T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
895.1 | | SMURF::CALIPH::binder | Simplicitas gratia simplicitatis | Thu Jun 27 1991 16:51 | 4 |
| Yeah, and I heard on NPR that Bush is busily beating the bushes for a
conservative-enough black to replace Marshall.
-d
|
895.2 | star sigh star | TLE::TLE::D_CARROLL | dyke about town | Thu Jun 27 1991 16:55 | 3 |
| I think I'm going to go jump off a bridge now.
D!
|
895.3 | :-( | ELWOOD::CHRISTIE | | Thu Jun 27 1991 16:58 | 4 |
| D! I'll join you.
L
|
895.4 | RE: The bridge | ESGWST::RDAVIS | We have come for your uncool niece | Thu Jun 27 1991 17:09 | 6 |
| Nah, don't give 'em the satisfaction.
At least we can make them go through the work of pushing us off.
(,< :)
|
895.5 | | MAKO::GOODMAN | I don't have a personal name yet... | Thu Jun 27 1991 18:16 | 1 |
| I want to throw up...
|
895.6 | Damn! | LANDO::ALLISON | | Thu Jun 27 1991 18:29 | 3 |
| sigh......
-HA
|
895.7 | The cynic speaks... | ASDG::FOSTER | Calico Cat | Thu Jun 27 1991 23:14 | 4 |
|
Keep in mind, Marshall has been bucked on every turn all year. He may
be getting out because he can't do any more good just voicing a lone
dissenting opinion...
|
895.8 | slitting my wrists came to *my* mind. gack | CARTUN::NOONAN | excavator of a beautiful butterfly | Fri Jun 28 1991 00:24 | 1 |
|
|
895.9 | Give him his due. Let him rest. | NECSC::BARBER_MINGO | | Fri Jun 28 1991 08:52 | 21 |
| I asked my husband as soon as I read it here.
He said that it was no surprise. Marshall has been in ill health
for quite a while.
This morning, the radio confirmed illness as the cause.
That makes it 3/4 aprox conservative, according to my SO.
I understand the dread that is felt hat loosing him.
However, I worry about the individuals who suspected political
loss motivations over the health issues involved. The man
has taken the political limb enough times so that I would
think him above petty speculations that he left because he
felt he wasn't doing any more good.
Give the man his due, and allow him to live the rest of his
life with the full respect he deserves. It would be very good
if the "political impotence" angle could be left out.
Cindi
|
895.10 | He's been ill for some time. | ASDG::FOSTER | Calico Cat | Fri Jun 28 1991 09:55 | 9 |
| Cindi, I did not make myself clear.
Thurgood Marshall has been ill for a couple of years now. I really
think he stuck it out because he wanted to be able to do some good,
despite his illness. All I'm saying is perhaps he is going now, instead
of 3 years ago when his health first began to fail, because staying now
means less than staying 3 years ago did.
But if you want to call my comment petty, that's your perogative.
|
895.11 | ruminating... | BYCYCL::FISHER | Rdb/VMS Dinosaur | Fri Jun 28 1991 10:09 | 10 |
| I know this isn't exactly relevant but ...
Did you here the factoid about his getting to see his son sworn in to
the Supreme Court Bar last week? I'll bet it made him feel good, even
if it doesn't help the country right away.
Too bad it will take a while to turn the court again, perhaps 20-30 years.
By then maybe there will be another Mr Justice Marshall appointed.
ed
|
895.12 | | XCUSME::QUAYLE | i.e. Ann | Fri Jun 28 1991 10:17 | 14 |
| If, as I have read, the supreme court is now weighted toward the
conservative, I wonder how long it had (this is at least implied)
a liberal slant?
I haven't paid much attention, I must admit, but am wondering whether
the court is more like a pendulum or a spiral (or helix). If a pendulum,
it must swing back and forth at more or less regular intervals. If a
spiral, then, even though each decision is liberal or conservative, and
the decisions of each year can be regarded as a tendency toward l or c,
nevertheless the body of all decisions can be observed to move. Then
come the questions. Upward or downward? Spiral or helix?
aq
|
895.13 | article | LEZAH::BOBBITT | sailing around my soul | Fri Jun 28 1991 10:23 | 142 |
|
type: NYT (Copyright 1991 The New York Times)
priority: Regular
date: 06-27-91 1818EDT
category: Washington News
subject: BC MARSHALL COX
title: THURGOOD MARSHALL RETIRES FROM SUPREME COURT
author: BOB DART and JULIA MALONE
text:
WASHINGTON -- Thurgood Marshall, an 82-year-old civil rights champion
and the nation's first and only black justice, announced his retirement
from the Supreme Court on Thursday -- opening the door for President
Bush to pick a conservative replacement.
