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PostPosted: 11/16/14 11:29 am • # 1 
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An excellent and thought-provoking read ~ there's a LOT of truth here, and makes a solid case exposing the dangers inherent in hegemony's "blind spots" ~ Sooz

November 13, 2014
Yale, Harvard, Yale, Harvard, Yale, Harvard, Harvard, Harvard, Columbia
The thing that scares me most about the Supreme Court.
By Dahlia Lithwick

Under Chief Justice John Roberts, the Supreme Court has emerged as one of the most ideologically aggressive in decades, and its rightward trajectory is usually attributed to this simple fact: a majority of the justices are very conservative. Today’s Court contains, according to one study, four of the five most conservative justices to sit on the bench since FDR; Anthony Kennedy, the putative swing vote, is in the top ten.

But having covered the Court for 15 years, I’ve come to believe that what we’re seeing goes beyond ideology. Because ideology alone would not propel the justices to effect such massive shifts upon the constitutional landscape, inventing rights for corporations while gutting protections for women, minorities, and workers. No, the real problem, I think, is that the Court as a whole has gotten too smart for our own good.

The current justices are intellectually qualified in ways we have never seen. Compared with the political operators, philanderers, and alcoholics of bygone eras, they are almost completely devoid of bad habits or scandalous secrets. This is, of course, not a bad thing in itself. But the Court has become worryingly cloistered, even for a famously cloistered institution. Every justice is unavoidably subjected to “public deference” when they ascend to the bench, as I heard Sonia Sotomayor describe it at a conference last June. Now, on top of that, today’s justices filter out anything that might challenge their perspectives. Antonin Scalia won’t read newspapers that conflict with his views and claims to often get very little from amicus briefs. John Roberts has said that he doesn’t believe that most law-review articles—where legal scholars advance new thinking on contemporary problems—are relevant to the justices’ work. Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Scalia’s opera-going buddy, increasingly seems to revel in, rather than downplay, her status as a liberal icon. Kennedy spends recesses guest-teaching law school courses in Salzburg.

Before the Affordable Care Act cases were heard in 2012, aspiring spectators lined up for days (mostly in vain, because seats are so limited). Meanwhile, this Court goes to considerable lengths to keep itself at oracular remove. The texts of many of the justices’ speeches are not publicized. Cameras and recording devices remain barred from oral arguments, and protesters may not even approach the spotless white plaza outside. But the most symbolically potent move came in 2010, when the justices closed off the giant bronze doors at the front of the building, above which the words EQUAL JUSTICE UNDER LAW are engraved. Today, the public must enter the building from the side, beneath the marble staircase, through dark, narrow entrances feeding into metal detectors. It is a fitting setup for a Court that seems to want neither to be seen nor to really see us.

Paradoxically, the Court that has gutted minority voting rights in Shelby County and limited women’s access to birth control in Hobby Lobby has never looked more like the country whose disputes it adjudicates. It includes three women, an African American, the first Hispanic, two Italian Americans, six Catholics, and three Jews. On the federal bench, President Obama has appointed more women, minorities, and openly gay judges than any president in history.

But while we have gained diversity of background, we haven’t gained diversity of experience. A study released in February revealed that 71 percent of Obama’s nominees had practiced primarily for corporate or business clients. The Supreme Court is even more homogeneous, because the modern confirmation gauntlet only lets one kind of person through. Post-Robert Bork, a nominee must not have too obvious an ideological agenda, as some judges and almost all elected officials do. Post-Harriet Miers, a prospective justice must possess not just a stellar résumé but also a track record of judicial rulings and legal writings from which future decisions can be confidently deduced.

The result has been what Professor Akhil Reed Amar of Yale Law School calls the “Judicialization of the Judiciary,” a selection process that discourages political or advocacy experience and reduces the path to the Supreme Court to a funnel: elite schools beget elite judicial clerkships beget elite federal judgeships. Rinse, repeat. All nine sitting justices attended either Yale or Harvard law schools. (Ginsburg started her studies in Cambridge but graduated from Columbia.) Eight once sat on a federal appellate court; five have done stints as full-time law school professors. There is not a single justice “from the heartland,” as Clarence Thomas has complained. There are no war veterans (like John Paul Stevens), former Cabinet officials (like Robert Jackson), or capital defense attorneys. The Supreme Court that decided Brown v. Board of Education had five members who had served in elected office. The Roberts Court has none. What we have instead are nine perfect judicial thoroughbreds who have spent their entire adulthoods on the same lofty, narrow trajectory.

