The judiciary has not always been political, or at least not the extent they are today. The executive and the legislative branches are the political branches. The judiciary is supposed to be different. They have lifelong appointments precisely because they're not political--that is, they're not accountable to the people.
There's a huge difference between making law and interpreting law. If Congress passed a law allowing for slavery, the judiciary would have a proper role in striking down the legislation because such a law clearly violates an unambiguous cons utional provision. But when states outlaw abortion, the Supreme Court invents a quasi-fundamental right to abortion for women, with basically no textual justification? Looks, the politicized judiciary is a recent phenomenon in America--you can trace it to the mid-twentieth century. For our first 150 years, the judiciary was remarkably restrained.


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@ your implication of persecuted Christians. Why are they never defended? Lets deal with specifics, where exactly are they under attack?