In a two-paragraph letter to the White House, Marshall said he was
stepping down because ``the strenuous demands of the court work and its
related duties required or expected of a justice appear at this time to
be incompatible with my advancing age and medical condition.''
Appointed by President Lyndon Johnson in 1967, Marshall has been a
consistent liberal voice on the Supreme Court -- advocating abolition
of the death penalty, supporting affirmative action and defending
individual rights, including a woman's right to an abortion.
His departure gives Bush a chance to bolster an already solidifying
majority of conservative justices on the nation's highest court. The
president said he intends to ``move very swiftly'' in selecting a
nominee.
When Marshall's replacement is confirmed, a majority of five justices
will have been appointed by Bush or former President Ronald Reagan.
David Souter, the court's newest member, was Bush's first nominee.
Reagan selected Justices Sandra Day O'Connor, the court's first woman
member, Antonin Scalia and Anthony Kennedy. William Rehnquist,
appointed to the court by former President Richard Nixon, was elevated
to chief justice by Reagan.
Marshall, who turns 83 next week, ia the oldest of the court's nine
members. He had expressed hopes of staying on the court until a liberal
successor was assured but has been in poor health in recent years. He
had also increasingly found himself in the minority in court decisions.
A dissent he authored in a ruling released Thursday articulated
Marshall's frustration at watching a conservative majority of justices
undo the legacy of his more liberal court of decades past.
The decision ``is but a preview of an even broader and more
far-reaching assault upon this court's precedents,'' predicted Marshall
in Payne v. Tennessee, a death-penalty case. ``Cast aside today are
those condemned to face society's ultimate penalty. Tomorrow's victim's
may be minorities, women or the indigent.''
Bruce Fein, a conservative legal scholar who served in the Reagan
Justice Department, said Marshall's departure ``pressages the most
dramatic change'' on the court since the 1930s.
``It will give the conservatives a 7-2 working majority in most
instances,'' said Fein, with Justice Byron White joining Rehnquist and
the five Reagan-Bush appointees.
Reaction to Marshall's retirement immediately melded with speculation
on his successor.
``The Supreme Court has lost a historic justice -- a hero for all
Americans and all times,'' said Sen. Joseph Biden, D-Del., chairman of
the Judiciary Committee that holds confirmation hearings on federal
judges. ``I hope the president will nominate a replacement who is
worthy of this great man's place on the court and in our hearts.''
There was widespread speculation that Bush would fill the vacancy with
a black or Hispanic jurist. Among the names being mentioned:
-- Clarence Thomas, a U.S. Appeals Court judge in Washington. Thomas, a
conservative African-American from Georgia, served as head of the Equal
Employment Oportunity Commission in the Reagan administration.
-- Circuit Judge Amalya L. Kearse, a black women who was appointed to
the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New York in 1979 by President
Carter.
-- Ferdinand Fernandez, a Reagan appointee to the 9th U.S. Circuit
Court of Appeals in California. Picking the first Hispanic ever to the
court would please the nation's growing number of Hispanic voters as
Bush's reelection campaign nears.
-- Ricardo Hinojosa, a federal district judge in Texas appointed in
1983 by President Reagan.
Or Bush could pick a second woman for the court. U.S. Trade Rep. Carla
A. Hills or Edith H. Jones, a conservative on the federal appeals court
in Texas, have been long considered potential justices.
There has also been speculation that Solicitor General Kenneth Starr,
the Justice Department's chief advocate before the Supreme Court, is
also in line for elevation to the bench.
Senate Democrats warned that nomination of a hardline conservative
jurist would be met with opposition.
``President Bush would send a powerful message not just to all
Americans but to all the world if he uses Thurgood Marshall as the
model for his next nomination to the high court,'' advised Sen. Howard
Metzenbaum, D-Ohio, a member of the Judiciary Committee.
