The more I learn about it, the more it offends me. That said, I would appreciate an opposing view.
Let me preface by saying that I voted (half heartedly) for Gore. I also voted twice for Clinton, once for Kerry and once for Obama. So generally, I vote Dem is what I'm saying.
Also, I disagree with the ultimate outcome of the SCOTUS decision on one major point: they should have let the FL come up with a workable standard and try to recount the votes in the time they had remaining.
That said, the decision is not as bad, IMO, as the Levine link indicates. I read the decision as soon as it was published, and I have not reread it since so this is from memory, but here goes.
The court determined that one of the big problems with the recount was that different districts were making differing decisions on how to recount the votes. There were no standards set up by the FL supreme court. The court found this (7-2) to be a violation of the EP clause of the 14th amendment, and I agree with this. You cannot have variable standards for enforcement of a constitutional right. The part where I (and the minority opinion) part ways is that the majority simply declared that the process was hopelessly flawed and that there was no way the recount could be done. I take exception with that. Coming up with a clear standard is not difficult, and there were thousands of volunteers willing to help with the effort. I may not have been possible to get the recount done, but SCOTUS should not, IMO, have removed that decision from the hands of people in FL.
My suspicion is that what was really going on is that 5 justices suspected there was simply too much shenanigans going on and that even assuming clear standards, any recount would not be objective enough. Having watched people on tv look at the exact same card and have one person say "Gore" and the person sitting right next to them say "Bush", I can understand this. But, sometimes Democracy is messy, and I think they should have allowed FL to do its best in the time remaining. (yes, I know we live in a Federal Republic and not a Democracy so don't go all pedantic on me)
Part of the problem in all of this is that the FL supreme court refused to come up with a standard to examine the votes. So, it got appealed to SCOTUS, and then SCOTUS sent it back to FL, and then it went back up to SCOTUS for the final decision. All of that was wasted time during which a statewide recount could have happened.
In the end, with all of the accusations and counter-accusations I think it came down to a fairly simple matter: the FL voting system was F'd up, and it might have cost Gore the presidency, depending on how the votes would have been recounted. I recall watching David Boises (sp?) say that if the recount had used the standard they favored, then Bush wins a recount, but if the recount had used the standard Bush favored, then Gore wins a recount. (this was some years back). I don't know if that's true of not, but that gives an indication of what one of the major players thought about it after the fact.
ETA: If its true that Scalia had son's working for Bush on this case, then I would consider that to be a clear COI, and he should have recused himself. I don't remember hearing about that anywhere other than Levine's link