Constructive gadfly
Published on January 14, 2006 By stevendedalus In Politics
 What is the point of judicial hearings on Supreme Court nominees if it is unwritten law — since Bork, anyway — that a candidate is not obligated to give direct testimony? Stock replies such as I cannot comment, even on a hypothetical case since it could very well become a reality before the court and I would therefore be prejudging a case. Or: Without having all the briefs and facts before me it would be indiscreet for me to conjecture.

Why, then, have hearings at all inasmuch as it is but a show of star power for nominee as well as senators? After all, it boils down to display — as in Roberts’ hearing — the justice as knowledgeable, likable, and seemingly trustworthy.

The upshot of absurdity was in the questioning of Alito’s colleague from the same circuit. Justice Lewis, a black, civil rights advocate inferred that although they differed often on civil rights cases, Lewis acknowledged the sincerity and judicial integrity of Alito’s opinions. Yeah, right. That is like saying though you hate your father for being an Italian immigrant, I respect the sincerity of your hatred.

Judicial integrity presupposes cold constructionist assessment of the Constitution, which in itself is a commitment to prejudging cases of variables; that is, ignoring the humanside of reality. Were the Constitution set in stone as the Ten Commandments, then there would be no need for a Supreme Court — thou shalt or shalt not, period — even to the extent of revisiting “settled” cases such as Roe v. Wade, not perhaps to be rejected, but to install certain conditions as the ostensibly conservative court has been doing, or as Alito himself displayed in his dissent that prohibiting the interstate sale of machine guns is unconstitutional.

Another absurd moment during the hearings was Kennedy’s fetish over Alito’s membership as a student in Princeton’s CAP restricting minorities and women on campus. There was no evidence that he actively subscribed to the campus organization and yet Kennedy harped on Alito’s having entered this membership long ago on an employment application for a Reagan administration position. Anyone in a search of a job, whether ill-advised or not, is going to suck up to a future boss. It is a forgivable humanside experience, and Kennedy, no less than a justice, should not take it literally and ominously. If Jonah had swallowed the whale, one should laugh it off as simply Jonah’s wishful, vengeful thinking.

Personally, I feel Alito is a cold fish, but so what? He is obviously competent, though at times evasive to the point of cutesy by extremely rationalizing fine points in his judicial record without blinking an eye — after all, drug lords have been known to plant contraband on children! Furthermore, he has a nice family and therefore must have a sense of family values. He also has an immigrant background — who doesn’t — which in itself is sufficient reason that he may indeed have sensitivity for the “little guy,” although in some instances because of this background the inverse is true by denial.

In the last analysis the President invariably gets what he wants even though it is no guarantee that whatever the extent of the examination the President could still wind up with a pig in a blanket. The political reality is that the pendulum of the Constitution arcs to the constructionist and back to the humanist throughout our history — and that’s all we need to know.

 

Copyright © 2006 Richard R. Kennedy All rights reserved. Revised: January 14, 2006.

http://stevendedalus.joeuser.com


Comments (Page 1)
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on Jan 14, 2006
In the last analysis the President invariably gets what he wants even though it is no guarantee that whatever the extent of the examination the President could still wind up with a pig in a blanket.


Crybaby.

Tell that to:

Harriet Myers
Priscilla Owen
Miguel Estrada
Alberto Gonzalez
Leon Holmes
William Pryor

The Constitution prescribes the process and it's been followed. I guess you just don't care for the Constitution.

Furthermore, predicting, pre-appointment, the decision-making of SCJ's in particular has been a rather losing proposition over a long period of time.

Cheers,
Daiwa
on Jan 14, 2006

The Constitution prescribes the process and it's been followed. I guess you just don't care for the Constitution.
Unwarranted comment--then again coming from you, it is expected.

Tell that to:

Harriet Myers
Priscilla Owen
Miguel Estrada
Alberto Gonzalez
Leon Holmes
William Pryor
I stand corrected.

on Jan 14, 2006
Crybaby.

Tell that to:

Harriet Myers
Priscilla Owen
Miguel Estrada
Alberto Gonzalez
Leon Holmes
William Pryor

The Constitution prescribes the process and it's been followed. I guess you just don't care for the Constitution.

Furthermore, predicting, pre-appointment, the decision-making of SCJ's in particular has been a rather losing proposition over a long period of time.