A Supreme Court built this way is going to have blind spots. But right-wing legal and political groups—who are much better at the confirmation game than their equivalents on the left—have added a final criteria that ensures the Court leans strongly in their favor. They have succeeded in setting the definition of the consummate judge: a humble, objective, nearly mechanical umpire who merely calls “balls and strikes,” in Roberts’s insincere but politically deft phrasing. This lets conservatives sell nominees who are far more conservative than liberal nominees are liberal. A Democratic-appointed justice makes the short list by having her heart in the right place, but will be disqualified for heeding it too much.

And so we have a Supreme Court that, for all its credentials, produces some truly confounding opinions. One sub-genre of these is typified by the split decision in Citizens United, which runs to 183 pages of intricate legal arguments. (The Brown v. Board ruling took only ten pages to declare, in a clarion voice, that “separate but equal” hurts schoolchildren.) Kennedy’s majority opinion is a beautiful work of abstract reasoning, but it seems to suggest that only something akin to blatant bribery fosters corruption or the appearance of it. On the ground, where actual campaigns occur, that simply is not true. Then there are cases like McCullen v. Coakley, which challenged a Massachusetts law imposing buffer zones around abortion clinics. The measure, enacted years after two fatal clinic shootings, was designed as protection from violence and verbal abuse. But the buffer zones also applied to pro-life “sidewalk counselors,” who challenged the law on free-speech grounds. However much women might be affected by doing away with the safeguard, the doctrine was clear: The Court struck down the Massachusetts law, nine-zero.

Perhaps the strongest and scariest signal that this Court has no use for real life came late last spring, when Sotomayor broke from the Court’s current operating procedure during an important case about affirmative action in Michigan. Sotomayor, a onetime prosecutor and a graduate of Princeton and Yale Law School, is as thoroughbred as they come. But when the majority opinion invalidating the program devolved into a highly abstracted discussion about voter preferences, the first Latina justice attempted to puncture the force field of hyper-legalism. From the bench, she read aloud from a passionate dissent that described in deeply personal terms “the slights, the snickers” that remind her that racism remains very alive. Roberts, in response, called her out for elevating “policy preferences” over rigorous doctrine.

Thurgood Marshall used to talk about race, too. But his colleagues listened. Sandra Day O’Connor famously explained in an essay that his stories about the Jim Crow South changed how she and several of her colleagues approached the law. “Justice Marshall imparted not only his legal acumen, but also his life experiences,” O’Connor wrote, “constantly pushing and prodding us to respond not only to the persuasiveness of legal argument but also to the power of moral truth.” They don’t talk about “life experience” at the Roberts Court, much less “moral truth.” Personal narrative of any sort has been downgraded to sloppy sentimentality, rather than something that might enrich the justices’ thinking.

In the coming months and years, this group of Ivy-trained Washington insiders will have to decide whether Texas voters who don’t have driver’s licenses and are required to take three buses across town to pay $30 for a voter ID have effectively been disenfranchised. They will determine whether women who need to travel 300 miles to procure an abortion (women who may lack cars, or paid time off, or money to spend on hotels) face an “undue burden.” But some of the same justices who will bar empathy from those considerations forget that they do evince empathy when they side with those beleaguered “sidewalk counselors,” or multimillionaire campaign donors, or the owner of a mega-chain of craft stores who believes his religious freedoms have been impinged. All of us import our values and experiences into our decision-making. The double-whammy at the current Court is that the justices are no longer allowed to acknowledge it, and that the pool of those with whom they unavoidably identify is so dangerously small and privileged.

When the next court vacancy occurs, there will be lists of brilliant, Yale- and Harvard-trained jurists to choose from. But there will also be many accomplished lawyers toiling in elected office and legal-aid clinics and state-school faculties. Progressives need to identify those prospects and to push them forward. The alternative is ceding the court to ever-more dazzling minds, while seeing less of our own realities in its jurisprudence.

Dahlia Lithwick is a senior editor at Slate.

http://www.newrepublic.com/article/120173/2014-supreme-court-ivy-league-clan-disconnected-reality


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PostPosted: 11/16/14 12:38 pm • # 2 
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IMO, the author fails to address the real problem. The SCOTUS should have no ideology at all.


