T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
417.1 | keep those calls coming! | LDP::SCHNEIDER | | Thu Jul 30 1987 18:41 | 5 |
| Just called, and asked whether there was a time limit; apparently
it's open-ended (at least until the Bork nomination is squashed,
whoops, I meant to say decided :-)
Chuck
|
417.3 | Huh? | SSDEVO::YOUNGER | This statement is false | Thu Jul 30 1987 23:28 | 6 |
| I called a few minutes ago, and got a recorded message about what
meetings they're having. Sure this is right, or is this what you're
supposed to get?
Elizabeth
|
417.4 | Keep Calling | DELNI::L_MCCORMACK | | Fri Jul 31 1987 09:58 | 6 |
|
I just called now. Someone from the senate judiciary commitee
answered, so the recording must be in place when no-one is there
to answer the phone. Keep calling!
|
417.5 | | AKA::TAUBENFELD | Almighty SET | Fri Jul 31 1987 10:45 | 5 |
| re .2:
Liberal bias in Womannotes? A bias in Womannotes? You must have
the wrong file... ;-)
|
417.6 | line is open now | BOBCAT::EDECK | | Fri Jul 31 1987 11:46 | 5 |
|
They're there now. They ask you what state you're from and how you'd
like to vote.
E.
|
417.7 | | USFSHQ::SMANDELL | Yes, I *can* have it my way! | Fri Jul 31 1987 11:58 | 15 |
| I called this morning. Thanks for sharing this opportunity.
When I called, the woman I spoke with asked what state I was from
and when I told her I was from Mass., she commented that they have
received a great volume of call from Mass., and asked if there was
some televised announcement. I told her that I had heard about it
through the company I worked for. However, I declined to mention
the company name when asked. Not sure if this might fall under
"solicitation" or if someone would be offended or such (yes - it's
possible!) and I generally wanted to protect DEC and the Notesfile.
But it felt real good to *participate* in the government!
Sheila
|
417.8 | (202) 224-5225 | VIKING::TARBET | Margaret Mairhi | Fri Jul 31 1987 12:49 | 6 |
|
Do call! Especially from other states (the woman who answered
seemed not to be very surprised that I was calling from
Massachusetts).
=maggie
|
417.10 | call for more info | LEZAH::BOBBITT | face piles of trials with smiles | Fri Jul 31 1987 13:43 | 9 |
| also, I believe the number is open in the evenings....
if anyone has the exact scoop (I have a pretty general idea) on
facts and figures about Judge Bork's track record, intentions, and
how he will impact the position if he is nominated and selected,
I would appreciate it.
-Jody
|
417.11 | amazing what they'll do | HARRY::HIGGINS | Citizen of Atlantis | Fri Jul 31 1987 19:01 | 17 |
|
Gee, isn't this swell!
Just pick up the phone and you can participate in government! Easy
and fun too!
Anybody have any idea what the people on the other end of the line
intend to do with the statistics they cull from your calls?
If you want to know about Judge Bork's "track record" it is a matter
of public record, so do some research before you pick up the phone!
Or is that just too inconvienient?
Want to participate in government? I think it highly laudable.
Please do it intelligently.
Don't wait until your government asks you to do it!
|
417.12 | | VINO::EVANS | | Sat Aug 01 1987 12:51 | 23 |
| Does anyone besides me have a little film projecter in a small corner
of their head, showing the people at the end of the phone line -
Answering the phone
Getting your input
Writing it down
Putting it in the shredder
Answering the next call
Getting their input
Writing it down
Putting it in the.....
etc.
???
Or is it just me?
:-) :-(
Dawn
|
417.13 | Get involved. | DINER::SHUBIN | Time for a little something... | Mon Aug 03 1987 11:34 | 29 |
| re: .7
> But it felt real good to *participate* in the government!
Yes indeedy it does. And don't stop now. Write letters, make phone
calls, join committees, and definitely VOTE when the time comes. You
*can* make a difference (do I sound like a high school civics class, or
what?).
It's especially hard for some of us (more liberal folk) here in Mass to
get excited about writing or phoning because our senators and most of
our representatives think the way we do. Nonetheless, they need
reminders.
re: .12
> Answering the phone/Getting your input/Writing it down/Putting it in
> the shredder/Answering the phone...
I think we're ok on this one. Isn't the judiciary committee run by
Joseph Biden? He's at least a Democrat (though I'm not sure exactly
where he sits on the liberal/conservative scale) and he's running for
president, so he's got to be sensitive to the public's desires. *We* are
the public, so we have to let him know what we think. (And yes, even if
you think Bork is great, you should let the committee know [but don't
hurry].)
Biden has apparently put off the hearings on Bork until the fall (in
October?). He's been accused of partisanship, because hearings on
Justices are usually begun much sooner than that. In any case, there's
time to make your beliefs heard, but don't wait.
|
417.14 | hmmmmm....misleading statements | LEZAH::BOBBITT | face piles of trials with smiles | Tue Aug 04 1987 12:47 | 16 |
| my, .11, we seem to be dipping the sharpened barb of wit in sarcasm,
don't we?
as for the responses, from what I've heard, the conservatives are
lauding the fact that only one out of every six or seven of the
responders *in conservative areas* are placing their votes in the
"disfavor" box. This was released by the judiciary folks at the
end of last week. Their failure to talk about a greater sample,
or the *liberal areas*, leads me to believe that a difference is
being made by our votes. BTW, this number has been posted by friends
of mine to conferences such as women.net (on the Usenet), and will
probably stray into many other-net mailing lists (that's where I
got it from) in the near future.
-Jody
|
417.15 | | 3D::CHABOT | May these events not involve Thy servant | Tue Aug 04 1987 22:25 | 14 |
| Please see this week's _New_Yorker_ magazine for analysis of Bork's
opinions about individual privacy, what the framers of the
consititution meant, and law.
What a guy. He opposed states outlawing racist business practices,
yet he supported states prohibiting use of contraceptives. The first
he declares as a tyranny of the majority. And what's the second?
"Original framers" or whatever euphemism they're trying to soften
his image with, it makes no difference: Bork will rule to support
his own morality.
I urge you to read it. _The_New_Yorker_ felt strongly enough about
it to make it the sole topic of "Around Town". And maybe you'll
call.
|
417.16 | Original Intent | DINER::SHUBIN | Time for a little something... | Wed Aug 05 1987 15:08 | 30 |
| > "Original framers" or whatever euphemism they're trying to soften
> his image with, it makes no difference: Bork will rule to support
> his own morality.
It's called "original intent". They want to interpret constitutional
issues based on what the framers of the constitution intended instead
of interpreting the constitution in the context of our own time.
Think of the framers: a fairly homogeneous group of mostly well-to-do
white men, many of whom owned slaves. So, if you use their original
intentions to interpret the constitution, what do you think you'll get?
Could that be why Bork doesn't want the government to "interfere" in
issues based on sex or race?
I suppose there's some logic to the doctrine, but not enough. If one
really believes that the framers were intelligent and planned ahead,
then their "original intent" might have been that we interpret the
constitution in our own context, allowing for changes over time.
(That's kind of like writing programs with subroutines to call, so that
different parameters can be used depending on the situation.) After
all, who knows all of what they all thought? We can't have a complete
record, and if something important is missing, the interpretation may
well be wrong.
Anyway, I called yesterday morning, and it's painless. I forgot to ask
the woman who answered how the calls were going. If anyone asks,
please post the response.
-- hs
|
417.17 | | BANDIT::MARSHALL | hunting the snark | Wed Aug 05 1987 18:16 | 21 |
| re .16 (original intent):
Bill Moyers did a series this year about the Constitution called
"In Search of the Constitution" which consisted of 10 interviews
with scholars, judges, etc. (one of the guests was Judge Bork)
One interview was with a man who is an American and is a professor
of law at either Cambridge or Oxford University.
His comments on "original intent" I thought were very good. He said
that imagine a man giving advise to his son, all he says is "Always
do the honorable thing". Years later, the father has died, and the son
wants to remain true to his father. It would be ridiculous for the son
to start rummaging all through his father's writings trying to
determine exactly how he defined "honorable".
/
( ___
) ///
/
|
417.18 | Bork info requested | DELNI::HANDEL | | Wed Aug 12 1987 14:37 | 24 |
| Some of Judge Bork's views (at least the ones I can remember):
The following represent views that Bork has expressed on recent
supreme court decisions (i.e., ones that he does not agree with):
- He's against legalized contraception - even for married couples.
- He's against one man-one vote.
- He's against the voting rights act
- He's against separation of church and state
- He's for racially restricted convenants
- He's for the sterilization of criminals
- He's for the prior restraint of freedom of the press
It seems to me that any one of these fundamental constitutional
issues would give cause to reject Bork. The Senate has rejected
presidential nominees for the court 26 times since the constitution
was written, including one of the framers of the constitution,
nominated by George Washington. Considering how infrequently the
chance comes to name a judge, this is a lot of times!
Also, one previous noter said that the framers of the constitution
were all similar types (paraphrasing), actually, they were considered
radicals!
|
417.19 | I'm skeptical | HARRY::HIGGINS | Citizen of Atlantis | Wed Aug 12 1987 14:54 | 9 |
|
re.18
I would like to see some documented proof of your charges relating
to what Judge Bork is "for" and "against".
Can you supply it?
|
417.20 | SET COURT/NOBORK | ULTRA::LARU | do i understand? | Wed Aug 12 1987 15:25 | 12 |
| re .18
Strictly speaking, I'm not sure that Bork is against or for all the items
you listed. I think it might be more accurate to say that he says
no there is no consitutional barrier to a state enacting laws that prohibit
such things... as in: he feels that a state is not prevented by
the constitution of the US from enacting a law that prohibits
the sale of contraceptives to married couples, etc...
I still don't want him on the Supreme Court.
bruce
|
417.21 | Information | MAY20::MINOW | Je suis Marxist, tendance Groucho | Wed Aug 12 1987 15:48 | 20 |
| Most of the information I have concerning Judge Bork comes from the
New Yorker "editorial" that Lisa mentioned in a previous note.
(I could make copies of it if you haven't seen it. It's good reading.)
The New Yorker discussed his judicial philosophy from his writings,
especially a review article he did for (from memory) the Indiana
Law Review in 1971.
In his publications, Judge Bork has argued against many of the positions
held by the current Supreme Court. He also appears to disbelieve in
"rights" that are held by the the people. Thus, he would not stand
in the way of legislation that would be declared unconstitutional today.
I.e., if a state were to pass a law saying that sexual intercourse
was illegal unless the man was on top, Judge Bork would say that that
that is the perogative of the state, and if you don't like it, elect
some congressfolk with more eclectic tastes.
Martin.
|
417.22 | current status, please... | QBUS::FINK | Time for a Dandelion Break!! | Thu Aug 13 1987 11:26 | 6 |
|
As the base note is like 2 weeks old, is the phone no.
still good? Are they still taking calls??
