So any entity can do whatever the hell it wants to do whenever it wants to do whatever it wanted to do.
The Creator Gave me the Right to rob liquor stores -- it is beyond the purview of the court.
How about that -- we are a nation of men, not laws, after all!
I am not aware of a creator saying one may not take the property of another without agreed upon compensation. I am claiming that no consitution can remove certain rights. Such as the right to free speech, the right to self defense, the right to be secure in one's possessions, the right to generally be left alone by one's government. These are not controversial. I would almost say you are practicing a reducto ad absurdum argument here.
You might say that but it would not be true.
"Certain" rights? So who chooses which rights are subject to the USC and which rights are not? You?
Either we hew to the system of laws and jurisprudence we agree to or we have anarchy. We agreed that the SCOTUS is the final say -- we might disagree but we agree to be bound by those decisions.
Learn a little about the law and the USC before copying and pasting Latin expressions you clearly don't understand.
"We" did not agree that a bunch of unelected black robed tyrants in any quantity are the final say. One could say that the spinelessness of our politicians have made it that way. If the Supreme Court decrees that we do not have a right to personal self defense are when then stripped of that right? You? Perhaps. As for me, I shall retain mine as it is beyond their purview. If the Supreme Court decrees tomorrow that the right to free speech and freedom of the press is limited only to those items and technologies such as were available when the constitution was written, would the government then be possessed of a right to censor the internet, radio, and television mediums? My answer should be obvious. Should the Supreme Court declare in one of it's fits of declaration, that warrants are not necessary, nor is their any need for the accused to confront their accusers and evidence against them, would it then be A-Okay for the local and federal law enforcement agencies to start picking up citizens and lock them up with such trials and evidence. No, I don't quite see it. However, you should feel free to be constrained by any leash you wish.
Robbery is against the law in every jurisdiction I have ever been in. With penalties ranging from jail time to death. Go anywhere, such items as robbery, murder, and rape are universally condemned. I say again, you are attempting a reduction to the absurd argument in support of the notion of judicial review. I am saying that the doctrine of judicial review is tyrannical in nature and certainly anti-democratic.
Since you have commenced with the absurd, I'll ask you this. Should the Supreme court decree that two plus two equals five, does it?