post as well regarding substantive due process.
A quick history of this. The 14th amendment was passed following the Civil War in 1866 that stated, "nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law."
In historical context it appears to mean that you can't take people's stuff or deprive them of basic freedom without first giving them a fair trial and opportunity to be heard. In fact, that's how it was interpreted initially and it was referred to as the right to procedural due process. The Amendment was then used to make some of the Bill of Rights applicable against the states (but not all). That is, it was asserted that some of the basic liberties set forth in the Bill of Rights were instances of "liberty" that a state could not deprive you of. A couple of notable examples where a state can deprive you of a right listed in the Bill of Rights are the right to a trial by jury in a civil suit and the right to a grand jury (the federal government cannot deprive you of such a right in a federal proceeding).
The idea of making sure all people receive fair trials makes sense in the historical context of blacks having just been emancipated and the idea of making the federal constitution applicable to the states makes sense since in the historical context of the states in rebellion having just been brought back into the union.
So far so good. The issue is that if the Court has recognized that certain enumerated rights are applicable to the states, it can now start deciding which unenumerated rights will become applicable to the states because the 9th Amendment says that there are some rights not enumerated. And this is where this concept of substantive due process derives (as opposed to procedural due process), which is that we can now look for other unenumerated liberties and demand that the state protect them.
Fast forward to 1905 with the Lochner case, a case striking down economic regulations that were intended to protect workers by limiting how long they could work in a given week. That case said it was unconstitutional to regulate how a worker could decide how he wished to freely contract to labor. There were additional Supreme Court cases that followed that similarly protected economic substantive due process, but in 1937 that era ended with a case striking down Lochner and making clear that the Court would allow employment regulation and it would exercise great caution in locating new unenumerated rights.
Fast forward to 1965, which is when the Court found a rejuvenated interest in finding unenumerated rights, changing course from the era of caution. Moving through the 60s and 70s, it was determined that some of the unenumerated rights that we had were the right to use contraception, the right for interracial couples to marry, the right to abortion, and the right to engage in sodomy (that was in the 90s) It was found however that we don't have the right to state assisted suicide.
In the 1960s, it was decided that there would be no specific formula for deciphering these rights, but the Court was just to make a case by case assessment. In 1997, a case indicated that the Court ought to recognize those unenumerated rights "deeply rooted in the in the Nation’s history and traditions” and “implicit in the concept of ordered liberty.” However, this formula was not used in 2015 when it was determined that gay marriage was an unenumerated right.
So, to answer your question: The 14th Amendment has become meaningless due to loose interpretation. The 14th Amendment states a state may not deprive you of contraception, intermarriage, abortion, sodomy, or gay marriage. You may however be deprived of the right to a jury trial in a civil case, the right to a grand jury, the right to contract to labor however you want, and the right to assisted suicide. There is no formula for deciding where these rights come from, but it's left up to the decision of the Justices.
That hardly sounds like they're following rules or laws, but just sort of deciding. And they don't just make generalized holdings like "you have the right to an abortion." They say, "you have the right to an abortion in the first trimester" and they lay out a very specific rule, as if all of that is a sacred right.
I think the rule is very clear, though, in how unenumerated rights are found. You simply look at the prevailing view of the political left and you declare it right and just and you enshrine it in the Constitution. It then becomes a moral statement decreed by their atheistic god or something and it stands forever immovable. I think it's clear that the Court is just looking to public sentiment when it finds these rights and they change with the political climate. That's not interpretation of a document. That's just what a good politician does.