Feminist groups expressed fears that the next justice could tilt the
conservative court even more toward the overturning of Roe v. Wade, the
1973 decision guaranteeing the right to an abortion.
Marshall's retirement brings the nation ``to a frightening
crossroads,'' said Judith Lichtman, president of the Women's Legal
Defense Fund.
``We call upon President Bush to put aside partisan politics and
appoint a successor worthy of Marshall's legacy,'' she said.
Long before his appointment to the Supreme Court, Marshall led the
fight for equal rights for black Americans as a civil rights lawyer in
the South.
In 1954, he successfully argued the Brown v. Topeka Board of Education
case before the Supreme Court that led to the desegregation of public
schools, abolishing the nation's ``separate but equal'' racial
policies.
In 21 years as chief counsel for the NAACP, he won 29 of the 32 cases
he argued before the Supreme Court.
After Marshall joined the court in 1967, he wrote a number of major
rulings upholding affirmative action programs designed to help blacks
and other minorities overcome the legacy of discrimination. He has also
opposed the death penalty in all circumstances.
The announcement of Marshall's retirement made Thursday ``a sad day for
civil rights and civil liberties because Thurgood Marshall -- who
championed so many of the constitutional principles of equality --
leaves at a time when that legacy is in decline,'' said Nadine
Strossmen, president of the American Civil Liberties Union.
*** End of Article ***
|
895.14 | Our perspective | NECSC::BARBER_MINGO | | Fri Jun 28 1991 10:32 | 20 |
| Ren'-
If you were being petty, then you may align yourself within the
ranks of petty speculators.
If you were not, do not assign yourself with it.
If I were addressing you, or thought you, in particular were being
petty... I would have told you. Probably in mail though. You
may have faith in that, if nothing else.
None of this is civil rights-- or Thurgood.
But in a way, our right to discuss it... both you and I,
black females in a technical field at Dec is a far sight from
where the world was when he started working on it. It is a
tribute to him in a way. He may have had a lot to do with it.
If we ever have progeny, I hope they too will have reps of justice,
that will allow them the same rights.
Cindi
|
895.15 | | VMSSG::NICHOLS | It ain't easy being green | Fri Jun 28 1991 10:40 | 12 |
| The Supreme Court has had a liberal slant (until quite recently) for at
least 30 years. F.D.R. had four terms of the presidency (following
about 12 or so years of Republican president (Hoover, Coolidge)
In those 12+years of F.D.R. and 7+years of Harry Truman, many/most of
the justices were repllaced by F.D.R. liberal nominees. In addition,
the Chief Justice Earl Warren was appointed by Eisenhower. ("worst damn
fool thing I did in my life": said Ike). So by 1954, Brown vs Board of
Education was decided by a staunchly liberal court. This liberal
orientation continued through part of Reagan's presidency such that the
liberal/moderate orientation was finally broken by the appointments of
Scalia/Kennedy/Oconnor/Souter
|
895.16 | The end of an era | CUPMK::SLOANE | Is communcation the key? | Fri Jun 28 1991 11:06 | 17 |
| Marshall has wanted to retire for years because of declining health. Reputedly
he refused to retire while Reagan was president because he didn't want Reagan to
nominate his successor, and he hoped the next president would not be such an
arch conservative.
Unfortunately Bush is cut from the same ideological cloth as Reagan. I truly
believe that the sole reason for Marshall's retirement is declining health and
age, and that, given the continuing conservative presidential trend, he would
remain on the bench until death.
Marshall has done more to advance the rights of the oppressed and minorities
than virtually any other person in the United States this century. He will be
remembered and revered as a giant long after people like Bush, Reagan, Sununu,
and their ilk have faded away into historical footnotes and obscurity.
His passing marks a continuing ominous trend toward repression of the rights of
all of us.
|
895.17 | We Who? | SNIPKY::MARCUS | | Fri Jun 28 1991 11:12 | 10 |
| Siggghhh........
Gone are the days when we had a genuine interest in helping and
evolving with each other. Back are the days when if I get the good
stuff, the h*ll with you.
Maybe Souter will line up if he sees some of the issues as right to
privacy issues.
