Brown
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Aug 3, 2001
- Messages
- 12,984
This story from AP and Yahoo reports that some members of the Supreme Court are "defending" their actions in the decisions in Bush vs. Gore. As of this writing, there has never been a coherent defense of the Court's granting of the stay and subsequently awarding the election to Bush. There has never been a formal explanation from the Court or from any of the justices as to why years and years of precedent were simply ignored in order to reach the five members' desired result.
I have written length about what grotesque actions five members of the Supreme Court took in 2000, and I will not repeat them. For those who are interested in details, I recommend The Betrayal of America: How the Supreme Court Undermined the Constitution and Chose Our President, by Vincent Bugliosi.
In any event, Justice Scalia "defended" his part in this grotesque saga with the following:
Imagine one felt that one or more Supreme Court decisions stunk to high heaven. The decisions were fundamentally flawed, inconsistent with pre-exiting law, and simply rotten jurisprudence. "Get over it" is the wrong attitude to take.
Certainly those who are result-oriented right-wingers (which arguably include Scalia himself) have not "gotten over" Roe vs. Wade. They haven't "gotten over" several decisions that uphold the Establishment Clause or limit the death penalty or protect freedom of expression.
The Supreme Court heard oral arguments a few months ago in abortion-related cases. Suppose Justice Scalia had questioned the constitutional basis for abortion rights during oral argument, and in response, suppose an advocate said, "Justice Scalia, Roe vs. Wade decided that issue. Get over it." Would that be a proper thing to say to a justice?
As a matter of fact, it would be a very rude and foolish thing to say. (It would almost certainly subject any advocate to disciplinary action who said such a thing to any member of the bench.)
I submit that if "Get over it" is a rude and foolish thing for a citizen to say to a justice, it is a rude and foolish thing for a justice to say to a citizen.
I have written length about what grotesque actions five members of the Supreme Court took in 2000, and I will not repeat them. For those who are interested in details, I recommend The Betrayal of America: How the Supreme Court Undermined the Constitution and Chose Our President, by Vincent Bugliosi.
In any event, Justice Scalia "defended" his part in this grotesque saga with the following:
This is a really, really stupid thing to say. And coming from him, it is hypocritical in the extreme."It's water over the deck — get over it," Scalia said, drawing laughs from his audience.
Imagine one felt that one or more Supreme Court decisions stunk to high heaven. The decisions were fundamentally flawed, inconsistent with pre-exiting law, and simply rotten jurisprudence. "Get over it" is the wrong attitude to take.
Certainly those who are result-oriented right-wingers (which arguably include Scalia himself) have not "gotten over" Roe vs. Wade. They haven't "gotten over" several decisions that uphold the Establishment Clause or limit the death penalty or protect freedom of expression.
The Supreme Court heard oral arguments a few months ago in abortion-related cases. Suppose Justice Scalia had questioned the constitutional basis for abortion rights during oral argument, and in response, suppose an advocate said, "Justice Scalia, Roe vs. Wade decided that issue. Get over it." Would that be a proper thing to say to a justice?
As a matter of fact, it would be a very rude and foolish thing to say. (It would almost certainly subject any advocate to disciplinary action who said such a thing to any member of the bench.)
I submit that if "Get over it" is a rude and foolish thing for a citizen to say to a justice, it is a rude and foolish thing for a justice to say to a citizen.