-Rich
|
417.23 | However, .21 is probably correct | DELNI::HANDEL | | Thu Aug 13 1987 14:26 | 5 |
| Reply to .19, .20
See Wednesday, Aug 12 Boston Globe, page 83. There is almost verbatim
the list I wrote, as given by Senator Biden.
|
417.24 | addendum | DELNI::HANDEL | | Thu Aug 13 1987 14:29 | 4 |
| Make that .22 is probably correct. I will, if you'd like, type
in the entire article so you can judge for yourself. (pun intended)
He is very much against individual rights.
|
417.25 | "Ultra anticonstitutional" | MAY20::MINOW | Je suis Marxist, tendance Groucho | Thu Aug 13 1987 17:53 | 44 |
| The entire article is probably over 4,000 words. Some out of context
quotes: [quotation marks are the New Yorker's, *** my ellipses, ...
the New Yorker's; [] mark my additions]:
"Every clash between a minority claiming freedom and a majority claiming
power to regulate involves a choice between ... gratifications,"
and "There is no principled way to decide that one man's gratifications
are more deserving of respect than another's or that one form of
gratification is more worthy than another." ***
*** the notion that "rights ... inhere in humans," which Bork dismisses
as some new, modish rhetorical development, ...
The Constitution was drafted with three clear aims *** and to protect
precisely the individula rights of citizens agains tmajoritarian
intrusion and coercion by the State. That the framers regarded these
rights as inhering in the individual, and not as in any sense "derived,"
either from any document or from any trivial, utilitarian "governmental
process," is clear, and not just from the Bill of Rights -- which
Judge Bork, in the same article [Indiana Law Journal, fall 1971],
brushes aside as a "hastily drafted document upon which little thought
was expended." It was thoroughly thought out again, after the Civil
War, when the Fourteenth Amendment exentded the core of the Bill
of Rights, along with due process and equal protection, to the citizens
of all the states. But Bork treats this amendment rather dismissively
as well, speaking of the "value choice (or, perhaps more accurately,
the value impulse) of the Fourteenth Amendment." He writes of the
"men who put the amendment in the Constitution" that "many or most
of them had not even thought the matter through."
"Courts must accept any value choice the legislature makes unless
it clearly runs contrary to a choice made in the framing of the
Constitution," Bork writes. And: "It follows, of course, that broad
areas of constitutional law ought to be reformulated."
Enough for now.
Martin.
|
417.26 | "impartial viewpoint" - his mind's made up | DELNI::HANDEL | | Mon Aug 24 1987 10:38 | 48 |
| I wrote every person on the Judiciary committee stating my opposition
to Bork. I got this letter back (so far the only one) from Humphrey
in NH (who represents [if someone whose views are the total antithesis
of mine can represent] me.)
"Dear Mrs. Handel:
Thank you for contacting me regarding Judge Robert H. Bork. I
appreciate the opportunity to respond.
I believe that Judge Bork will make an excellent addition to the
Supreme Court. Judge Bork's credentials and judicial experience
are extensive. The record shows that Judge Bork has a sound,
consistent and wellreasoned approach to constitutional and statutory
issues. His judicial philosophy is based on neutral principles
of constitutional law, rather than on politics or ideology. Liberal
characterizations of Judge Bork's record as "extremist" or doctrinaire
are invalid from any objective standpoint. It is my hope that the
Judiciary Committee will act with dispatch in considering Judge
Bork's nomination. The longer the Supreme Court is short-handed,
the longer important judicial decisions will be delayed.
Again, thank you for contacting me. I appreciate being apprised
of your views.
With warmest regards, I am
Sincerely yours,
Gordon J. Humphrey, USS"
===========================================
This is the second letter I've received from Humphrey, and both
had to do with the Supreme Court - the first was about Rehnquist.
Neither time did he state that he would take my views into
consideration. That's wrong. I believe that the elected officials
should take into consideration what the predominant view of their
electorate is - not what they themselves necessarily believe. They
are there to REPRESENT the views and protect the views of their
constituencies, not their own political goals or what the President
necessarily wants.
Do you think elected officials should take into consideration the
viewpoints of their electorate or of the President? (or their own
views)
|
417.27 | cynical reply | MAY20::MINOW | Je suis Marxist, tendance Groucho | Mon Aug 24 1987 12:28 | 12 |
| re: .26:
Do you think elected officials should take into consideration the
viewpoints of their electorate or of the President?
Only if they want to be re-elected. You (and your neighbours) elected
Sen. Humphrey to *represent* you, not to bow to your every whim.
If you don't like what he's doing, get out the vote against him next
time around.
Martin.
|
417.28 | | VIKING::TARBET | Margaret Mairhi | Mon Aug 24 1987 12:36 | 4 |
| Or petition for recall (if that's legal in NH, and I think it
is)!
=maggie
|
417.29 | ex | DELNI::HANDEL | | Mon Aug 24 1987 12:48 | 5 |
| As a matter of fact, I have voted against Humphrey, as well as Sununu,
unfortunately, we lost. Maybe next time - I will definitely do
my part to defeat him!
|
417.30 | Even if their minds are made up... | GIGI::TRACY | | Tue Aug 25 1987 16:49 | 8 |
| Re .26:
I would like to also write to the judiciary committee on my opposition
to Bork. Could you supply us with the "mailing list" as well as
your letter (for ideas, not to duplicate exactly). Thanks,
-Tracy
|
417.31 | the masses are such a disappointment | SKYLIT::SAWYER | i'll take 2 myths and 3 traditions...to go.. | Fri Aug 28 1987 16:27 | 11 |
|
re 18
if he's that bad....there's no way we can avoid his selecction.
most of the noters and deccies and conservaatives and republicans
will see to it that he keeps this country great by calling FOR his
appointment.
what a country.
|
417.32 | TWO houses | BANDIT::MARSHALL | hunting the snark | Tue Sep 01 1987 09:51 | 25 |
| re .26:
> Do you think elected officials should take into consideration the
> viewpoints of their electorate or of the President? (or their own
> views)
Congressional Representatives should represent the will of the people
regardless of their own views (up to a point)
Senators should act according to the famous charge by Edmund Burke,
that he owes his constituency not only his industry but also his
judgement, and he betrays them if he sacrifices the latter to their
opinion.
This is the reason for the two and six year terms.
I do think Senators should take the opinions of his constituency
under consideration, but I don't think that they should blindly follow
the will of the majority.
/
( ___
) ///
/
|
417.33 | | FRSBEE::GIUNTA | | Wed Sep 09 1987 12:32 | 17 |
| For those of you in Massachusetts, I called Senators Kennedy and
Kerry yesterday to see what their stand on Bork is, and how they
intend to vote. I was told that Senator Kennedy is against the
confirmation, and I expressed my agreement with this position so
they would have a record of it. I was surprised to find that the
woman who answered in Senator Kerry's office hemmed and hawed a
few times before giving me a very non-commital answer on Kerry's
position. She said that he had not decided, but had some questions
about Bork's role in the firing of Cox (?). I expressed my opinion
to her, and I have followed that up with a letter.
Just thought that some of you folks may want to do something to
help Kerry make up his mind, and express your opinion to both of
our senators.
Cathy
|
417.34 | | VIKING::TARBET | Margaret Mairhi | Wed Sep 09 1987 13:41 | 3 |
| Can you post Kerry's phone number, Cathy?
=maggie
|
417.35 | | CALLME::MR_TOPAZ | | Wed Sep 09 1987 13:55 | 5 |
| re .34:
John or Faulkner?
--Mr Topaz
|
417.36 | | VIKING::TARBET | Margaret Mairhi | Wed Sep 09 1987 14:00 | 3 |
| John, of course. (Actually, I thought of re-editing it to "Sen.
Kerry" just to shortstop a response like yours, Don, but I was too
lazy. That'll teach me! ;')
|
417.37 | Senator Kerry's address and phone | FRSBEE::GIUNTA | | Wed Sep 09 1987 15:08 | 10 |
| Senator John F. Kerry
203 John F. Kennedy Bldg.
Boston, MA 02203
617-565-8519
or
Russell Senate Office Bldg.
Washington, D.C. 20515
|
417.38 | "Far-fetched? Far from it." | AKA::ASHLUND | | Thu Sep 10 1987 00:44 | 28 |
|
If anyone is still skeptical as to how they feel on Bork's
nomination to the Supreme Court, the following quotes are
from a full-page article in the Boston Globe (pg. 13,
Tuesday, Sept. 8, 1987):
"According to Bork, women can be forced to choose between
being sterilized and losing their jobs...
"[If Judge Bork is confirmed to the Supreme Court] a state
can declare the use of birth control illegal and invade your
privacy to enforce the law...
"[If Judge Bork is confirmed to the Supreme Court] you wouldn't
even be protected against sexual harassment at work (Robert
Bork doesn't believe such coercion is 'discriminatory').
"[If Judge Bork is confirmed to the Supreme Court] a state
could ban both birth control and abortion - throwing women
back to the age when pregnancy was, in effect, compulsory and
women risked their lives to terminate pregnancy."
The above-quoted article was placed by the National Abortion
Rights Action League. The article also informs readers that
if they feel Bork should be rejected as a Supreme Court Justice,
they should write to their senators stating this view.
(Pre-written letters are included in the Globe, they need only
be cut out, signed, and mailed.)
|
417.39 | | TFH::MARSHALL | hunting the snark | Thu Sep 10 1987 09:55 | 19 |
| re .38:
While I object to Bork's nomination, I think that most of the
statements in that advertisement are ludicrous. The "if-then"
phrasing is what I protest. Why can't they just say "Bork's opinion
is:..."?
It was not an article, it was a paid political advertisement, as
biased and distorted as the article about the "Family Security Act".
It bothers me that the plain truth is not believed to be sufficient,
that it must be embellished and twisted in such a way as to insure
opposition.
/
( ___
) ///
/
|
417.40 | phone number still works | NEWVAX::BOBB | I brake for Wombats! | Thu Sep 10 1987 12:35 | 16 |
|
.0
The line is still working. I just started reading this file again
and found out about the phone number yesterday. I called and they
asked what state I was from and how I felt about the nomination.
And that was it..... of course, I do wonder how they will use this
info (shredder fodder, etc) and how valid it will be, since one
person/group could call over and over again.
But, it is kinda neat to know about ways of giving input into the
system!
Thanks for posting the number!
janet b.
|
417.41 | Bork on noncustodial parent's rights | NAC::BENCE | Shetland Pony School of Problem Solving | Thu Sep 10 1987 14:15 | 91 |
|
The following article, reprinted without permission, appeared in today's Boston
Globe. It discusses Judge Bork's 1983 position on a case involving a father's
visitation rights after a divorce.
"Let the record show the real Judge Bork"
Ellen Goodman - Sept. 10, 1987
Robert Bork is bound to have trouble living up to his billing. Portly,
scruffy around the edges, no matinee idol, the nominee for the Supreme Court
is finally going to appear in the Senate chambers on Tuesday to take up his
starring role.
Will he play the brilliant, charming, judicial moderate scripted by his
White House fans? Is he likely to slip into the role of raging rightwing
radical portrayed by his enemies?
