One of the first law review articles I ever remember reading and loving was Vesan Kevasan and Michael Stokes Paulsen's
"Let's Mess with Texas", arguing (in the wake of an extreme GOP gerrymander orchestrated by Tom DeLay) that -- under the treaty governing its admission to the United States -- Texas could go even further by dividing itself into five mini-states. These "Texas tots" could of course also be gerrymandered, thus giving Republicans not just a bunch of bonus House seats, but several Senate seats besides.
Nothing came of the article, of course. It was viewed as an amusing exercise and a bit of provocation; a way of seeing how one could play with various legal principles and arguments to reach absurd results while still staying nominally inside the rules of the game. Their follow-up article, "Is West Virginia Unconstitutional", was similarly silly, fun, provocative, and obviously not ever pursued.
I am not here to say those articles should not have been written. To the contrary, I think that in a healthy legal climate, articles like these are fantastic. They're like avant-garde art -- they push boundaries, get readers to think in new ways, and provoke thought and discussion even as they are ultimately recognized as impractical and nonstarters. We should not divvy up Texas, and we should not abolish West Virginia, but those articles still were fun to read and had a lot to teach us.
But in an unhealthy legal climate, where norms are routinely shattered and long-standing legal limits are crumbling at alarming speed, this sort of play must be set aside. What in other times might be playful and provocative takes on a very different tenor when serious (or at least powerful) people are taking everything seriously.
I'm referring, of course, to the spate of right-wing scholars who responded to Donald Trump's attempted suspension of the constitutional guarantee of birthright citizenship by sprinting as fast as possible to "make the case" for it. The resulting endeavors were an embarrassing display of openly prostituting oneself to their dearest leader: starting with half-cocked tweets before moving to half-baked op-eds and blogposts, and now one of their half-completed essays is apparently being published in the Notre Dame Law Review.
As earnest scholarship, this is all transparent bullshit -- it's blindingly, painfully, shamefully obvious that the whole bit is purely results-oriented, designed to "create a debate" where none actually existed. The "best" category one could slot it into is in the mode of the playful provocations above -- can one, while appearing to stay nominally inside the rules of the game, dislodge a longstanding presumption of constitutional law everyone has taken for granted? If one can pull it off, isn't one roguish and rakish and a dashing flouter of the status quo?
But in times like these, that "play" -- isn't. It's not charming, or funny, or quirky, or even thought-provoking. We are not in time where we enjoy the luxury of indulging in such play, because it isn't actually play at all -- it is a terrifyingly live possibility that countless American citizens will be summarily denaturalized and placed at the mercy of the state.
A few years ago, I wrote about certain right-wing ideologues who were upset that, as their faction of nationalist-conservatism ascended in power, they were no longer treated with the tolerant patience that they enjoyed in their formative years as plucky little law students. "You’re fine when you’re just a yappy little dog that can’t bite," one said, but "if you grow up to be a big dog that can actually do stuff, then you’re probably going to be put down." They framed this as a story of liberal intolerance. But it's actually exactly how things are supposed to go -- the whole point of liberal tolerance is that we're willing to discuss a lot more than we're willing to endorse as actual lived policy. We can read and consider and have serious debates over the ideas of Lenin in a political theory class precisely because there's a background presumption that Leninism isn't coming back. But
if the Leninists actually start seizing political power and instituting the purges, that would be bad! And if they said, "Oh, it was fine to debate our ideas in the classroom, but now that we're actually in charge and establishing gulags you have a problem with it," well, yeah, I do! Clearly!
Again, I greatly prefer the days where we could be more indulgent. It's a much more vibrant and enjoyable world to be in. It's fun to play with the avant-garde sometimes. It's much nicer to contemplate "messing with Texas" as a thought experiment when we're all reasonably confident it isn't actually on the table.
But we're not in that world right now. And the "scholars" who are making play with people's lives -- not as a thought experiment, not as a hypothetical, but in a very real way with very real stakes -- don't deserve our respect or indulgence. In these times, we must lay aside our toys.