Wed Mar 11, 2020, 10:01 AM
dajoki (10,675 posts)
A Federal Judge Condemned the "Roberts Court's Assault on Democracy.'' It's About Time
A Federal Judge Condemned the “Roberts Court’s Assault on Democracy.’’ It’s About Time.
https://slate.com/news-and-politics/2020/03/federal-judge-condemns-roberts-courts-assault-on-democracy.html Nowhere is the problem of asymmetrical rhetorical warfare more apparent than in the federal judiciary. For the past several years, federal judges, notably those appointed by Donald J. Trump, have felt unmoored from any standard judicial conventions of circumspection and restraint, penning screeds about the evils of “big government” and rants against Planned Parenthood. Most of the judicial branch, though, has declined to engage in this kind of rhetoric. There are norms, after all, and conventions, standards, and protocols. There seems to also be an agreement that conservative judges demonstrate deeply felt passion when they delve into such issues, while everyone else just demonstrates “bias” if they decide to weigh in. So when Justice Clarence Thomas just last year used a dissent to attack the integrity of a sitting federal judge in the census case, it was mere clever wordsmithing. But when Justice Sonia Sotomayor suggests, as she did recently, that the conservative wing of the high court seems to be privileging the Trump administration’s emergency petitions, she is labeled—by the president himself—unfit to judge. It’s such a long-standing trick, and it’s so well supported by the conservative outrage machine, that it’s easy to believe that critiques of fellow judges by conservative judges are legitimate, while such critiques from liberal judges are an affront to the legitimacy of the entire federal judiciary. This dynamic is why it’s so astonishing to see progressive judges really go for broke in criticizing conservative bias in the judiciary, as U.S. District Court Judge Lynn Adelman does in criticizing the five conservative justices on the Roberts Supreme Court in an upcoming Harvard Law review article. The article begins, brutally: By now, it is a truism that Chief Justice John Roberts’ statement to the Senate Judiciary Committee that a Supreme Court justice’s role is the passive one of a neutral baseball “umpire who [merely] calls the balls and strikes” was a masterpiece of disingenuousness. Roberts’ misleading testimony inevitably comes to mind when one considers the course of decision-making by the Court over which he presides. This is so because the Roberts Court has been anything but passive. Rather, the Court’s hard right majority is actively participating in undermining American democracy. Indeed, the Roberts Court has contributed to insuring that the political system in the United States pays little attention to ordinary Americans and responds only to the wishes of a relatively small number of powerful corporations and individuals. Adelman, who sits in the Eastern District of Wisconsin, goes on to methodically chronicle that which is hardly news to anyone who has observed the rightward turn of the Supreme Court. His article brings into clear relief the court’s systemic attack on voting rights for minority and other marginalized communities, by way of striking down a key section of the Voting Rights Act, as well as repeated blessing of voter suppression and decisions not to adjudicate political gerrymandering. He notes that the court privileges the wealthy and corporate interests at the expense of the public. He lays out in detail the rise of the conservative legal movement, starting with the infamous 1971 Lewis Powell memo that served as a right-wing call to arms and tracing its progress through the current well-funded effort to reverse the New Deal in the courts. The article ultimately portrays the slow movement of the Supreme Court to the right—and then the far right—through a long line of cases that reversed the Warren court’s protections for minority groups and poor and working-class Americans. It shows how the court has undermined unions and boosted corporate interests. The court, he notes, has greatly contributed to income inequality, health care inequality, and the hollowing out of the American middle class. Adelman ends with this caution: We are thus in a new and arguably dangerous phase in American history. Democracy is inherently fragile, and it is even more so when government eschews policies that benefit all classes of Americans. We desperately need public officials who will work to revitalize our democratic republic. Unfortunately, the conservative Justices on the Roberts Court are not among them. <<snip>>
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24 replies, 7602 views
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Author | Time | Post |
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dajoki | Mar 2020 | OP |
Glorfindel | Mar 2020 | #1 | |
rickyhall | Mar 2020 | #14 | |
mountain grammy | Mar 2020 | #2 | |
ancianita | Mar 2020 | #3 | |
FBaggins | Mar 2020 | #5 | |
ancianita | Mar 2020 | #6 | |
Nitram | Mar 2020 | #4 | |
gratuitous | Mar 2020 | #7 | |
crickets | Mar 2020 | #9 | |
not fooled | Mar 2020 | #8 | |
calimary | Mar 2020 | #10 | |
Hekate | Mar 2020 | #11 | |
malaise | Mar 2020 | #12 | |
Pepsidog | Mar 2020 | #13 | |
Rob2861 | Mar 2020 | #17 | |
hangaleft | Mar 2020 | #18 | |
burrowowl | Mar 2020 | #21 | |
lastlib | Mar 2020 | #22 | |
ehrnst | Mar 2020 | #23 | |
Uncle Joe | Mar 2020 | #15 | |
hangaleft | Mar 2020 | #16 | |
zentrum | Mar 2020 | #19 | |
Karadeniz | Mar 2020 | #20 | |
Seinan Sensei | Mar 2020 | #24 |
Response to dajoki (Original post)
Wed Mar 11, 2020, 11:08 AM
Glorfindel (9,078 posts)