The dueling previews of Bork have led to a certain opening-night excitement
about the confirmation hearings. Joe Biden, committee chairman and a man
with his own role to play as presidential candidate, predicts that Bork will
be a "beared Ollie North," reaching for a nationwide standing ovation and a
place of honor on a T-shirt.
But however Bork plays to his audience (the Senate in the front row, the
public in the TV balcony), we dont't judge a judge by his star quality.
Judges leave a paper trail, a track record of opinions that tell, literally,
where they are coming from.
So when you hear the clever dialogue, the Q and A, the lines from the Senate
floor, think about his role in the dramas of our private lives. Think about
the Franz family.
In 1976, after eight years of marriage and three children, William Franz
became a divorced father with visitation rights. Five year later, his
ex-wife went into hiding with her new husband under the Federal Witness
Program. Franz was effectively and permanently cut off from his children.
He sued to get his visitation rights back, and eventually that suit went up
to the three-member Court of Appeals in Washington.
As sometimes happens, messy family stories make good law for the rest of us,
and Franz won his case. The majority ruled that severing the ties between
parent and child without their participation and consent violated the
constitutional right to privacy.
But Bork wasn't part of the majority. Bork dissented. He disagreed that
there was a right to "so tenuous a relationship as visitation by a
noncustodial parent."
Yes, Bork said, the state had an interest in maintaining families and the
institution of marriage. But the same could not "be said of broken homes
and dissolved marriages."
Indeed, he wrote, protecting the relationship after divorce could have the
tendency "further to undermine the institution of the intact marriage." He
said this in 1983 when there was one divorce for every two marraiges.
The point is not Bork's ease in dispensing with such "tenuous" relationships
as those of parent and child. Nor is it his notion that protecting the bond
of noncustodial parent and child would loosen the bond of marriage. His
co-judges called this "sufficiently ludicrous as to merit no rebuttal".
But the Franz case is just one study of Bork's view that the only legitimate
guide through the Constitution is one that divines the original intent of
the framers, that the only rights protected by the Constitution are those
specifically named. It underscores his insistence over decades that there
is no right to privacy.
What would the men who wrote the Constitution, and later drew up the Bill of
Rights, say about a world in which more families are dissolved by divorce
than death? We'd need a psychic to answer that. They never thought to
specifically shelter family relationships from the state. They assumed a
level of personal liberty that we have to protect.
The "right to privacy" is not just a code phrase for the right to abortion,
although it has seemed that way during the long summer previews to the Bork
show. If indeed there is no right to privacy, as Bork says, then the state
has the power to prohibit OR enforce abortion.
But the privacy issue itself goes beyond abortion, beyond even the right to
use birth control in your own home, beyond the freedom from state
sterilization - all rulings Bork disagrees with. It goes straight to the
heart of familial descisions about the upbringing of their children, and the
right of noncustodial parents to see those children.
When Bork enters the scene from stage right - far right - it isn't his
presentation that matters as much as his point of view. Don't just follow
the new script. Read the old record."
|
417.42 | scary is an understatement | SUPER::HENDRICKS | Not another learning experience! | Thu Sep 10 1987 19:11 | 2 |
| After outlawing abortion, he might even go after the right to divorce
one's spouse.
|
417.43 | so much hysteria | TFH::MARSHALL | hunting the snark | Thu Sep 10 1987 20:04 | 18 |
| re .42:
Bork cannot outlaw abortion.
He cannot "go after" the "right" to divorce one's spouse.
He may be of the opinion that the States may Constitutionally regulate
these activities.
As I've said before, I don't like Bork, and do not want to see him
on the Supreme Court, but I think some are getting a little carried
away in the powers they ascribe to the man.
/
( ___
) ///
/
|
417.44 | | VIKING::TARBET | Margaret Mairhi | Thu Sep 10 1987 20:15 | 7 |
| It is not his personal weight that must concern us, but rather the
balance on the court that his weight would destroy for *many* *years*.
It was precarious enough before Powell's retirement; we need a moderate
to replace him, not a reactionary.
=maggie
|
417.45 | Worthwhile article | SPMFG1::CHARBONND | I sobered up for this?! | Fri Sep 11 1987 06:47 | 18 |
| "The issue that most exercises Bork's critics is abortion, a
litmus test in the minds of many who oppose his nomination.
At first blush, there is no ambiguity in Bork's position.
He has written, and still says, that "Roe v. Wade", the 1973
Supreme Court decision legalizing abortion, was "wrongly
decided, an unconstitutional decision, a serious and wholly
unjustifiable usurpation of state legislative authority."
Or, as Bork has put it in laymen's terms, "I don't think
abortion is any of the Court's business. I just don't think
there is anything in the Constitution about it."
A recent survey of American jurists found that only 44%
believe "Roe" was correctly decided. (Bork's personal view
of abortion is unknown. But he may have telegraphed it when he
testified...*against* the "Human Life" bill, a proposal that
would have made abortion murder by defining life as beginning at
conception.) "
from US News & World Report, Sept. 14, 1987 page 20
|
417.46 | BORK and the WATERGATE TAPES | CAMLOT::COFFMAN | Howard D. Coffman | Fri Sep 18 1987 12:50 | 39 |
| re:; .33 (Cathy)>
For those of you in Massachusetts, I called Senators Kennedy and
Kerry yesterday to see what their stand on Bork is, and how they
intend to vote. I was told that Senator Kennedy is against the
confirmation, and I expressed my agreement with this position so
they would have a record of it. I was surprised to find that the
woman who answered in Senator Kerry's office hemmed and hawed a
few times before giving me a very non-commital answer on Kerry's
position. She said that he had not decided, but had some questions
>>> about Bork's role in the firing of Cox (?). I expressed my opinion
to her, and I have followed that up with a letter.
The comment on the firing of Cox refers to Archibald Cox.
Archibald Cox was the special prosecutor in the Justice Department
investigating the WATERGATE break-in. As special prosecutor he went
to court to supeona (sp) the WATERGATE TAPES.
Nixon ordered his Attorney General (Elliot Richardson) to fire COX; he
refused. He then ordered (Ruckelshaus(SP) to fire Cox, he too
refused. Both these men resigned over the incident. This incident
has been referred to as the Saturday Night Massacre.
What does this have to do with BORK you ask?
Guess who was #3 in the Justice Department at the time and actually
DID THE FIRING.
BTW, the firing of the Special Prosecutor was prevented by Federal law
establishing the position. BORK concluded that the law did not have
effect given that he was following a direct order by the President.
There is obviously more to this but I think this gives a fair
accounting.
- Howard
|
417.47 | | VIDEO::TEBAY | Natural phenomena invented to order | Fri Sep 18 1987 13:03 | 7 |
| The Sat. night thing is one of the things that bothers me
about Bork. He seems to interept the law according to his
whims at the time-or what he thinks. He disregards what doesn't
suit him.
Constitutional question -if appointed can he be removed?
|
417.48 | | MOSAIC::TARBET | Margaret Mairhi | Fri Sep 18 1987 14:28 | 5 |
| He can be removed via the impeachment process...Abe Fortas resigned
rather than submit to impeachment (or so it was said).
I'd rather he were never appointed!
=maggie
|
417.49 | Not all "laws" are from Congress | DFLAT::DICKSON | Network Design tools | Fri Sep 18 1987 17:31 | 14 |
| The so called "federal law" establishing the special prosecutor was
not passed by congress. It was an edict of the Justice Department
with the force of law, just like other rulings from the various other
agencies (FAA, OSHA, etc). Just like Congress can change its mind and
repeal a law, so can the executive branch with an executive-branch order.
The president runs the executive branch, delegating authority to the heads
of the agancies as he sees fit. So the president is the ultimate head
of every agency. So the president can cause any agency ruling to be
withdrawn.
When Nixon ordered Cox removed, he was implicitly repealing the "law" that
created the office, or at least amending it. Bork's position is that
Nixon had every right to do this.
|
417.50 | A man with frightening views | SERPNT::SONTAKKE | Vikas Sontakke | Mon Sep 21 1987 10:31 | 14 |
| "She was given a good choice of losing her job or selecting the
sterlization and she was happy to select the sterlization."
"Reckless driving and pornographic speech are similar"
"But Judge Bork, there is no constitutional freedm for driving,
speech is protected by 2nd ammendment"
Paraphrased from Robert Bork.
I wonder if we could convince few Senators to give Bork a choice
between not getting confirmed or getting sterlized. I bet he would
be thrilled with the "choice".
- Vikas
|
417.51 | This file is full of propaganda and distortions! | COLORS::MODICA | | Mon Sep 21 1987 13:20 | 6 |
| RE: .50
I believe that the facts behind the first quote would help to
clarify how that sentence was meant. Tell me, what was her third
choice? That in itself may prove interesting.
|
417.52 | document your facts please | CADSE::SANCLEMENTE | | Mon Sep 21 1987 13:56 | 17 |
|
In general it seems that debate will help in decisions only if
that debate is carried out in a meaningful and constructive way.
The point is accurate and documented facts will add constructively
to any debate. Personal opinion can also be of value if said opinion
is represented as a personal view and NOT presented as fact. The
kind of hysterics that can be found in this file does NOTHING to
further intelligent debate. I would no more want to see a person
approved for the supreme court based on blind emotion as see them
not approved on that same basis.
With regard to expressing opinion to ones senator, assuming
none of us are experts in constitutional law, should our views as
to the competence of a supreme court judge really have a bearing
on the outcome of the hearings?
Aj
|
417.53 | A little clarification | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Mon Sep 21 1987 13:57 | 12 |
| The interesting thing was that she had NO third choice.
She could be sterilized so that she would not produce any
defective children despite working in a chemically dangerous
environment, or she could be fired from that job. She was
not given the choice of transferring to a job in another
part of the same company.
Bork indicated (and I was watching) that he was quite happy
with this situation.
Ann B.
|
417.54 | A little more clarification. | VIKING::SAWYER | Mark Sawyer by Tom Twain | Mon Sep 21 1987 14:27 | 32 |
| >< Note 417.53 by REGENT::BROOMHEAD "Don't panic -- yet." >
> -< A little clarification >-
>
> The interesting thing was that she had NO third choice.
That is not what I read in the Boston Globe this Sunday.
> She was
> not given the choice of transferring to a job in another
> part of the same company.
As the Boston Globe printed it, she had the choice of taking a lower
paying job in another part of the plant.
> Bork indicated (and I was watching) that he was quite happy
> with this situation.
While the situation is certainly not a pleasant one for the person losing
her job, I also find the final disposition of the case satisfactory.
Rather than finding fault with the decision, why don't you enlighten us
as to what you would have done?
I have watched this topic with great interest. I of course expected that
this notesfile would be the most militant with respect to stopping Bork's
nomination. What I find most interesting though is the great amount of
DISinformation that gets promoted here. I have heard much from Bork's
detractors, almost all of it "quotes" that sound absolutely preposterous
when taken out of context. This sterilization issue is a perfect case.
When all of the information is taken into account, I feel that the
decision was justified.
Mark Sawyer
|
417.55 | and if the (O.R.) tables were turned | PNEUMA::SULLIVAN | | Mon Sep 21 1987 14:38 | 16 |
|
Am I to understand (Mr. Sawyer) that you think it's justifiable
for a woman to either get sterilized or take a cut in pay?