Barb
|
895.18 | | ASDG::FOSTER | Calico Cat | Fri Jun 28 1991 11:34 | 3 |
| In the Time article that came out just before Marshall's announcement,
there was a cited trend that some justices become more liberal as they
age. let's hope these new folks age real soon...
|
895.19 | Counterpoint | SMURF::CALIPH::binder | Simplicitas gratia simplicitatis | Fri Jun 28 1991 12:20 | 12 |
| "Morning Edition" this morning voiced a particularly interesting slant
to Marshall's decision to retire at this time. He's putting Bush in a
pretty tough position. Bush is fighting the very popular civil rights
bill that is presently in the Congress. If Bush now appoints a really
conservative Justice so close to a Presidential election, that move will
not be forgotten. It would make things *very* difficult for him in '92.
Republican leaders are saying that Marshall's action could not have come
at a worse time for the Republican party.
If this is true, I'll laygh all the way to the voting booth.
-d
|
895.20 | from today's washington post | GUCCI::SANTSCHI | violence cannot solve problems | Fri Jun 28 1991 13:04 | 23 |
| also, from today's Washington Post, Marshall has made his retirement
conditional upon confirmation of a nominee. This is totally his right
to make this condition, although most justices retire unconditionally.
This takes away the urgency on the part of Bush to get someone
appointed quickly.
also, this quote, reprinted without permission:
"Rather, those who know Marshall speculated it was the loss of his
close friend Brennan and mounting frustration at the court's direction
that led him to break his often-repeated vow to remain on the court
'for the length of my term, which is life.'"
that kinda confirms 'ren's suspicions that he just can't fight against
it anymore. what a sad commentary that one of the sole voices of
reason in this country has to retire because he can't work with his
peers in deciding fundamental fairness for the citizens of the United
States.
We might as well kiss the Bill of Rights good-bye, it was nice knowing
you. i really fear for our country now.
sue
|
895.21 | | FMNIST::olson | Doug Olson, ISVG West, UCS1-4 | Fri Jun 28 1991 14:01 | 14 |
| re .16, Bruce-
(actually this belongs in the rathole)
> Unfortunately Bush is cut from the same ideological cloth as Reagan.
I don't think so. I always got the impression that Reagan was sincere.
Maybe stupid, maybe blind to certain aspects, but true to himself; and
I found it hard to hate him.
Bush, on the other hand, is owned; and his moral spinelessness is easy
to despise.
DougO
|
895.22 | | TOMK::KRUPINSKI | C, where it started. | Fri Jun 28 1991 15:00 | 12 |
| Thurgood: Enjoy your retirement. You've earned it, even if I don't
always agree with you.
There is precedent for retired Justices to continue assisting
the court in several ways. I hope he does so, to whatever extent
he feels able.
A real interesting position for Bush. Does he stick a
"white males need not apply" to the req? Or does he stay
true to his "no quotas" line?
Tom_K
|
895.23 | Congress is Liberal | ELWOOD::CHRISTIE | | Fri Jun 28 1991 16:32 | 13 |
| According to the news I heard this morning, although the Supreme
Court is conservative, Congress has a liberal majority and is now
in the process of enacting legislation to override the latest
Supreme Court ruling of no abortion couseling in federally funded
clinics. Congress is also vowing to enact any legislation
necessary to continue to override the Supreme Court's rulings.
Seems like Congress is starting to do it's job (IMHO).
I just hope that the bills pass with enough majority to override
Bush's veto.
Linda
|
895.24 | Presidential comments | CUPMK::SLOANE | Is communcation the key? | Fri Jun 28 1991 16:42 | 14 |
| Re: Reagan and Bush
I always felt Reagan was an actor continually on stage and acting, and nothing he
said or did had any substance beyond that. And yes, Bush has sold out. He does
what he and his advisors think is best from the media point of view.
Unfortunately this point of view is horribly distorted.
But maybe we should watch what we say. Next there will be Supreme Court decision
saying that employees of companies that sell to the U.S.are not free to
criticise the government. That is the direction we are heading toward.
No smily face. (Do we have symbols for the other end of the body?)
Bruce
|
895.25 | | GUESS::DERAMO | duly noted | Sat Jun 29 1991 16:55 | 8 |
| re .24,
> No smily face. (Do we have symbols for the other end of the body?)