1. Well, hooray for Judge Adelman!
We need more patriotic judges to speak out while there are still some left.
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Response to Glorfindel (Reply #1)
Wed Mar 11, 2020, 12:08 PM
rickyhall (4,889 posts)
14. Alas, patriotic federal judges are few & far between.
Response to dajoki (Original post)
Wed Mar 11, 2020, 11:09 AM
mountain grammy (25,295 posts)
2. We need to see far more of this.
Calling out Roberts for the partisan hack he is. It won’t change him but he must be exposed.
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Response to dajoki (Original post)
Wed Mar 11, 2020, 11:15 AM
ancianita (30,859 posts)
3. President Biden should nominate Judge Judge Lynn Adelman for the U.S. Supreme Court.
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Response to ancianita (Reply #3)
Wed Mar 11, 2020, 11:20 AM
FBaggins (25,627 posts)
5. He's 80 years old
Perhaps a note of thanks instead?
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Response to FBaggins (Reply #5)
Wed Mar 11, 2020, 11:21 AM
ancianita (30,859 posts)
6. Crap. Okay. Note of thanks duly noted.
![]() How about he recommend someone like him for Biden to nominate, then. |
Response to dajoki (Original post)
Wed Mar 11, 2020, 11:18 AM
Nitram (20,351 posts)
4. Speaking truth to Power. The false equivalence must not be allowed to continue.
We have to speak out and never stop speaking out until balance is restored.
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Response to dajoki (Original post)
Wed Mar 11, 2020, 11:22 AM
gratuitous (80,497 posts)
7. There's a lot of blame to go around
Let's not minimize or forget the role of the Senate in confirming these court nominations, infesting the judiciary with these poisonous toadstools. No other administration has put forward so many court candidates rated unqualified by the American Bar Association, and the Senate Republicans have rubber-stamped just about all of them.
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Response to dajoki (Original post)
Wed Mar 11, 2020, 11:30 AM
not fooled (5,470 posts)
8. Thank you for posting this
I wish more American understood what has been happening to the judiciary, why, and the impact on their lives.
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Response to dajoki (Original post)
Wed Mar 11, 2020, 11:33 AM
calimary (74,879 posts)
10. Oh dear, can't question! No questions!
GOOD one!
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Response to dajoki (Original post)
Wed Mar 11, 2020, 11:47 AM
malaise (254,525 posts)
12. K & R
This is excellent
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Response to dajoki (Original post)
Wed Mar 11, 2020, 12:02 PM
Pepsidog (6,020 posts)
13. Kavenaugh must be impeached for lying about all the stuff we knew were lies. Example, The Renata
Club, Boof, blacked out drinking as a teen. A full and proper investigation needs to be done and he should be impeached and removed. If i lied and acted like he did at his confirmation I would be disbarred and locked up. This lifetime appointment for federal judges needs to be revamped as well.
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Response to Pepsidog (Reply #13)
Wed Mar 11, 2020, 09:52 PM
Rob2861 (39 posts)
17. Total Disgrace
In a real world Kavenaugh would never became a nominee. Hopefully when we get a decent government we can do something about this.