How would you feel if faced with the same choice?
With regard to your question about what would you do instead
of giving the women workers that "choice"... DEC *was* faced with
a similar situation recently in Hudson. (See Associated Press
story Wed., 24-December-1986.) A DEC Study found a high
rate of miscarriages among women working with certain chemicals
in the production of chips. DEC voluntarily offered to transfer
any woman who was concerned about future pregnancies.... no
cut in pay, no sterilization.
Justine
|
417.56 | | VIKING::SAWYER | Mark Sawyer by Tom Twain | Mon Sep 21 1987 14:56 | 27 |
| >< Note 417.55 by PNEUMA::SULLIVAN >
> -< and if the (O.R.) tables were turned >-
>
> Am I to understand (Mr. Sawyer) that you think it's justifiable
> for a woman to either get sterilized or take a cut in pay?
If the alternative is that of birth defects or other possible
complications due to the pregnancy then my answer is yes.
Regarding the cut in pay: If there are no other positions available at
her present pay-scale, for which she is qualified or could be trained
for, then I guess that's just life. I'm sure that you are not advocating
anything other than "equal pay for equal work". I just wouldn't expect
to find that kind of thing in this notesfile. :-)
> How would you feel if faced with the same choice?
I'm sure that I would feel very badly. What else can I say ???
RE: DEC's similar problem and its solution
DEC is a very large company with many types of jobs in many locations.
I'm sure that although it 'cost' DEC to place these women in other jobs,
it was probably very feasible given the number of job opportunities
available within the DEC community. Can you say that about the company
that made these women chose between sterilization or quitting ???
|
417.57 | as I understand it..... | COLORS::MODICA | | Mon Sep 21 1987 14:58 | 11 |
|
RE: .55 etc Unfortunately, most companies just do not treat
their people as well as DEC treats us (my opinion).
I don't think the issue was either get sterilized or
take a cut in pay. If my facts are right, the issue
was whether or not a woman could consent to sterilization
if she wanted to continue working in a job that had
been linked to causing birth defects. Bork stated that
he felt that a woman should be allowed to make this
decision.
|
417.58 | | MOSAIC::TARBET | Margaret Mairhi | Mon Sep 21 1987 15:06 | 4 |
| Hank, how could that ever be an issue??? Of *course* she could
consent!
=maggie
|
417.59 | I think attitude counts too. | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Mon Sep 21 1987 15:07 | 10 |
| My take on Bork's stand on this situation, based on a news
program excerpt of the hearings (which makes this incomplete,
perhaps even suspect) was that Bork held that the company did
NOT have to offer her ANY other job, at ANY wage. Further,
he asserted that the woman involved would have been grateful
to be allowed to continue at this job after sterilization,
although the woman, whose case this was, had stated under oath
that she was not happy about it, and felt that she had been
forced [by circumstances] to be sterilized.
Ann B.
|
417.60 | What's Next? | PNEUMA::SULLIVAN | | Mon Sep 21 1987 15:08 | 13 |
|
I happen to believe that people in this country have a *right* to
work in a safe environment *and* get paid. They shouldn't
have to choose between the 2. In South Africa, black miners
risk their lives in unsafe working conditions because there are
no other jobs for them. And the laws of their government (so far,
anyway) say that it's ok. If women in this country have to get
sterilized in order to keep their jobs, can you see what that could
mean? That corporations (sanctioned by the highest court in our
country) will decide how safe (or unsafe) our work environment will
be. Is anyone else troubled by that?
Justine
|
417.61 | I think this trolly has been derailed. | VIKING::SAWYER | Mark Sawyer by Tom Twain | Mon Sep 21 1987 15:25 | 20 |
| >< Note 417.60 by PNEUMA::SULLIVAN >
> -< What's Next? >-
>
> I happen to believe that people in this country have a *right* to
> work in a safe environment *and* get paid.
So do I.
> That corporations (sanctioned by the highest court in our
> country) will decide how safe (or unsafe) our work environment will
> be. Is anyone else troubled by that?
Of course.
However, in the Cyanimide case it was not the corporation that made the
decision, it was OSHA. Due to the nature of the manufacturing processes
and the resulting health hazard to pregnant women it was considered that
the safety hazard could never be completely eliminated. Therefore, no
women capable of child-bearing were to be allowed doing that kind of
work.
|
417.62 | A pointer, please | CYBORG::MALLETT | | Mon Sep 21 1987 17:22 | 10 |
| In following this note, I'm beginning to get the outline
of (American Cyanamid?) case. It's beginning to sound as
if the factual detail of the case might make a difference
in how one might make a decision. Could someone please
point me to a source that outlines the details or the case?
Thanks in advance,
Steve
|
417.63 | I'll try to find it. | VIKING::SAWYER | Mark Sawyer by Tom Twain | Mon Sep 21 1987 17:32 | 14 |
| >< Note 417.62 by CYBORG::MALLETT >
> -< A pointer, please >-
>
> Could someone please
> point me to a source that outlines the details or the case?
I will attempt to find the article I mentioned a few replies back. When
I wrote the reply, I said it was in yesterdays Globe. I may have been
wrong as it may have been in the local paper on Saturday. At anyrate, I
will bring it in and enter it if I can find it.
Mark Sawyer
|
417.64 | Viewpoint extremely important here | DSSDEV::BURROWS | Jim Burrows | Mon Sep 21 1987 19:13 | 42 |
| Regarding Justine Sullivan's comment
I happen to believe that people in this country have a
*right* to work in a safe environment *and* get paid.
They shouldn't have to choose between the 2.
The problem in the particular case is that, so far as I
understand it, OSHA and the experts in the field feel that it is
an established fact that there is *NO* safe for a woman who will
later bear children to do the work in question. The chemicals
involved are very strongly linked to birth defects.
It maters a whole lot as to how you look at the problem. Do you
view the question as "Should women who have been sterilized have
the right to take this job that is unsafe for child-bearing
women?" or do you view it as "Should women be forced to be
sterilized in order to keep this job." Obviously from the second
viewpoint coercing sterilization is a bad thing and certainly
shouldn't be supported glibly. On the other hand, exempting
sterile women from the ban on women doing this kind of work
is a compasionate thing.
This leaves us with the question of should women be banned from
work that is shown to cause birth defects. This is a very
interesting and hard question. Its, however--at least as I
understand it--not the question that faced judge Bork. He was
faced with a question that he, at least, felt was the one stated
above--"Should sterile women be allowed to work in environments
were child-bearing women are prohibited." It may be that he
could have viewed the broader question, but without detailed
knowledge of the facts of the case and the laws involved that's
hard to second guess.
For the record, there are views of Judge Bork's that I am not
at all happy to see in a Supreme Court Justice. I am not at all
convincved he is the right candidate for the job. I'm merely not
very happy about what appears to be and emotion presentation or
possibly misrepresentation of the facts by portions of the media
and by some of the judge's detractors. The man deserves to be
judge on what he has really done.
JimB.
|
417.65 | Here's what I found. | VIKING::SAWYER | Mark Sawyer by Tom Twain | Tue Sep 22 1987 09:11 | 45 |
| Well, I was not able to find all the information I mentioned in my
previous replies. Specifically, I remember reading an article where it
was mentioned that OSHA was the agency that told American Cyanamid that
the environment was unsafe for pregnant women. At anyrate, after
re-reading 3 Concord Monitors and the Boston Sunday Globe, this is what I
found. In my opinion it is a far cry from the inflammatory anti-Bork
sentiment expressed in this notesfile. BTW, thanks for posting the
telephone number for expressing approval/disapproval for Bork's
nomination. I of course availed myself of the opportunity. :-)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
The following excerpt is from the September 19 issue of the NH Concord
Monitor and is reprinted without permission. It is itself an article by
David Lauter and David Savage of the Los Angeles Times.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
[... text unrelated to the American Cyanamid case deleted ...]
The tensest moments of yesterday's hearing came when Sen. Howard
Metzenbaum, a Democrat from Ohio, accused Bork of issuing a "shocking"
ruling that gave female employees of a chemical plant "the choice of
being sterilized or being fired."
The case concerned an American Cyanamid Co. plant in West Virginia at
which high lead levels were found in the air. Since the air could not be
made safe for pregnant women - a point agreed to by an administrative
judge - the company told female workers they could work there only if
they were sterilized. A federal workplace review panel upheld the
company's decision, but a union filed suit. Speaking for a unanimous
three-judge panel in 1984, Bork upheld the review panel.
"The women involved in this matter were put to a most unhappy
choice," Bork wrote. "But no statute redresses all grievances, and we
must decide cases according to law."
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
My comment:
Note the first paragraph, more disinformation. Bork did not ISSUE the
ruling, he was part of a three-judge panel that upheld a federal
workplace review panel which upheld the company's position.
|
417.66 | However, it is certain that he WILL be confirmed | SERPNT::SONTAKKE | Vikas Sontakke | Tue Sep 22 1987 09:50 | 10 |
| It would be very interesting to note that if it could be demonstrably
proven that certain kinds of hazards in work environment (e.g. heavy
doses of microwave radiations) cause irreversible damage to a man's
ability to produce healthy sperms, you can bet your life saving that
"Get Sterilized" won't be a "choice" offered to him.
Bork's views are extreme and he has repeatedly shown his lack of
compassion towards women and minority.
- Vikas
|
417.67 | | MOSAIC::TARBET | Margaret Mairhi | Tue Sep 22 1987 10:41 | 12 |
| I would argue that American Cyanimid's 'inability' --my sense is that
the problem is economic, not technical-- to clean the air enough for
safety should not have excused them from maintaining the income of the
women they had to transfer to other jobs. Someone commented that
DEC's size gave us more options in the comparable case, but I don't
see where that applies: American Cyanimid aren't exactly a Mom&Pop
grocery; it would not have compromised their earnings picture to
have offered those women a decent choice. Bork may share the blame
for his unwillingness/inability to see that, but he is not thereby
absolved of responsibility.
=maggie
|
417.68 | | MANANA::RAVAN | | Tue Sep 22 1987 12:21 | 25 |
| Why is it that there only seem to be two categories of women in
this case - sterile, and pregnant? Do the chemicals alter a
non-pregnant woman such that if she leaves the job and gets pregnant
years later, she's *still* liable for birth defects, or is it the
presence of the chemicals during pregnancy that presents the risk?
If the latter, why is it not acceptable to let the women choose
whether or not to risk pregnancy?
I know, I know. The current liability situation makes companies
run scared at the very thought. Even if a woman signed a waiver
spelling out exactly what could happen if she got pregnant while
working in the hazardous area, there would be fear that she could
win a suit in the event that it happened anyway. But it seems to
me that the safety ruling is a prime example of letting an agency
place the welfare of a (potential) fetus over the welfare of the
mother, and taking the decision out of her hands. While I believe
that workers have a right to be informed of the hazards of the
workplace, I also believe they have a right to accept those hazards
if they see fit.
