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The primary problem is there's effectively no check or balance on the Supreme Court.
The House can pass a bill that gets blocked by the Senate.
The House and Senate can pass a bill that gets vetoed by the President.
The House and Senate can over-ride a veto.
The House and Senate can impeach and remove the President.
But if the Supreme Court does something incredibly immoral or otherwise illegal, there really is zero accountability.
Yes, technically the House and Senate could impeach and remove, but that would really only apply to high crimes and misdemeanors (cough, Thomas, cough).
The only way around a bad ruling is to pass a new Constitutional Amendment over-riding it, and the bar for that is far, far higher than a simple veto.
“High crimes and misdemeanors” means whatever the fuck Congress pleases. The problem is that these checks and balances were put in place by people of severely limited vision and imagination, centuries ago, who naively believed that govt officials would show fealty to their office and position. The whole shit breaks down when party loyalty is paramount. Our constitution is stupid af.
Our constitution is fine. On its surface, it works surprisingly well for a document written a quarter of a millennium ago by people who couldn't fathom what society would be two centuries later. If we were to write a new Constitution today, the people of the year 2275 would probably have similar criticisms since there's no way for us to know how society will develop and what the people of 2275 will need. Doesn't mean that the people who wrote it were bad, or there's a problem with the document. It just means that the people who wrote it aren't clairvoyant.
The biggest flaw with the Constitution is that it was written under the assumption that our elected officials would put their personal opinions and differences aside and sincerely work for what's best for the American people. Corruption seemingly did not exist in their minds, and the Constitution doesn't give any guidance about what to do if and when power falls into corrupt hands.
That said, even if the Constitution did give Congress a way to override Supreme Court rulings, our system of tribal politics would have long since perverted it. Especially these days, where even acknowledgement that the other side may even have a point is worthy of excommunication from the party. If a simple majority could override a SC ruling, then the majority would simply spend their time overriding a bunch of old SC rulings they don't like, rendering the SC essentially toothless. If it required a supermajority (60%, 75%, whatever), there's no way you'd get either party to override rulings made by a Supreme Court controlled by their own party. It just wouldn't happen, to the point where the rule may as well not exist and we'd be in the same situation we're in now.
Congress being largely unable to interfere in Supreme Court decisions is what (in theory, if not in practice) keeps the Supreme Court an independent branch of government and not just a lap dog of the legislative and/or executive branch. The problem is that that independence means the Supreme Court could just decide that it wants to be a lap dog anyway.
Yes, it's always been a corrupt and evil system invented by literal slavemasters to violently preserve their disgusting privilege.