See HUMAN::ETIQUETTE topic 98 (esp. the base note and
replies .3 and .4).
Dan
|
895.26 | Without comment | DRIFT::WOOD | Laughter is the best medicine | Mon Jul 01 1991 17:07 | 10 |
| From a widely distributed mail message:
At 2:00 President Bush announced his nominee to fill the vacancy in
the Supreme Court.
He nominated Clarence Thomas, a Black judge from the South. Thomas
graduated from Holy Cross in 1971, after spending a year in the seminary
to become a Roman Catholic Priest.
|
895.27 | | FMNIST::olson | Doug Olson, ISVG West, UCS1-4 | Mon Jul 01 1991 20:03 | 5 |
| > (Do we have symbols for the other end of the body?)
Vonnegut's version, from Cat's Cradle: *
DougO
|
895.28 | "Cat's Cradle" is probably my favorite though... | WAYLAY::GORDON | Of course we have secrets... | Tue Jul 02 1991 09:30 | 4 |
| Actually DougO, It's from "Breakfast of Champions", which is his book
in which he also did the 'illustrations'.
--DougG
|
895.29 | Character of Thomas, and a battle plan. | SMURF::CALIPH::binder | Simplicitas gratia simplicitatis | Tue Jul 02 1991 10:04 | 17 |
| Clarence Thomas is fiercely conservative and has been the target of much
controversy about, especially, his tenure as chairman of the EEOC,
during which time more than 13,000 age-discrimation suits were allowed
to die through inaction. He is vocally opposed to Affirmative Action.
He also opposes much of Welfare, quite rightly saying that welfare can
become a debilitating narcotic. Women's and minority groups are likely
to come out of the woodwork in opposition to his appointment, an event
that some commentators say the President is eagerly looking forward to,
as it promises a prospect of some serious political warfare, in which
Poppy revels.
I'd say we ought to deprive Bush of what he wants - let him appoint his
man without a fight - he's almost certain to win anyway - and then vote
every single Republican out of office next year in retaliation. Your
mileage may vary.
-d
|
895.30 | life term seems like forever | GUCCI::SANTSCHI | violence cannot solve problems | Tue Jul 02 1991 10:16 | 10 |
| re: .20
-d, i like your last idea, but the members of the Supreme Court are
appointed for life, not a two or four year term. much more damage can
be done.
of course, that doesn't mean that we can't turn the rascals out anyway
in the next several elections :)
sue
|
895.31 | ?? | NOVA::FISHER | Rdb/VMS Dinosaur | Tue Jul 02 1991 10:55 | 6 |
| Who is Poppy?
A life term is an especially long time considering that Clarence Thomas is
only 43.
ed
|
895.32 | Not *my* Poppy! | CARTUN::NOONAN | Of course not silly. You're a boy! | Tue Jul 02 1991 10:56 | 3 |
| That's George Bush's nickname.
E Grace
|
895.33 | "Poppy"... | SMURF::CALIPH::binder | Simplicitas gratia simplicitatis | Tue Jul 02 1991 11:06 | 6 |
| ...is the nickname George Bush acquired as a member of the blatantly
sexist Skull and Bones secret society at Yale University. The name is
used in derision by cartoonist Garry Trudeau; Poppy's evil twin Skippy
is really responsible for it all...
-d
|
895.34 | ARRRGHH! | PROSE::BLACHEK | | Tue Jul 02 1991 12:38 | 15 |
| Well, I'm going to NOW's national convention this weekend in NYC.
I'll report back on what action NOW plans to take with this nominee.
I'm hoping that if the Supreme Court does hear the Guam or Pennsylvania
case, they do it in 1992 when it can do real harm to the presidential
election.
Of course, can you say POLITICS, boys and girls? I'm willing to bet
that the court will "pass" on hearing those cases and wait for the
Louisiana case which will most likely make it there in 1993.
It's going to be a long 40 years ahead of us with the Renquist court
and whichever Chief Justice follows.
judy
|
895.35 | but we can always hope for an accident | GNUVAX::QUIRIY | It's the Decade of the Bob | Tue Jul 02 1991 13:42 | 4 |
|
re. 31 Yes, and unfortunately "only the good die young".