(I've completely lost track of the argument now - does this mean
I think Bork was right? I'd better read up on this in a hurry!)
-b
|
417.69 | | VIKING::SAWYER | Mark Sawyer by Tom Twain | Tue Sep 22 1987 12:42 | 59 |
| >< Note 417.67 by MOSAIC::TARBET "Margaret Mairhi" >
>
> I would argue that American Cyanimid's 'inability' --my sense is that
> the problem is economic, not technical-- to clean the air enough ...
I would argue that the problem was probably both economic and technical
in nature. I am not a biologist/chemist/doctor or anything of the sort
but I can well imagine that if the technology required to make the
environment safe for pregnant women cost enough, the process was no
longer economically efficient. Would you propose that if this was the
case that American Cyanamid incorporate the expensive technology ???
What if this put them out of business ??? None of us have the actual
facts here; but, since you are so willing to see the dark side of
American Cyanamid, would you care to comment make some comments regarding
ecomonic efficiencies ??? Should a company be forced to implement an
economically inefficient when it penalizes a large number of people for
the benefit of a few. Remember that there is no such thing as a free
lunch. Someone has to pay for the more expensive process.
> ... for
> safety should not have excused them from maintaining the income of the
> women they had to transfer to other jobs. ...
Why should they maintain their income ??? If you are suggesting that AC
should pay these women the same pay for less skilled jobs, would you care
to address the issue of equal pay for equal work ??? I asked this
question in a previous reply to this topic and noone has bothered to
address it.
> ... Someone commented that
> DEC's size gave us more options in the comparable case, but I don't
> see where that applies: American Cyanimid aren't exactly a Mom&Pop
> grocery; it would not have compromised their earnings picture to
> have offered those women a decent choice. ...
I was the 'someone' that made that comment and I have not seen or heard
anything that has changed my mind. Granted, AC is definitely bigger than
your typical Mom&Pop grocery, but you have not shown that AC had anything
even close to a 'decent choice' to offer these women. How can you make
the statement that it would not have compromised their earnings picture
without knowing anything about their operation. ???
> ... Bork may share the blame
> for his unwillingness/inability to see that, but he is not thereby
> absolved of responsibility.
I don't see how this follows at all.
> From 417.65
> "The women involved in this matter were put to a most unhappy
>choice," Bork wrote. "But no statute redresses all grievances, and we
>must decide cases according to law."
Are you suggesting that Bork make a new law ??? I think not. That
should be left to our elected representatives.
Mark Sawyer
|
417.70 | The Future looks grim sometimes | PSYCHE::SULLIVAN | | Tue Sep 22 1987 13:02 | 52 |
| re Note 417.68
> While I believe that workers have a right to be informed of the hazards
> of the workplace, I also believe they have a right to accept those hazards
> if they see fit.
I would essentially agree with this argument. Boxers (gasp) and
race car drivers, for example, have the right to engage in a risky
occupation. However, I would argue that when you introduce the
element of (but you will lose your job or make less money if you
decide *not* to get sterilized) the level of *choice* is greatly
reduced.
Remember: these women did not enter into an occupation that they
*knew in advance* would be risky. They gave the company their
service believing that their health was not in danger. It was after
the women began giving that service that the company discovered
and revealed the lack of safety involved in the job. So should
those workers be compensated? I think so. It seems to me that
at least implicit in any employment arrangement is the agreement
that the worker will provide a service, and the employer will provide
a safe work environment (along with whatever other protections are
guaranteed under the law). To meet its obligation to the employee,
the employer should either make the work environment safe *OR*
provide a comparable (i.e. in pay, benefits, opportunity) work
situation for those people who agreed to work there before learning
about the lack of safety. With regard to the equal pay for equal work
issue that Mark Sawyer wants someone to address... First of all,
I frankly don't believe that there were no other jobs for which
the women could be paid equally and/or trained. And while I can't
*prove* it, none of us really has enough info to *prove* anything;
we can only offer our opinions, and that's mine. Secondly, because
of what I described above, i.e., that the women agreed to work there
believing it was safe, I think that *those women* - the ones *already
hired* should be kept on at their current wages or compensated in
some other mutually agreeable way.
Maybe the employer has the right to screen out future employees on
the basis of health risk, but what if it were suddenly revealed that
people over 50 are highly susceptible to cancer of some sort if they
spend over 30 hours a week working at a video terminal. Would DIGITAL
be allowed to fire all employees over 50? With or without benefits?
(And I can think of a more similar-to-the-case-at-hand scenario,
but I'd rather not get into that kind of below-the-belt discussion.
What you have to give up in order to keep your job is not at issue
here. I think the issue is that if the conditions under which you
accept employment change... putting you at risk, should *you*
be penalized?)
It's scary to think about the way that future rulings might go ...
Justine
|
417.71 | | VIKING::SAWYER | Mark Sawyer by Tom Twain | Tue Sep 22 1987 13:08 | 58 |
|
Re: My previous reply 417.69
Sorry for the poor grammar, if I'd read it again before entering it, I
would have caught the numerous grammatical mistakes. I hope you get my
drift though.
Re: < Note 417.68 by MANANA::RAVAN >
> Why is it that there only seem to be two categories of women in
> this case - sterile, and pregnant?
I think it is more accurate to say that there are two categories of
women, those that are sterile and those that are capable of
child-bearing. I think that the pregnant case is an extreme of the
latter, ie. there is most definitely a risk.
> Do the chemicals alter a
> non-pregnant woman such that if she leaves the job and gets pregnant
> years later, she's *still* liable for birth defects, or is it the
> presence of the chemicals during pregnancy that presents the risk?
From what I've read about lead poisoning in the newspapers concerning
children and lead paint, I'm led to believe that the effects of lead
poisoning are long term. The lead is not readily removed from the
system.
> If the latter, why is it not acceptable to let the women choose
> whether or not to risk pregnancy?
>
> I know, I know. The current liability situation makes companies
> run scared at the very thought. Even if a woman signed a waiver
> spelling out exactly what could happen if she got pregnant while
> working in the hazardous area, there would be fear that she could
> win a suit in the event that it happened anyway.
I think you answered the question quite well. :-)
> (I've completely lost track of the argument now ...
Again I agree. This topic definitely went down a rat hole. Knowing the
sentiment of the community of this notesfile, I purposely stayed out of
the discussion. However, I had to enter my 2 cents worth when the entry
about Bork advocating sterilization was entered. Almost anything can be
made to sound outrageous when taken out of context. I therefore felt
compelled to enter some 'facts' about the case.
> ... - does this mean
> I think Bork was right? ...
He is probably not idealogically in line with you; however, when viewed
strictly as a jurist and not a lawmaker, some of the anti-Bork statements
lose there credability.
> I'd better read up on this in a hurry!)
An informed decision is definitely preferred. :-)
|
417.72 | random thoughts | VINO::EVANS | | Tue Sep 22 1987 13:35 | 35 |
| RE: BOrk
I've been catching pieces of the hearings on WBUR...
This is one *^& of an intelligent, articulate man. A goodly portion
of whose views are totally *from hunger*. What a shame.
I happened to hear some of the questioning re: privacy, contraceptives,
etc. (Griswold case? ) Anyway, one of the questions led to the privacy
issue. The senator asked essentially, "well, here's this decision
not allowing couples to purchase contraception - what's to prevent
this decision from being used against them?
Bork's reply was that a judge would never issue a search warrant
for contraceptives. "Never happen." (Exact quote)
This man has apparently never heard of selective enforcement. This
privacy thing has too much possibility for real problems when enforced
selectively. I can't believe this man is so innocent as not to know
that this exists.
Either he really believes that laws are fairly enforced, and certain
individuals/groups are *not* harrassed by selective enforcement;
or he ..... what? Has a hidden agenda? I don't know.
This man's intelligence combined with his legal ideas scare the
*%& out of me.
One other thought: I caught Prof. Barbara Jordan's testimony. Now
*there's* an intelligent, articulate person! This country lost a
great deal when she retired from politics. Egad! How I wished it
were *she* up for confirmation, and the roles reversed!
Dawn
|
417.73 | | RAINBO::TARBET | Margaret Mairhi | Tue Sep 22 1987 13:51 | 15 |
| Mark, I think Justine's .70 makes the point perfectly.
But just for the record, you pounced on my parenthetical comment about
economics and took off running, so I think I need to clarify that point
explicitly. No, I do not think --NOR did I imply, if you'll check it--
that AC should beggar themselves by installing ruinously expensive
technology. My comment was merely meant to note that the article's use
of "unable" probably really meant "unwilling" in a technical sense:
many companies used to claim that cleaning up smokestack emissions
would be ruinously expensive, too...yet once compelled to either clean
up or close down they somehow found that their straits weren't really
so dire after all. 'mazing how that works.
Cynical? Me? Naaawwwwwwww.
=maggie
|
417.75 | further ramblings | MAY20::MINOW | Je suis Marxist, tendance Groucho | Tue Sep 22 1987 14:07 | 30 |
| My understanding from hearing some of the testimony, reading the Globe,
and some notes on Usenet was that the problem is even more complicated
(and Bork perhaps less culpible).
The Cyanimid case apparantly contained both Constitutional and
non-constitutional aspects. The company settled the constitutional
question out of court, and Bork was able to rule on only one narrow
aspect of the question. It is not clear to me that his ruling, while
regrettable, was incorrect. (I would be happy to have my mind changed
on this matter.) Also, as an appeals judge, Bork was not in the
position either of unmaking existing law, nor of making new law.
(Compare this case with the Baby M case, where the judge was called
upon to rule in a case without any settled precedents.)
The question of worker safety does need to be discussed.
The foetus is made of the same substance as the adult, but is
far more sensitive to environmental poisons. Thus, were I judging
the matter, I would hold the company explicitly responsible for
creating an environment safe for pregnant women, so that I could
be assured that it was also safe for adult humans. I don't know
whether this was an issue judge Bork was called upon to decide, however.
Former Representative Barbra Jordan pointed out in her testimony that,
had it not been for the one-man-one-vote rulings of the 1960's she
would have never been elected to office in the heavily gerrymandered
Texas legislature. (Can anyone get that women into the White House
where she belongs? Even if she isn't electable, could we get her
appointed to Attorney General?)
Martin.
|
417.76 | | VIKING::SAWYER | Mark Sawyer by Tom Twain | Tue Sep 22 1987 14:33 | 50 |
| >< Note 417.73 by RAINBO::TARBET "Margaret Mairhi" >
> Mark, I think Justine's .70 makes the point perfectly.
While I'll agree that Justine makes several good points, I wouldn't say
that they're perfect. We have come to expect many things as being 'our
right' and I'm not sure that I agree on that. I used to be a 'flaming
liberal' before I took a course in economics. Now I suppose you could
categorize me as a 'flaming Republican' on the side of big-business.
After all, if it weren't for big-business, what do you think we'd all be
doing ??? It is big-business that employs us and in essence helps us to
keep a roof over our heads. Please, I'm not suggesting that we should
simply let big-business walk all over us; but, I think to penalize the
many to save the few is the wrong approach. You don't suppose that we
have some very fundamental differences of opinion here do you ??? :-)
> But just for the record, you pounced on my parenthetical comment about
> economics and took off running, so I think I need to clarify that point
> explicitly. No, I do not think --NOR did I imply, if you'll check it--
> that AC should beggar themselves by installing ruinously expensive
> technology. ...