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PostPosted: 11/20/14 11:32 am • # 3 
oskar576 wrote:
IMO, the author fails to address the real problem. The SCOTUS should have no ideology at all.

Read this thread at work but not allowed to post As usual Oscar is right on spot


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PostPosted: 11/20/14 12:32 pm • # 4 
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I agree with the author of this piece, and sort of disagree with you, Oskar and Cannalee. Supreme Court cases define things in our culture. They affect citizens' everyday lives for the whole country. Every case is about who gets more wealthy and who gets more power in our politics (being redundant here). Who gets to boss whom around over issues of morality, even who gets to define that. So I'd prefer to have those decisions made by somebody who has been exposed to life as it's lived by people who can't afford Harvard and Yale. Not someone whose greatest life challenge has been, say, teenage acne...and by the force of hard work and good character they overcame it before their sophomore year at college.

Re ideology: Every justice is going to have a philosophy, at least. Hopefully that is informed by a life experience that's rich, and not just wealthy.


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PostPosted: 11/20/14 12:57 pm • # 5 
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IMO, the SCOTUS deals with the LAW as it is written, not as they wish it was written.


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PostPosted: 11/20/14 12:58 pm • # 6 
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I'm with gramps on this ~ with one caution: not everyone who attends an Ivy League school comes from or has money ~ Sonia Sotomayor jumps to mind ~ what too many people don't recognize [or maybe don't know] is that the practice of law is largely the practice of interpretation ~ it's nice to imagine 9 justices being able to remove themselves from their own life experiences, but I don't see that as realistic ~

Sooz


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PostPosted: 11/20/14 1:03 pm • # 7 
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sooz06 wrote:
I'm with gramps on this ~ with one caution: not everyone who attends an Ivy League school comes from or has money ~ Sonia Sotomayor jumps to mind ~ what too many people don't recognize [or maybe don't know] is that the practice of law is largely the practice of interpretation ~ it's nice to imagine 9 justices being able to remove themselves from their own life experiences, but I don't see that as realistic ~

Sooz


And that's why the "interpretation" of the Second Amendment is causing so many deaths, injuries and maimings.


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PostPosted: 11/20/14 1:23 pm • # 8 
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So it should be replaced with another "interpretation" Oskar?

Its almost impossible to write down anything that isn't open to reasonable, and yet slightly different interpretations. And the meaning of notions like "right", as in the 2nd amendment, are pretty much always contestable.

You can't have "ideology free" judges either. Not if they are human beings anyway.

Apart from that, there's the problem of the law makers having to write perfectly clear laws. That's going to happen right after sheep take up knitting.


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PostPosted: 11/20/14 1:30 pm • # 9 
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Cattleman wrote:
So it should be replaced with another "interpretation" Oskar?

Its almost impossible to write down anything that isn't open to reasonable, and yet slightly different interpretations. And the meaning of notions like "right", as in the 2nd amendment, are pretty much always contestable.

You can't have "ideology free" judges either. Not if they are human beings anyway.

Apart from that, there's the problem of the law makers having to write perfectly clear laws. That's going to happen right after sheep take up knitting.

Exactly, CM ~ and I'd much prefer to "take my chances" with a human being than with an automaton ~

Sooz


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PostPosted: 11/20/14 1:49 pm • # 10 
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Cattleman wrote:
So it should be replaced with another "interpretation" Oskar?

Its almost impossible to write down anything that isn't open to reasonable, and yet slightly different interpretations. And the meaning of notions like "right", as in the 2nd amendment, are pretty much always contestable.

You can't have "ideology free" judges either. Not if they are human beings anyway.

Apart from that, there's the problem of the law makers having to write perfectly clear laws. That's going to happen right after sheep take up knitting.


Repeatedly ignoring the part about "a well regulated militia" is all rather convenient, isn't it?


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PostPosted: 11/20/14 2:59 pm • # 11 
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I didn't say all interpretations made equal sense Oskar.

But its not clear to me (if I was being as totally legalistic as possible) what the import of that particular phase, in that context, is either. After all, its a causal claim, but laws are imperatives.

Its just a very good example of the law-makers not writing very clear laws.

That's just another reason why an automaton couldn't and shouldn't do the job.


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