I thought we were trying to put an end to the trolling. Stevendedalus made a thoughtful post about the supreme court nomination process and here we have this sheepish rhetoric stemming from ingrained hatred of anyone who isn't willing to follow blindly.
on Jan 14, 2006

since Bork, anyway

Uh, no.,  Ruth Buzzi Ginsberg set that precedent.  And now that conservative nominees are using it you cry fowl?  Where were you in 93 when she was trying to get NAMBLA mainstream?

on Jan 14, 2006

I thought we were trying to put an end to the trolling. Stevendedalus made a thoughtful post about the supreme court nomination process and here we have this sheepish rhetoric stemming from ingrained hatred of anyone who isn't willing to follow blindly.

And we are commenting on it.  Why are you not?

on Jan 14, 2006
I thought we were trying to put an end to the trolling. Stevendedalus made a thoughtful post about the supreme court nomination process and here we have this sheepish rhetoric stemming from ingrained hatred of anyone who isn't willing to follow blindly


So why are you commenting on this instead of the original? A reply was given to his post yet, you call it hatred.
on Jan 14, 2006
Come, come, Steve. You know you love me.

Ben (& Steve) -

The point of "advice & consent" is to be sure a President's nominee is qualified to serve as a Justice. Not to determine in advance how he or she will rule on individual senators' pet issues. If the latter is the point, just scrap the Court & let the Judiciary Committee do the Court's job. The Court is not, nor was it ever intended to be, "balanced" in the political sense - it "should" be apolitical.

The point you missed was that Steve's central contention - that the President always gets what he wants, anyway - is bogus. The "pendulum" Steve refers to has hardly been influenced in the way the appointers had intended - time and again pre-appointment assumptions have been demonstrated by history to have been way off.

I actually agree with Steve in one sense - look what being direct and responsive did for Bork. And who was responsible for teaching nominees that lesson? Anyone? Anyone?

Finally, Ben, you really need to seek help for this sheep fetish of yours. And, for the record, I have no "ingrained hatred" for anyone, not even you. I'll leave it to others to make up their own minds about who is or is not a troll.

Cheers,
Daiwa
on Jan 14, 2006
Finally, Ben, you really need to seek help for this sheep fetish of yours.


Kind of creepy if you ask me!
on Jan 14, 2006
Kind of creepy if you ask me!


no creepier (and a lot more honest) than your persistent dishonest characterization of ginsburg. you've been provided with the truth yet you continue to spread the same stupid lie every chance you get.

ever hear of the boy who cried wolf?
on Jan 14, 2006
no creepier (and a lot more honest) than your persistent dishonest characterization of ginsburg. you've been provided with the truth yet you continue to spread the same stupid lie every chance you get.


Or your insistance on an illusion? Guess you cant keep people straight, and that is kind of creepy.

Are you ok? DO you need a shot of reality?

Did you cry wolf?
on Jan 14, 2006
kay doc...here's a shot of reality...for like the third time aint it?

Link

but don't let me interfere with your determination to morph yourself into your own worst enemy by continuing to spread the big lie.
on Jan 14, 2006
but don't let me interfere with your determination to morph yourself into your own worst enemy by continuing to spread the big lie.


Come on kb, you know truth and reality have no standing with him and his ilk. Why bother with silly old concepts like those when you can rely on smears and lies?
on Jan 15, 2006
Uh, no., Ruth Buzzi Ginsberg set that precedent. And now that conservative nominees are using it you cry fowl?
If you must pursue this it was Thomas, Bork's alternate. My point was Bork's openness was the catalyst to keep a stiff lip. I am not crying fowl--that's simply the way it is regardless of who the nominee is.
on Jan 15, 2006
Kind of creepy if you ask me!
What the hell is this supposed to mean? Why not discuss Kennedy's "fetish"?

The point you missed was that Steve's central contention - that the President always gets what he wants, anyway
Not really central; besides, I suggested that what he wants and what he gets are two different aspects of the process--that's a given.
on Jan 15, 2006
Kennedy’s fetish over Alito’s membership as a student in Princeton’s CAP restricting minorities and women on campus. There was no evidence that he actively subscribed to the campus organization


i'm not sure why you chose to characterize it as a 'fetish'; inquiring about alito's decision to incorporate his cap membership when compiling a resume in hope of securing a desired position would seem a lot less germane to me if he hadn't the benefit of 13 subsequent years in which to wonder what the hell he'd been thinking when he signed on. in 1985, he was no longer a chucklehead schooolboy. for that matter, one might expect alito to used slightly better judgement (heh) some 34 years down the line when called on the issue.

btw, it took bill bradley less than a year to realize cap was fulla unamerican crap.
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