Yes, I guess I did 'pounce' and take off running. Sorry about that. I
didn't mean to imply that you implied anything of the sort. I did
however want to raise the issue of the economics of the additional
technology required to make the environment safe.
> ... My comment was merely meant to note that the article's use
> of "unable" probably really meant "unwilling" in a technical sense:
This of course is an ASSuMEption (sic) that supports your argument.
Where is the basis in fact ???
> Cynical? Me? Naaawwwwwwww.
What ??? No smiley face ??? :-)
Back to the real topic, sort of:
--------------------------------
One of the points that Bork's supporters like to espouse is that of
"judicial restraint."
Would anyone care to comment on that ???
Do we really want nine unelected judges making law ???
Shouldn't that be left to our representatives ???
Mark Sawyer
|
417.77 | | DECSIM::HALL | | Tue Sep 22 1987 14:40 | 11 |
| RE .74
>> BTW - I'd would be in MENNOTES except that it seems to be unavailable
>> most of the time.
I don't know what to make of such a remark.
Perhaps you should bring in a magazine to keep you
busy the next time MENNOTES is down.
Dale
|
417.78 | After lunch ramblings | MAY20::MINOW | Je suis Marxist, tendance Groucho | Tue Sep 22 1987 15:16 | 13 |
| Today's Boston Globe had a wonderful column by Ellen Goodman. She
has appointed herself president of the "Free Bob Bork" committee.
You see, Bork is personally in favor of individual rights and liberties,
but doesn't see support for them in the Constitution. He feels that,
if we are to have these rights, we need merely legislate them.
Goodman feels that Bork has been trapped by his principles, painted
into a corner where he must judge against his true desires.
So, she proposes that he shouldn't be confirmed to the Supreme Court,
but elected to Congress.
M.
|
417.79 | | VINO::EVANS | | Tue Sep 22 1987 15:33 | 20 |
| WEll, since we are in a situation in which the Supreme Court can
either uphold or strike down such laws, thus creating "precedent"
which affects, in turn, other rulings regarding that law - the
gentleman has, indeed, placed himself squarely on the horns of a
dilemma.
OF course, there are those who would say, "But we *HAVE* legislated
them." And, of course, we are also in a situation currently in which
a law ain't a law until somebody takes it to court. And then, you
get "precedent".
etc.
RE: Barbara Jordan in the white house, where she belongs:
HEAR, HEAR!!
Dawn
|
417.81 | Elect Bork dog catcher and put a bite into crime | SPIDER::PARE | What a long, strange trip its been | Tue Sep 22 1987 16:18 | 1 |
| tsk, tsk, tsk ..... mennotes must be down again...
|
417.83 | (Mal)-Content(full) | PSYCHE::SULLIVAN | | Tue Sep 22 1987 16:38 | 3 |
|
re -.1
I think it was non-contentfull.
|
417.84 | | SPIDER::PARE | What a long, strange trip its been | Tue Sep 22 1987 16:42 | 1 |
| Of course not_:-) What could that possibly mean?
|
417.85 | What could be simpler than one-person-one-vote in a true democracy? | SERPNT::SONTAKKE | Vikas Sontakke | Wed Sep 23 1987 16:31 | 12 |
| Getting back to the topic, was there a time in the history of this
country when the concept of "one-person-one-vote" was considered too
radical?
If so, what exactly made the concept to become reality? Was it the
legislative body who instituted the changes or was it the Supreme
Court?
More importantly, does Bork have trouble with the concept of
"One-person-one-vote"?
- Vikas
|
417.86 | | TFH::MARSHALL | hunting the snark | Wed Sep 23 1987 18:29 | 28 |
| re .85:
First of all, what makes you think the U.S. is a "true democracy".
It is not and was not intended to be.
Secondly, the issue of one-man-one-vote does not have to do with
voting rights directly, but with the population of congressional
districts. The Supreme Court declared that all the districts must
contain numerically equal populations. All the Constitution has
to say directly on the matter is:
...The Number of Representatives shall not exceed one for every thirty
Thousand, but each State shall have at Least one Representative;...
- ARTICLE I, Section 2.
I think that the problem Bork had with the SC decision is that it
could result in some communities being broken up into other districts
resulting in a QUALITATIVE inequality of represention in order to create
strict QUANTITATIVE equality of representation.
/
( ___
) ///
/
|
417.87 | moved | VIKING::TARBET | Margaret Mairhi | Wed Sep 23 1987 19:56 | 65 |
| ================================================================================
Note 488.0 vote NO on Judge Bork! 2 replies
HPSCAD::DITOMMASO "Enjoying myself to death ..." 25 lines 23-SEP-1987 16:40
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
There is a Judiciary Commitee opinion poll telephone number,
where you can call and vote yes or no, for Bork's nomination.
I'm not sure about the hours which you may call, but when you call,
they will answer "Justice Department ..." , tell them you would
like to vote NO (or yes) for Bork. They will then ask you what
state you are calling from.
I don't know what kind of impact this poll will have on the nomination
of Judge Bork, but, this is a chance for the average person to speak
out.
The number is: **** 202-224-5225 ****
If I had the time (I'm very busy, deadlines and all!!!) ... I'd
state a whole bunch of reasons why I think you should vote NO!!
But, I'm sure somebody could help me out on that, .. it isn't too
difficult!!!
Thanks Paul
(a very busy noter!! Its been a long time since I wrote a note in
this conference!!)
================================================================================
Note 488.1 vote NO on Judge Bork! 1 of 2
HPSCAD::DITOMMASO "Enjoying myself to death ..." 9 lines 23-SEP-1987 16:45
-< NOT THE WRONG NUMBER!! >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CORRECTION!!! They will answer "Senate Judiciary ..."
Also, I'm sure they've been swamped with calls from MASS, maybe
it would really help of people from other states than MASS called!!
Thanks Again!! Paul
(p.s. My SO thanks you too!!)
================================================================================
Note 488.2 vote NO on Judge Bork! 2 of 2
HPSCAD::DITOMMASO "Enjoying myself to death ..." 13 lines 23-SEP-1987 17:08
-< One more time!!!!!!!! >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ooops ... sorry, I looked a few times and didn't see note 417!!
Or, I didn't match the title with the subject!
Sorry to clutter up the notes file with duplicate notes!!
The only thing I can add is that they still are taking calls!!!
I found out about the number from someone from a different company,
had it been a DEC person, I would have expected this to already
be in the notes file!
Sorry
|
417.88 | What *is* the role of the court? | AITG::SHUBIN | There's noplace like noplace | Thu Sep 24 1987 13:34 | 36 |
| r.74
> Bork sounds revolutionary because he favors the Constitutional
> role assigned to the Court, not the role which liberals have
> assigned to it. The Court as been absorbed of late into the
> liberal's agenda creation mechanism. Its true role is to pass
> on the constitutionality of laws that Congress should be passing
> to remedy social ills, not to make the laws.
Article 3, section 1 says that "The judicial Power of the United
States, shall be vested in one supreme Court, and in such inferior
Courts as the Congress may from time to time ordain and establish..."
Section 2 says, "The judicial Power shall extend to all Cases, in Law
and Equity, arising under this Constitution, the Laws of the United
States, ..."
What is this "judicial Power" that they talk about? It's never spelled
out (unless it's elsewhere in the document), so it seems to me that
"its true role" is subject to interpretation, which is based on
precedent and on the feelings of the particular justices.
I agree that Barbara Jordan was much better than the nominee, and
better than most of the committee members. (Does anyone know why she
retired?) I don't agree that she spoke without content, however. Sen.
Humphrey tried playing games with her, and wound up sounding like a
jerk. She asked him how one arrives on a decision based on original
intent, and he didn't have much to say of any value. Her discussion
with someone (Metzenbaum?) about one-person-one-vote was good, as well.
What happens if Bork isn't confirmed? Who else will be nominated? The
only other name I've heard is Orin Hatch, who's no great shakes,
either.
|
417.89 | | COLORS::TARBET | Margaret Mairhi | Thu Sep 24 1987 14:41 | 3 |
| I heard Edwin Meese!
(Doubtless spread about by those in favor of Bork. :'{ )
|
417.90 | Marbury v Madison | TFH::MARSHALL | hunting the snark | Thu Sep 24 1987 15:16 | 15 |
| re .88:
The concept of "judicial review" was first established in the case
Marbury v. Madison. This case established the role of the Supreme
Court in determining the constitutionality of laws. I think it was
John Marshall (no relation :-( ) who was Chief Justice at the time.
Sorry, but I do not know the details of the case other than "Madison"
was indeed James Madison, one of the primary Founders. (and I think
he lost)
/
( ___
) ///
/
|
417.91 | Just a thought (ain't it obvious, now?) | HUMAN::BURROWS | Jim Burrows | Thu Sep 24 1987 23:18 | 9 |
| I heard some lovely commentary on "original" intent the other
day which centered around how much of the constitution was
written during the lifetime of Judge Bork. Oh, you mean the
ammendment are PART of the Constitution?! And the Authors
of the Constitution lived in three different centuries! And
their intentions varied a little bit! Maybe interpretation
isn't such a bad idea...
JimB.
|
417.92 | Poor Richard | HARRY::HIGGINS | Citizen of Atlantis | Fri Sep 25 1987 11:17 | 16 |
| re .85
re: true democracy
As Steve Marshall has pointed out, the United States is not and
was not intended to be a democracy.
An interesting tale is told regarding the Constituion being signed
in Philadelphia 200 years ago. The story goes, that, after
ratification, Benjamin Franklin was asked on the street by a woman
what kind of government had been formed. Franklins answer?
"A Republic, Madam, if you can keep it."
richard
|
417.93 | | SERPNT::SONTAKKE | Vikas Sontakke | Fri Sep 25 1987 13:00 | 42 |
| RE: Democracy/Republic
OK, so where do we *now* stand on the one-person-one-vote issue? What
is the guiding principle? Is it one-dollar-one-vote, or is
one-acre-one-vote, or is it one-man-one-vote-one-woman-half-vote,
or is it one-white-one-vote-one-black-half-vote? Isn't it closer
to one-person-one-vote than any other principle? My original question
still remains unanswered. Is the concept still considered too radical
for the mainstream America?
RE: Bork
Funny thing is that the more I think about this issue, the more
I realize that as individuals we have got lot less rights than
we take them for granted.
Indeed, if it were up to the majority of the people (i.e. legislative
body), the minority rights will often get trampled upon and if the
judicial body is supposed to act merely as a rubber stamp, then who is
going to protect your rights as an individual?
Does the Constitution of United States gives (generic) me specific
right to work in any state I choose to? Does it give me any right to
reside in the state I choose to? Let's assume that there is no Federal
Anti-discrimination Law. Exactly what prevents a state from passing
blatantly discriminatory laws as long as the majority of the people
want it? Nothing. And if we have someone on the Supreme Court who
wants to let the majority rule the minority and does not recognize the
basic rights derived from the Constitution, I as an individual from
the minority has no recourse left.
