Court Opinion

ID: 9423005
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-02 23:05:28.238829+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:22:40.901841
License: Public Domain

Me. Justice Black,
dissenting.†
While I have joined the dissents of Mr. Justice Douglas from the Court’s action in remanding these cases without deciding the important constitutional questions involved, I have additional reasons for objecting to the remands. In Communist Party v. Subversive Activities Control Board, 367 U. S. 1, 137 (dissenting opinion), I stated at some length my reasons for believing that the Subversive Activities Control Act of 1950, as amended, 64 Stat. 987, 50 U. S. C. §§ 781-826 (1958 ed.), on which the Government’s case here rests, violates a number of provisions of our Constitution and Bill of Rights in many respects. See also Aptheker v. Secretary of State, 378 U. S. 500, 517 (concurring opinion). I think that among other things the Act is a bill of attainder; that it imposes cruel, unusual and savage punishments for thought, speech, writing, petition and assembly; and that it stigmatizes people for their beliefs, associations and views about politics, law, and government. The Act has borrowed the worst features of old laws intended to put shackles on the minds and bodies of men, to make them confess to crime, to make them miserable while in this country, and to make it a crime even to attempt to get out of it.* It is difficult to find laws more thought-stifling *512than this one even in countries considered the most benighted. Previous efforts to have this Court pass on the constitutionality of the various provisions of this freedom-crushing law have met with frustration on one excuse or another. I protest against following this course again. My vote is to hear the case now and hold the law to be what I think it is — a wholesale denial of what I believe to be the constitutional heritage of every freedom-loving American.

[This opinion applies also to No. 65, Veterans of the Abraham Lincoln Brigade v. Subversive Activities Control Board, post, p. 513.]

In Aptheker v. Secretary of State, 378 U. S. 500, this Court held unconstitutional on its face the whole of § 6 of the Subversive Activities Control Act of 1950, as amended, 64 Stat. 993, 50 U. S. C. § 785 (1958 ed.), which made it unlawful for any member of an organization registered under the Act “to make application for a passport . . . or ... to use or attempt to use any such passport.”