CQ
|
895.36 | | ISSHIN::MATTHEWS | OO -0 -/ @ | Tue Jul 02 1991 15:00 | 3 |
| re: .35
I can't believe you said that. :'(
|
895.37 | a sad day for us all | TYGON::WILDE | why am I not yet a dragon? | Tue Jul 02 1991 16:15 | 20 |
| the greatest sadness at Marshall's retirement is the fact that we, as the
voting public, have failed him. From all indications, the majority of
Americans ARE more liberal in their views...however, the people VOTING are
the middle-aged and older citizens of the bible belt. They have skewed the
the political bent of this country to the very conservative - hence, we get
congress and the senate afraid to support women's rights or the civil rights
bill...and we get George Bush in his conservative disguise. If the so-called
majority ACTUALLY VOTED, we might have a more realistic congress and senate.
And, of course, George would be wearing his liberal disguise.
I'm not surprised that Marshall got tired of standing out there in the
wilderness, virtually alone.
His press conference was wonderful, though...the man went out blunt, feisty,
and not suffering fools gladly. When asked why he was retiring, I believe
he said, "because I'm old and my body is falling apart!". When asked what
should be done to correct racism in this country, he fixed the reporter
that asked the question with a hard glare and said, "there is not one person
in this country who doesn't know what to do to combat racism!". He was not
in the mood to deal with stupid questions.
|
895.38 | | GNUVAX::QUIRIY | It's the Decade of the Bob | Tue Jul 02 1991 18:01 | 6 |
|
I can't believe I said it either. I don't really hope that any of the
conservative judges has an unfortunate accident, it was just something
wicked that popped into my head.
CQ
|
895.39 | | USWS::HOLT | Karakorum Pass or Bust! | Tue Jul 02 1991 23:16 | 8 |
|
Some people just don't get it. GHWB won the election, yet the liberals
just can't accept that votes came from a broader segment of society
than just the usual male supemacists, bible thumpers, and cold warriors.
They've just gotta believe that the election was stolen by Jesse Helms
and Robert Vigurie... pitiful.
|
895.40 | with an elephant gun! | SA1794::CHARBONND | barbarian by choice | Wed Jul 03 1991 07:33 | 2 |
| re.39 WADR Bush won because the Democrats shot themselves in
the foot by nominating Dukakis.
|
895.41 | Sorry Mr Holt. small, dedicated groups do it | 44SPCL::HAMBURGER | FREEDOM and LIBERTY: passing dreams, now gone | Wed Jul 03 1991 10:33 | 18 |
| > <<< Note 895.40 by SA1794::CHARBONND "barbarian by choice" >>>
> -< with an elephant gun! >-
> re.39 WADR Bush won because the Democrats shot themselves in
> the foot by nominating Dukakis.
Come on Dana we know the Democrats don't like guns. :-} ;-} :-} :-}
in reality
only about 60% of those eligible in this country register to vote
only 50-60% of those registered vote, even in a presidential election .
the margin was close 47% to 53% or some such it wasn't a gigantic landslide
as I remember
so in reality you have about 13-16 % of the population electing *YOUR*
president.
I have read the exact %ages but the above is very close :-(
Amos
|
895.42 | | TOMK::KRUPINSKI | C, where it started. | Wed Jul 03 1991 12:54 | 4 |
| An ABC poll indicated that 60% of Americans are glad that
a conservative was nominated.
Tom_K
|
895.43 | Thank Goodness he's finally gone | COMET::PAPA | NEVER let anyone stop you from singing | Wed Jul 03 1991 13:17 | 2 |
| It's great to see Marshall finally get ot of office. He should have
left years ago.
|
895.44 | | CBROWN::HENDERSON | Thinking a lot about less & less | Wed Jul 03 1991 13:32 | 16 |
| RE: <<< Note 895.43 by COMET::PAPA "NEVER let anyone stop you from singing" >>>
-< Thank Goodness he's finally gone >-
> It's great to see Marshall finally get ot of office. He should have
> left years ago.
Yep. Then we would have less rights and freedoms to be concerned with
today with no "conscience" on the court to remind the rest of them that
this is still America.