Interesting point about Judge Bork is that even though he thinks that
"Come on Senator, no judge in his right mind would have issued a
warrant based on the Connecticut Contraceptive Ban Law" (his own words
during the testimony), he himself would have had no trouble in
constitutionally uphelding the law. as he himself pointed out later
"just because a law is stupid, does not mean it is unconstitutional"
(once again his own words). Since he does not recognize the basic
right of privacy, he would have had no alternative but to go along with
the Ban.
- Vikas
|
417.94 | Article I, Article IV, Amendment XIV | TFH::MARSHALL | hunting the snark | Fri Sep 25 1987 17:25 | 67 |
| re .93:
The issue of "one man one vote" is, as I said earlier, really a
question of equal representation. Originally the population that
a representative represented was calculated as
|Representatives .... shall be apportioned among the
|several States which may be included within this Union, according to
|their respective Numbers, which shall be determined by adding to the
|whole Number of free Persons, including those bound to Service for a
|Term of Years, and excluding Indians not taxed, three fifths of all
|other Persons. ... The Number of Representatives shall not exceed one for
|every thirty Thousand, ... (Article I, Section 2)
Clearly "all other persons" (i.e. slaves) were not equally represented.
The 14th amendment changed this passage to read:
|Representatives shall be apportioned among the several
|States according to their respective numbers, counting the whole number
|of persons in each State, excluding Indians not taxed.
But the clause "... The Number of Representatives shall not exceed one for
every thirty Thousand, ..." remains in effect. So the issue
remains that a congressman's district could be larger than 30,000.
Thus the citizens of a district of 30,000 is "more" represented
than one whose poplulation is (for example) 100,000. This example
is of course clearly unfair, but suppose the sizes were instead
35,000 and 38,000. It may not be entirely fair to redraw the districts
just to maintain a strict numerical equality.
> Exactly what prevents a state from passing blatantly discriminatory
> laws as long as the majority of the people want it? Nothing.
The 14th Amendment.
|SECTION 1. All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and
|subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States
|and of the State wherein they reside. No State shall make or enforce
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of
|~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life,
|~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any
|~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.
|~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> Does the Constitution of United States gives (generic) me specific
> right to work in any state I choose to? Does it give me any right to
> reside in the state I choose to?
Not specifically, but it does say:
| The Citizens of each State shall be entitled to all Privileges and
| Immunities of Citizens in the several States.
(Article IV, Section 2)
/
( ___
) ///
/
|
417.95 | more access points | LEZAH::BOBBITT | face piles of trials with smiles | Fri Oct 02 1987 11:16 | 46 |
| This came to me today via a mailing list from someone at UMass. Please
note that I am not telling/asking anyone to change their opinion,
but rather if your opinion prompts you to take action either way,
you are now aware of the access points below.
________________________________________________________________________
As decisions are being made in Washington which potentially have
far more impact on the future of this country than the election
of a president, the following information is provided as a public
service:
The Senate subcomittee vote on Bork's nomination has been postponed
until TUESDAY. (This vote decides whether the recommendation passed
to the full Senate will be positive, neutral, or negative).
The undecided senators (as of when last called) are our own Kerry, and
Specter of Penn., Heflin of Alabama, and DeConcini of Arizona.
THEY DO TAKE OUT OF STATE OPINIONS.
They are getting so many calls that all they ask for is your "vote",
for or against, and your state. So it takes precious little of your
time to influence this decision.
The phones are:
Edward M. Kennedy (202) 224-4543 - against (very much)
John F. Kerry (202) 224-2742 - UNDECIDED and from MASS
Arlen Specter (202) 224-4254 - UNDECIDED - Penn.
Howell Heflin (202) 224-4124 - UNDECIDED - Alabama
Dennis DeConcini (202) 224-4521 - UNDECIDED - Arizona
You may also write them (soon!) at:
The Honorable <first> <mi> <last>
Russell Senate Office Building
Washington D.C. 20510
And our representative:
The Honorable Silvio R. Conte
20300 Rayburn House Office Building
Washington, D.C. 20515
(202) 225-5335
|
417.96 | Kerry's opposed... | ATEAM::LUPACCHINO | | Fri Oct 02 1987 15:04 | 3 |
| I've just called Kerry's office and he 's opposed to the Bork
nomination.Apparently, he declared himself yesterday...(sigh).
ann marie
|
417.97 | | SERPNT::SONTAKKE | Vikas Sontakke SERPNT::SONTAKKE | Mon Oct 05 1987 10:42 | 1 |
| So is Spectre
|
417.98 | FANTASTIC NEWS!!! | RICKS::BUTLER | | Tue Oct 06 1987 16:53 | 5 |
| *** YEAH!!!! ***
BORK IS
O-U-T!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
|
417.99 | Famous Last Words: Over My Dead Body | PNEUMA::SULLIVAN | Does that mean Bush will run as an incumbent? | Tue Oct 06 1987 17:18 | 5 |
|
Does that mean that Bush will run as an incumbent?
|
417.100 | Bush - head for the hills.... | BUFFER::LEEDBERG | Truth is Beauty, Beauty is Truth | Tue Oct 06 1987 17:36 | 13 |
|
Is it really true - I don't think I could stand it if he made it.
_peggy
(-)
| Thank the Goddess
I will continue to bake cakes for
the Queen of Heaven and pour librations
in her honor and just about anything
she asks
|
417.101 | | TFH::MARSHALL | hunting the snark | Tue Oct 06 1987 18:03 | 12 |
| Bork IS NOT out until the full Senate votes. (or did Reagan withdraw
the nomination?) The Judiciary Committee voting "NO" does not eliminate
him, it is merely a recomendation to the Senate.
With a negative recommendation his chances are very poor, but Reagan
may be able to call in a number of favors, make a few deals, etc.
/
( ___
) ///
/
|
417.103 | he's not completely out yet... | MEWVAX::AUGUSTINE | | Tue Oct 06 1987 18:36 | 10 |
| re .98
I just heard the news, and you're partly right. The Senate Judiciary
committee voted 9-5 against recommending Bork's nomination. The full
Senate still needs to vote, but, as s.m. says, chances for Bork's
confirmation are now very poor. (Reagan has still vowed to fight
for it, though)
liz
|
417.104 | *groan* | COLORS::TARBET | Margaret Mairhi | Tue Oct 06 1987 18:58 | 5 |
| Did they actually release it from committee to a floor vote then?
That isn't nearly as strong as strangling it in camera, which is
what a 9:5 vote sounds as tho it shuda been.
=maggie
|
417.105 | | QUARK::KLEINBERGER | MAXCIMize your efforts | Tue Oct 06 1987 22:26 | 7 |
| Maggie, no matter WHAT the judicial committee said, it still had
to go upwards for a vote.. what a noter said a couple of replies
back about Reagan calling in "major" favors, can (and could) be
done, and BORK still could be voted in... sigh... I only found this
out a little while ago too...
Gale
|
417.106 | I think it looks pretty hopeful that Bork is truly OUT... | NEXUS::CONLON | | Wed Oct 07 1987 02:40 | 12 |
| RE: .105
From the interviews I saw on CNN yesterday afternoon, Bork has
almost zero chance of making it at this point.
I saw Ronnie himself, and he looked pretty shaky (yeah, I know...
he *ALWAYS* looks pretty shaky.) :-)
He said he wasn't going to give up, but he said his little
"No." to the question without much conviction.
Suzanne...
|
417.107 | *sigh* | CHEFS::MAURER | La vie en rose | Wed Oct 07 1987 05:04 | 4 |
| I'm sure our 'illustrious' president would come up with someone worse
for his next nominee.
Helen
|
417.108 | Question about who does what | PNEUMA::SULLIVAN | October 11, 1987.. | Wed Oct 07 1987 09:50 | 10 |
|
I heard on NPR this morning that (assuming Bork doesn't make it)
Congress *could* hold out until after the next presidential election.
It had something to do with the President appointing someone to
the bench while the Congress is in recess. Did anyone else hear the
story or know more about it?
Justine
|
417.109 | Bork is uninteresting | MAY20::MINOW | Je suis Marxiste, tendence Groucho | Wed Oct 07 1987 10:03 | 21 |
| While Congress (just the Senate?) is in recess, the President can appoint
Supreme Court justices who serve -- I believe -- until the end of the
next session or until they are confirmed/rejected by the Senate.
This is unlikely.
The interesting thing about the Bork nomination is that he was defeated
in committee, in part, because of the political strength of Blacks,
women, and ethnic minorities. Southern senators discovered last year
that they could get elected even though they lost the white vote, as
long as they received strong support from the Blacks in their state.
Reagan has very little political power left -- he proved that during
the last Congressional elections. By forcing the Senate to vote,
he will "hold their feet to the fire" and make it harder for moderate
Republicans to get support from the fire-breathing wing of the Republican
party. Instead of the two strong centrist parties we were accustomed to
up until the mid-60's, we may end up with two more extreme parties, each
beholden to periferal interests. Ultimately, this may result in
a third (currently non-existant) party sweeping up the middle.
Martin.
|
417.110 | Don't bury him until he's dead | ULTRA::WITTENBERG | The stimulation of eccentricity | Wed Oct 07 1987 11:34 | 24 |
| The nomination is not dead yet. It's in real trouble, but Reagan
has pulled rabbits out of his hat before, so we have to keep the
pressure on our senators. Various people pointed out that
Alabama's senator left himself room to change his mind and I'm
sure that a lot of pressure will be brought to bear on everyone in
the Senate. Remember the sleazy tricks used to confirm Manion such
as promising a senator a water project for his district (and than
not delivering it.)
So, this is a good first step, but we must keep fighting until
he's defeated in the full senate.
In response to an earlier question:
If Bork isn't confirmed, and the fight goes on for another few
weeks, It will be very difficult to confirm anyone before the
Senate recesses in December. If one nominee is defeated, it is
ofthen easier to defeat another, particularly against a lame duck
president. (LBJ had his later nominations rejected.)
Reagan could make an interim appointment, which traditionally
hasn't been done, but Reagan has used it in other places when he
couldn't get his choice confirmed.
--David
|
417.111 | | FAUXPA::ENO | Homesteader | Wed Oct 07 1987 12:59 | 7 |
| NPR news report stated that the Senate is going to try to bring
this to a vote by the end of next week.
Also, a commentator stated that this may be a political move by
Reagan to ensure that if Bork is defeated by the Senate, Reagan's
next nominee will pass fairly easily, even if he is as controversial
as Bork.
|
417.112 | Twilight Zone theme - do do do do do do do do... | VINO::EVANS | | Wed Oct 07 1987 13:04 | 10 |
| I heard Reagan say "Over my dead body" regarding the defeat of Bork's
nomination.
I heard a psychic on TV the other day predict that RR won't live
out his term.
Hmmm.
