46
Laurence H. Tribe
ing meta-principle directing the Federal Government and all its branches,
including the Judiciary, never to regard the piecemeal and incomplete char-
acter of the enumerated substantive and procedural rights as preclusive of
other rights, depending on the circumstances. That Amendment states: “[t]
he enumeration in the Constitution of certain rights shall not be construed to
deny or disparage others retained by the people.”
150
Griswold thus constituted an instance in which the Constitution’s own
text did not in fact silently leave the Court free to choose between Douglas’s
approach and that of the dissenting justices, each of whom treated the
Constitution’s silence on the existence of a right to intimate personal, sexual,
or marital privacy – its failure to “enumerate” that right in the Bill of Rights
or anywhere else in the Constitution – as though that silence represented a
constitutional prohibition on the recognition of any such a right and on its
federal judicial enforcement.
151
Properly understood, the Ninth Amendment
is
a command, directed to all federal officials (including, of course, Supreme
Court Justices), about how not to construe the rest of the Constitution’s text.
Although Justice Goldberg, concurring separately, invoked the Ninth
Amendment in just the right way (for the first time ever in any Justice’s opin-
ion, whether for the Court or in a concurrence)
152
– a tribute, I think, to my
friend and former Harvard colleague Stephen Breyer, the Justice who had been
Goldberg’s law clerk at the time – the truth is that the Ninth Amendment’s
meta-rule had never before been treated as a serious source of, or constraint
on, constitutional doctrine. Indeed, although his having done so may in signif-
icant part help to explain Judge Robert Bork’s lopsided rejection by the Senate
when President Reagan nominated him to the Court, Bork had casually dis-
missed the Ninth Amendment’s rule of construction as an incomprehensible,
and therefore judicially unenforceable, “ink blot” during his confirmation
hearings roughly two decades after Griswold, which he famously went out on
a limb to denounce.
153
Whatever the most convincing explanation for
Griswold v.
Connecticut
might be, that decades-old decision, now part of the firmly settled constitutional
150
U.S. Const. amend. IX (emphasis added).
151
381 U.S. at 510 (Black. J., dissenting; “I like my privacy as well as the next one, but I am never-
theless compelled to admit that government has a right to invade it unless prohibited by some
specific constitutional provision.”);
ibid.
, at 530 (Stewart, J., dissenting; “With all deference, I
can find no such general right of privacy in the Bill of Rights . . .”).
152
See
ibid.
, at 488–90 (Goldberg, J., concurring).
153
See Ramesh Ponnuru, “Judge Bork’s Ink Blot,”
National Review (December 20, 2012, 4:00
A.M.),
www.nationalreview.com/article/336142/judge-borks-ink-blot-ramesh-ponnuru
[
https://
perma.cc/BLY6-UCWS
]; Steven F. Hayward, The Age of Reagan, 565–6 (2009).