FDR's Fireside Chat, Reorganizing the Judiciary, March 9, 1937-- The Fight for the General Welfare
Quote from Franklin Roosevelt in his "Fireside Chat", on the Reorganization of the Judiciary, March 9, 1937--
["But since the rise of the modern movement for social and economic progress through legislation, the Court has more and more often and more and more boldly asserted a power to veto laws passed by the Congress and State Legislatures in complete disregard of this original limitation.
In the last four years the sound rule of giving statutes the benefit of all reasonable doubt has been cast aside. The Court has been acting not as a judicial body, but as a policy-making body.
When the Congress has sought to stabilize national agriculture, to improve the conditions of labor, to safeguard business against unfair competition, to protect our national resources, and in many other ways, to serve our clearly national needs, the majority of the Court has been assuming the power to pass on the wisdom of these acts of the Congress - and to approve or disapprove the public policy written into these laws."]
We are fighting the same Social Darwinist and Free Market dogmatic insanity today. The same culture of greed and survival of the fittest which ran the GOP, Wall Street, and the Republican appointed Judges during the New Deal, is still running the show today, standing for the same bankrupt outlook, except this time, in the middle of a Pandemic.
FDR defeated them, because his understanding and defense of our Constitution from the Financial predators and Religious zealots started with the Constitution's Preamble. And he brought these ideas directly to the American People, educating them on the history of our Nation and government. Our President taught Civics Classes while he was fighting to defeat Economic Depression, Fascists at home and abroad, and a Fifth Column of financiers and Bankers who were out to sabotage the recovery and revive the failed policies of Herbert Hoover. He says it right in this Fireside Chat. It is so worth reading the transcript.