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Response to Rob2861 (Reply #17)
hangaleft This message was self-deleted by its author.
Response to hangaleft (Reply #18)
Wed Mar 11, 2020, 10:42 PM
burrowowl (16,678 posts)
21. Unfortunately
Response to hangaleft (Reply #18)
Wed Mar 11, 2020, 11:33 PM
lastlib (20,304 posts)
22. That memo burned in my dumpster fire......
The only way I'm reaching across the aisle is with dimensional lumber--and I'm gonna whip some GOPher a-- with it.
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Response to hangaleft (Reply #18)
Thu Mar 12, 2020, 08:43 AM
ehrnst (32,640 posts)
23. So I've heard...
Sanders: I'm 'prepared to work with' Trump
Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders said Wednesday he is willing to collaborate with President-elect Donald Trump going forward but warned he would "strongly oppose" the Republican should he continue to pursue his most extreme policy proposals.
Acknowledging Trump's success in taping into economic resentment in his astounding electoral win Wednesday morning, Sanders cast Trump's candidacy in a light similar to his own failed presidential run during the Democratic primaries. “Donald Trump tapped into the anger of a declining middle class that is sick and tired of establishment economics, establishment politics and the establishment media," the senator said in a statement released Wednesday. Trump And Sanders Try To Show New Hampshire They Can Reach Across The Aisle In a presidential election season that’s seen plenty of partisan fights, Republican Donald Trump and Democrat Bernie Sanders were among the candidates in Manchester, New Hampshire, Monday who were promising to reach across the political aisle if elected.
As WBUR's Fred Bever reported both men were out to demonstrate that they are practitioners of the art of compromise. http://america.aljazeera.com/articles/2015/9/14/sanders-reaches-across-aisle-at-liberty-university.html ![]() https://www.nytimes.com/2019/02/19/us/politics/bernie-sanders-2020.html While often viewed as a pesky left-wing gadfly, he is also known to reach across the aisle, working on legislation with Senator Charles E. Grassley of Iowa and Senator John McCain of Arizona, both Republicans. He has rationalized voting for the 1994 crime bill, now heavily criticized for some of its draconian provisions, by saying he had favored progressive parts of the bill, including the Violence Against Women Act, while strongly opposing measures that would lead to mass incarceration.
Bernie Sanders’ Republican Buddy Reaches Across the Aisle To Endorse Clinton Sanders’ longtime friend Tony Pomerleau, a prominent Republican businessman and developer in Sanders’ hometown of Burlington, Vermont, offered his support for Clinton this week, framing his endorsement in a historical context.
Said Pomerleau: “I am a loyal Republican born in 1917 and the first time a woman could vote was in 1919,” the letter reads. “I will be most happy to cast my vote to the first woman president of the United States of America. I am a loyal friend of Bernie Sanders and in Vermont they call us the ‘Odd Couple.’” |
Response to dajoki (Original post)
Wed Mar 11, 2020, 12:36 PM
Uncle Joe (55,215 posts)
15. Kicked and recommended.
Thanks for the thread dajoki.
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Response to dajoki (Original post)
Wed Mar 11, 2020, 06:23 PM
hangaleft (649 posts)
16. Great post
This is of major importance. Long after we (hopefully) remove the cancer in the White House and his henchmen and reinstate and rebuild our democracy, these asshats on the judiciary will remain to thwart our attempts at every turn.
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Response to dajoki (Original post)
Wed Mar 11, 2020, 10:21 PM
zentrum (9,864 posts)
19. Wow. Finally.
Never thought protest would happen.
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Response to dajoki (Original post)
Wed Mar 11, 2020, 10:38 PM
Karadeniz (19,084 posts)
20. Yay!!! This needs to be front page news!
Response to dajoki (Original post)
Thu Mar 12, 2020, 09:36 AM
Seinan Sensei (125 posts)
24. In the umpire locker-room
First umpire: "I call 'em as they are."
Second umpire: "I call 'em as I see 'em." Third umpire: "They are what I call 'em." |