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#1
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I think you are totally wrong in your assessment of this whole thing. As I said earlier, there are plenty of people that are fairly liberal such as Scuds who are troubled by the comments. I think it's insulting for you to say that anyone who disagrees with you on the issue must simply be falling for scare tactics. I think it's totally the opposite. Her comments are not taken out of context. I think people totally understand her comments and are offended by them. Did you consider the possibility that you may be biased on the subject and that you would find the comments offensive if she was a white, republican male? I do think you are correct that her judicial record is more impotant than some quotes she has made. But I think her quotes are certainly something that people will and should consider just as they would if she was a white, republican male. Last edited by Rupert Pupkin : 05-31-2009 at 06:43 PM. |
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#2
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Mr. Obama and his aides responded by denouncing her critics while saying she had used a poor choice of words. “I’m sure she would have restated it,” Mr. Obama said on Friday. “But if you look in the entire sweep of the essay that she wrote, what’s clear is that she was simply saying that her life experiences will give her information about the struggles and hardships that people are going through — that will make her a good judge.”
The White House and its liberal supporters also dug up quotes from Republican-appointed justices, including Samuel A. Alito Jr., who said at his confirmation hearing that his immigrant roots played into his consideration of cases. “When a case comes before me involving, let’s say, someone who is an immigrant — and we get an awful lot of immigration cases and naturalization cases,” he said at the hearing, “I can’t help but think of my own ancestors because it wasn’t that long ago when they were in that position.” Its silly to think a person's past experiences wont in someway affect judgement. The Supreme Court takes on the very toughest cases. If the cases were easy, they would all be 9-0. This pontification about the Supreme Court having to view the Constitution in a perfectly sterile way is absurd, yet this is basically what we are fed. If everything is so darn clear why do we have all these 5-4 decisions with dissents and opinions dressed up by very good writers in order to appear to lack any political or personal bias... If you follow the Supreme Court you can usually pick which judge voted where as long as the legal question is made clear. Occasionally there are some surprises. |
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#3
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you have rulings such as roe v wade, where the justices who voted to allow abortion thought that said right was contained in the right to privacy-certainly abortion rights are not specifically named in the constitution. |
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#4
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it did mention that slaves should be counted as 3/5 of a white man when doing a census to apportion representation in congress. so we had that spelled out for us. roe v wade was 7-2, btw. |
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#5
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He wishes he was 3/5 of a man getting beatn by guys with white wigs. Events have arisen that the constitution could never have imagined. So when problems arise as mentioned, one pigeon holes the question to fit their particular moral comfort zone. Living breathing document might not be the proper metaphor but that is the way we get it fed to us. How about its very old and there are certain issues that dont fit nicely under anything that is written so we pretend like the constitution does or does not say something on the issue.. Law and lawyers love word games. Intentions, beyond a reasonable doubt, on and on... my little hang up. Last edited by pgardn : 05-31-2009 at 09:58 PM. |
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#6
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Is she not American? Was she not born in this counrty and afforded all the rights that every other person born in America is?
It would be like me saying ( because of where my families came from) that as wise Germanic woman I would be wiser at making decsions than an American Indian when it pertains to someone of Germanic heritage. Its her belief that she would be better at coming to a judical conclussion when it pertains to someone of ethnenticity than someone who's direct heritage is not ethnic. To me and it is only my opinion that should rule from the bench with no bias whatsoever.
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Horses are like strawberries....they can go bad overnight. Charlie Whittingham |
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#7
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instead she graduated from princeton and then yale law school. her legal opinions are narrow and show no bias. a dropout from southeast missouri state university with a drug problem tells you she's a reverse racist and unqualified for the supreme court. you take that as gospel? |
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#8
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Hey man its just my opinon , everyday folks grow up and live thru hard lives and are succesful , my parents divorced when I was 14 years old and I somehow managed to grow up to be a productive member of society. My cousin who works for the Secret Service grew up with an alcoholic abusive father somehow managed to get educated and be a part of President Clintons team of protection. My friend the Harvard graduated podiatrist somehow managed to become successfull despite the fact that his father died when he was 3. I have no idea who the drop out is that you are talking about , I do my own reading and I havent come to a final conclusion about her but just the little that I have researched leads me to believe that she perhaps might rule with more empathy than I would prefer.
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Horses are like strawberries....they can go bad overnight. Charlie Whittingham |
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#9
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Only white, male, Republicans think that white, male, Republicans have some unique set of life experiences. Minorities of all kinds, folks without the sorts of built in privilege, DO have a unique view on things. I fully believe that, and it has nothing to do with quotas, affirmative action, or anything. White, male, heterosexual, Republicans would easily be the most privileged class of folks in the entire country, so of COURSE it would be different, because it would make absolutely no sense and it would rightly be seen as nothing but a racialist comment. I firmly believe, and people can disagree all they want, that being a minority and having qualities about you that have no privilege does make one privy to a unique set of circumstances....and white, male, heterosexual, Republicans are about as privileged as you can get. If the concept of privilege is lost on you, then I could type 80,000 words on it and you'll never get it. EDIT: Let me add that I don't think that this unique set of experiences I'm talking about should influence her judicial philosophy, and she was being honest in that speech while acknowledging that it exists, how her striving to remain impartial is key. She knows that this potential bias is there, but she admits it's there and talks about how she avoids letting it influence her. The fact that she's a Latina isn't why I think she should be a judge, and she essentially admits as much in her speech. I take this whole dustup as nothing more than people interpreting something she said in a way she didn't mean it whatsoever, because to me, all she's done is acknowledge that minorities realize that their experience is unique in white America. Last edited by brianwspencer : 05-31-2009 at 09:19 PM. |
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#10
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if there was only one "wise" decision, then a wise white male should reach the same decision as a wise latina female. in this sort of discourse you have to ignore that there isn't a single "wise" course and that all decisions have both bad and good consequences. you have to ignore context. you have to ignore nuance. this part of the nomination process isn't about the nominee. it's political, not judicial. she can't speak for herself in public until the judiciary committee hearings. in the meantime, all the "judicial watch" pac's have to justify their existence. this is when they get all their contribution's. relax. every nominee goes through this process. no one will remember the "controversy" a year from now. |
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#11
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I'm not saying she's a better judge because of them...and she doesn't seem to think so either in the context of the entire speech she gave. |
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