Dawn
|
417.113 | Direction! | AKOV04::WILLIAMS | | Wed Oct 07 1987 13:28 | 10 |
| Re .109 (and to a lesser extent a few others). A discussion of
Bork's qualifications and opinions might be interesting but the
attacks on Reagan serve little more purpose than to show you for
what you are. The note is not titled 'Reagan,' or 'Look what
Reagan is attempting to do.'
How about directing the comments correctly? Bash Reagan, or if
you choose, but at least make an attempt to discuss Bork.
Douglas
|
417.114 | | CYBORG::MALLETT | Situation hopless but not serious | Wed Oct 07 1987 13:39 | 13 |
| One aside: some time ago, one of the noters had a reply
title that read "But it is certain he WILL be confirmed"
and, although it may not, in fact, have been *certain*, it
seems to me that when the process began, most folks figured
Bork's chances were a lot better than they are now.
I have a feeling that the public outcry was a major factor
in swaying the Senate Judiciary Committee; though it may
be a small one, I toast the victory (and if I'm being naive,
I don't want to know about it :-D ).
Steve
|
417.115 | a little humor | JUNIOR::TASSONE | Cruise Nov 9 -16 | Wed Oct 07 1987 17:39 | 14 |
| I heard something funny on the radio this morning. On Z94, the
two commentators "pretended" to place a telephone call to Reagan.
The question to Reagan went something to the effect of "President
Reagan, did you hear that the committee voted Bork down 9 to 5?"
and to that Reagan replied, "What does a movie starring Dolly Parton
have to do with anything? Ha ha, I saw that line and I had to take
it". Next question, "I heard you say, in regards to Bork's defeated
nomination, 'over my dead body'" and Reagan replied, "again, I've
been misquoted. What I actually said "was over George Bush's dead
body, yuk yuk". Then Reagan says, "Oh, listen, got to go, the new
Romper Room is on, you know, Miss Jeans, 'bend and stretch'.
Cathy (who prefers to laugh now)
|
417.116 | Empty Rhetoric - Is that a threat or a promise? | SERPNT::SONTAKKE | Vikas Sontakke | Thu Oct 08 1987 12:25 | 16 |
| RE: .114
That was me. I would love to eat my words and really looking forward
to it. But it is not over, yet.
I have to agree that if Bork was not honest and had decided not to
answer questions, he would had lot better chances. But once he made
his views known on privacy, freedom of speech, majority will, women's
rights, among others, he made lot of people uncomfortable. I have to
wonder if the next nominee is going to avoid answering questions about
his judicial views to avoid getting scrutinized.
RE: "Over my dead body":- He had another one yesterday.
"As long as I have a living breath in my body. I will support Contras."
- Vikas
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417.117 | Look alike reactionaries??? | SSDEVO::YOUNGER | This statement is false | Thu Oct 08 1987 23:03 | 8 |
| Has anyone noticed that political cartoons of Bork look a lot like
political cartoons of Khomeini?
Hmmm. They do kind of resemble each other, and seem to share some
views...
Elizabeth
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417.118 | Give the Man a Break! | CSMADM::LUST | REALITY IS WHEN YOU CAN'T HANDLE DRUGS | Tue Oct 13 1987 14:04 | 55 |
| RE: .117 et al.
I find it rather repulsive to see such slurs cast at someone who has
dedicated a large part of his life to honorable public service.
I find Judge Bork's views frequently to be anathama to me, but I do
not believe that he deserved in any way the personal vilification that
has been heaped upon him.
Several points follow:
1. THE SATURDAY NIGHT MASSACRE: When then Solicitor General Bork fired
Archibald Cox at President Nixon's command, I was residing in Washington DC.
At that time Bork refused to comment on the whole affair, but both Eliot
Richardson (The Attorney General who quit) and William Ruckelshouse (the
Deputy Attorney General who also quit) announced that Bork had also
threatened to resign rather than fire Cox; and that they (Richardson and
Ruckelshouse) had urged him to remain in order to avoid the anarchy in
the Justice Department which would surely arise with the departure of so
many in high places. Richardson and Ruckelshouse have both also stated
that there was absolutely no question of whether the President had the
legal right to fire Cox, they just considered doing so unethical and so
they resigned rather than compromising their own integrity -- this is
exactly the same position that Bork has espoused. So lets give him a
break folks. Bork also resigned soon afterwards after a new Attorney
General was appointed.
2. The American Cyanimid Case: From my understanding of the case, Judge
Bork and his colleagues(sp?) had to decide whether a corporation could
declare a whole set of working positions off-limits to women unless
they were either past child-bearing age or sterile. Th company, at the
insistance of OSHA, had made such a move to protect its women workers.
The union sued on behalf of its women members, because the positions that
were involved were among the highest-paid in the plant and shutting them
off to women would prevent women from achieving promotions and rising upwards
to better pay, etc. There was no one woman who was told to get a sterili-
zation, the issue was one of 'women's rights' - i.e. was it discriminatory
for a whole class of higher-paying jobs to be declared off limits to women?
The original Judge declared that it was not discriminatory, and Judge Bork
and his fellow-judges on the Court of Appeals confirmed that decision.
The Supreme Court on appeal declined to review that case, apparently
not disagreeing.
Remember that it's easy to take things out of context and twist them.
Judge Bork is not my choice for the Supreme Court, and I have called and
written the Senators involved to urge them to vote against him. But, I
believe him to be an intellegent, caring individual who does not deserve
the personal vilification to which he has been subjected.
Let's work to defeat him, but there is no reason to bash him. He isn't
a cheap poltroon the likes of Harold Carlswell whom Nixon tried to
appoint to the Court. Give him a break!
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417.119 | | VINO::EVANS | | Tue Oct 13 1987 16:47 | 16 |
| I tend to agree with .118. However, I am more sure than ever that
this person is not the one for the job. His resistance to dropping
this issue (granted, he is beging pressured by RR) shows me that
he is more interested in "proving" some point than in the running
of the government, or in the efficient return-to-order of the Supreme
Court.
I understand the Cox deal. I think it was your garden variety political
game-playing. But I *understand* it. I believe the gentleman thought
that the smooth continuation of government was a priority, and he
based his actions on that priority.
The current situation calls for a smooth move. He's not making it.
Dawn
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417.120 | Doing the right thing? | MAY20::MINOW | Je suis marxiste, tendance Groucho | Tue Oct 13 1987 17:33 | 15 |
| I disagree with Bork's philosophy of government and his assumptions of
the rights of individuals with respect to the government.
On the other hand, he does seem to be an honorable -- and relatively
apolitical -- person. As such, I can well understand his making
a principled stand to force the Senators to fulfil their Constitutional
role of "advise and consent." It takes a certain amount of guts to
stand up and say "I know I'll lose this vote, but politicizing the
court is wrong, and I'm not going to let you (the Senate) off by
quitting."
He is, for better or for worse, doing what he feels is right, and
-- however much I disagree with his Constitutional philosophy -- I
certainly admire Judge Bork for doing what he feels is the right thing.
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417.121 | announcing a government conference | 15767::BARANSKI | Law?!? Hell! Give me *Justice*! | Wed Oct 14 1987 10:53 | 39 |
| Spurred by this topic, I've started a 'government' conference...
I hope that you women will get in on the ground floor...
Jim.
<<< VADER::DRA3:[NOTES$LIBRARY]GOVERNMENT.NOTE;1 >>>
-< Let's make it *our* government! >-
================================================================================
Note 1.0 Let's make it *our* government No replies
VADER::SYSTEM "If I were a realist, I'd be dead." 26 lines 13-OCT-1987 16:24
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
This NOTES Conference is devoted to the ideal of having a government being
repsonsive to the people it governs. Let us share ideas how we can make our
various governments obey our needs, rather then letting them run amuck! Let us
keep track of what various governments, governmental agencies, and government
officials are up to, so that they don't sneak anything past we the people.
Let us use this Conference to empower us to make the government *ours*.
Let us *not* use this Conference for political campaigning, or turn ourselves
into politicians, taking on the flaws of our political system. Let us debate
issues, but keep the debate to a minimum. State your piece, and please listen
to other people's point of view. Keep to the facts, and avoid flames and
disinformation. Let us have a Conference which has the tolerance to have a
pluarality of options, so that we can *all* work to *all* have the government we
would like.
Any and all levels of government, agencies, and officials are fair game. World,
Continental, Country, State, County, Town, and other geographical governments
are fair game. Government in countries other then the US are fair game.
However, let us remember that the purpose of this Conference is to empower it's
people to live in the kind of country they want, not for people to flame about
other countries.
Let's try to keep the issues, level of government, and geographic locality under
discussion under control, and organized.
Jim Baranski
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417.122 | Just a short note, idea | PATSPK::SEGUIN | | Wed Oct 14 1987 11:58 | 6 |
| You know, Bork's stand triggerered off a new topic. But before
writing a new note I'd like to present the issue. From my perception
the "attitudes" men have towards women whose resistance to dropping
the issue is labeled as one as department outcast, feminist, liberal,
and so forth.
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417.123 | ? | MEWVAX::AUGUSTINE | | Wed Oct 14 1987 12:17 | 5 |
| Sorry, I don't understand how to parse 417.122. can someone help
explain it?
thanks
liz
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417.124 | not sure this is right | TFH::MARSHALL | hunting the snark | Wed Oct 14 1987 14:01 | 15 |
| re .123:
I think that s/he would like to discuss:
the attitude some men have that causes them to label women as
"department outcast", "feminist", "liberal" etc., when that woman
resists dropping some issue.
is that right SEGUIN?
/
( ___
) ///
/
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417.125 | yes/no to .124 | PATSPK::SEGUIN | | Wed Oct 14 1987 14:24 | 12 |
| yes in that is the topic to be introduced.
no in that the point is: men do have labels for women who
resist dropping issues. Those labels are like those presented
in .123.
Some issues women may refuse to drop is one of power.
Since the majority of those in power are men the lable
one might might place on such a woman could be "man-hater".
What label would your co-works place on Bork if Bork was your radical
feminist in the group?
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417.126 | next.... | LEZAH::BOBBITT | face piles of trials with smiles | Wed Oct 14 1987 14:30 | 11 |
| from Reagan's "shoot from the hip" speech last night (or some time
yesterday)...
something on the order of
"those who objected to the Bork nomination will dislike my next
nomination just as much!"
feh.
-Jody
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417.127 | re .126 | LDP::SCHNEIDER | | Wed Oct 14 1987 17:01 | 11 |
| Yah, sorta shows you who *really* started the 'politicizing', don't
it? I'm surprised the media wolves didn't run with that statement
(which I heard quoted as more like "if you didn't like Bork, you'll
dislike my next choice EVEN MORE" (not "just as much.") I don't know
which version is closest to reality.)
My first thought on hearing the quote was: Hmmm, so if women and
minorities found plausible cause to fear Bork, now they have even
more to worry about? What could RR hope to gain with this attitude?
Mindboggledly, Chuck
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417.128 | He's outta there1 | ASD::LOW | Merge with Authority | Fri Oct 23 1987 15:53 | 10 |
| Well, it's official!
The nomination of Bork to the Supreme Court has been REJECTED by
the US Senate this afternoon!
Whew,
Dave
|