Ziggurat
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Jun 19, 2003
- Messages
- 61,786
Given his evasiveness in answering questions, and the track record of the administration which nominated him, I wouldn't extend the benefit of the doubt when it comes to trust. It's too important a position to take it on faith that this time, it's going to be okay.
Due to the way the Senate operates now, candidates pretty much HAVE to be evasive. And the "track record of the administration" argument would apply to every single candidate they could possibly put forward. And it shouldn't take too much thinking to figure out that an argument which works against basically any candidate Bush might nominate simply isn't going to fly.
In terms of his track record on bias towards government, rather than believing special interest groups which can pick out and misrepresent specific cases quite easily, I prefer to rely upon his actual co-workers, namely other judges, lawyers who have presented before him, and clerks who have worked for him. And those have pretty much been unanimously positive, including from democrats.