Of course, they want freedom for themselves, just not Other People
Harvard Law Prof: Coronavirus Is an Excuse to Dump Free Speech, Property Rights from Constitution
Harvard Law Professor Adrian Vermeule suggests using the Chinese virus pandemic as an excuse to establish a new interpretation of the U.S. Constitution, implementing policies that do away with concepts such as “free speech ideology†and “property rights.â€
Adrian Vermeule, a professor of constitutional law at Harvard Law School, recently wrote a piece for the Atlantic in which he argues that traditional interpretations of the U.S. constitution have “now outlived its utility,†and that it is now time for the government to take a more centralized role in people’s lives.
Vermeule argues that “circumstances have now changed†due to the Chinese virus pandemic, and that it is now possible to imagine “moralâ€Â constitutionalism, which he says is not “enslaved to the original meaning of the Constitution,†and is also “liberated†from the narrative of “relentless expansion of individualistic autonomy.â€
The professor is advocating for a new interpretation of the U.S. constitution, which he refers to as “common-good constitutionalism.â€
“Such an approach,†wrote Vermeule, “should be based on the principles that government helps direct persons, associations, and society generally toward the common good, and that strong rule in the interest of attaining the common good is entirely legitimate.â€
Who wants to bet that Prof Vermeule would go Level 10 Apoplectic if Government attempted to limit his 1st Amendment Right to free speech and take his property away? Then we have Charlie Warzel at the NY Times
Open States, Lots of Guns. America Is Paying a Heavy Price for Freedom.
(lots and lots of yammering on gun violence and Coronavirus deaths for lots and lots of paragraphs, we’re skipping to the end)
As in the gun control debate, public opinion, public health and the public good seem poised to lose out to a select set of personal freedoms. But it’s a child’s two-dimensional view of freedom — one where any suggestion of collective duty and responsibility for others become the chains of tyranny.
This idea of freedom is also an excuse to serve one’s self before others and a shield to hide from responsibility. In the gun rights fight, that freedom manifests in firearms falling into unstable hands. During a pandemic, that freedom manifests in rejections of masks, despite evidence to suggest they protect both the wearers and the people around them. It manifests in a rejection of public health by those who don’t believe their actions affect others.
In this narrow worldview, freedom has a price, in the form of an “acceptable†number of human lives lost. It’s a price that will be calculated and then set by a select few. The rest of us merely pay it.
Damned freedom! I recommend the government look to restrict Freedom of the Press, just a threat, and see how the leftist press which doesn’t seem happy that Other People have freedom, reacts. I’m betting, again, Level 10 Apoplexy, denunciations of Fascism and tyranny. And not a shred of self-awareness that they’re fine with taking freedom from Other People, but not themselves.
Read: Using Bat Soup Virus, Liberals Aren’t Even Trying To Hide Their Anti-Freedom Beliefs »
Harvard Law Professor Adrian Vermeule suggests using the Chinese virus pandemic as an excuse to establish a new interpretation of the U.S. Constitution, implementing policies that do away with concepts such as “free speech ideology†and “property rights.â€
Investing in a green recovery from COVID-19 will deliver rapid short-term growth and long-term economic gains while also tackling climate change, according to a new study from Oxford University.
Gov. Roy Cooper said Tuesday that the coronavirus pandemic is under enough control in North Carolina to allow businesses to reopen Friday.
While the global average number of tropical cyclones each year has not budged from 86 over the last four decades, climate change has been influencing the locations of where these deadly storms occur, according to new NOAA-led research published in 
Among the greatest honors of my life was a trip I took to Memphis in October of 2018 to visit the National Civil Rights Museum and receive the institution’s annual Freedom Award. While I was there, I had a chance to stand on the balcony of the Lorraine Motel where Dr. King was assassinated half a century earlier, and reflect on all of the progress we’d made — and that which we hadn’t — in the years since that unbearable day. (snip)
The study, published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences on Monday, breaks new ground by quantifying the temperature range society is most adapted to and projecting how climate change will push people outside it.
We’ve been dealt a bad hand with the coronavirus pandemic. Until we have a vaccine or effective treatment, we have limited tools to fight it. Closing large segments of our society and having people shelter at home is a blunt tool that works, but it inflicts severe hardship on individuals and the economy.