Jim
|
895.45 | | USWS::HOLT | Karakorum Pass or Bust! | Wed Jul 03 1991 13:54 | 6 |
|
re small dedicated groups
which groups would these be?
the polls in favor of Brady prove you gunnuts wrong...
|
895.46 | ***co-moderator request*** | LEZAH::BOBBITT | the colors and shapes of kindness | Wed Jul 03 1991 13:59 | 6 |
|
please refrain from using insulting language about various groups of
people in this file.
-Jody
|
895.47 | | JURAN::VALENZA | I don't have wings. | Wed Jul 03 1991 14:06 | 39 |
| I doubt if any of this will make any difference in the long run,
because I suspect Bush is unlikely to lose the 1992 election; thus we
can count on a reactionary Supreme Court for some time. And if, by
some chance, Bush's popularity should fall by next year, he can always
just find another foreign leader to depict as Hitler incarnate, and then
kill a few thousand of said Hitler's civilian constituency through a
sustained bombing campaign, describe the civilian carnage as
"collateral damage", proclaim victory, and lastly ride on the wave of
patriotic hysteria about another glorious military "victory" to the
January 1993 inauguration.
When it comes right down to it, I don't see many alternatives left for
people of conscience in response to the rightward trend of American
politics. Other than giving up on politics altogether, a more extreme
response would be to simply give up on the United States and find
someplace else to live. But I have too many ties to this country, and
I like watching NFL football on fall Sundays too much :-), to seriously
consider that option, so instead I am drifting more in the direction
that my brother has taken recently.
My brother, who I saw last April while I was on my way to New England,
illustrates one possible option. As a former antiwar activist during
his college days in the 1960s, the sight of contemporary college
students supporting the Gulf War was simply too offensive to bear; so
he now spends his energy and time watching baseball and other sporting
events. He does try to impart a progressive vision to his sons
(watching him flash a peace sign to his four-year-old, and asking him
what it means--"No blood for oil" being the correct response--indicates
that he hasn't *totally* withdrawn from politics, I suppose). But
ultimately it is his view that political activism is pointless, and the
emotional frustration of trying to deal with it simply isn't worth it.
I might not have shared my brother's cynicism, but the recent Supreme
Court decisions, and Thurgood Marshall's retirement, have lately
suggested that things are only going to get worse. The Supreme Court
is going to be dominated by young, right wing appointees, well into the
next century, and we might as well get used to it.
-- Mike
|
895.48 | the court isn't the problem | TYGON::WILDE | why am I not yet a dragon? | Wed Jul 03 1991 14:54 | 36 |
|
> I might not have shared my brother's cynicism, but the recent Supreme
> Court decisions, and Thurgood Marshall's retirement, have lately
> suggested that things are only going to get worse. The Supreme Court
> is going to be dominated by young, right wing appointees, well into the
> next century, and we might as well get used to it.
which would be okay if the Congressional and Senatorial representatives
in Washington DC actually reflected the needs and wants of their constituency.
Recent polls conducted by ABC News, NBC News and several other magazines
indicate that a clear majority of Americans support Women's rights, for
instance, and the question was asked to specifically address the right to
choose abortion. The majority still support a woman's right to choose; while
not liking the idea of abortion at all, they still feel it should be a woman's
right to choose. Yet, we do not have a federal law that declares a woman's
body is her own property, NOT THE PROPERY OF THE STATE. Without this law,
Roe vs Wade is leaning on the very precarious defense of rights of privacy.
With the conservative leaning of the Supreme Court now, it is inevitable that
this defense will not stand....rights of privacy are being eroded every day
by this court. Civil rights laws are also going to suffer because the federal
government will not enforce the laws that stand, nor pass new ones.
Get the other 87% of the eligible voters to vote and you would have the
laws in place.
The conservative definition of the Supreme Court's function is to interpret
current law only, AND TO AVOID MAKING NEW LAW which is determined to be the
business of the Congress and Senate. If we had the laws the majority of
the citizens of this country want and deserve, the court would be our
friend. Marshall was the last of the liberal judges - those who felt that
the constitution of this land promised certain inalienable rights, whether
they are clearly written into law or not, and their job was to interpret
court cases in the light of support of these "promised" or intended rights.
We will all miss him and his brethern before long. It takes bravery to
propose new laws - you chance making someone angry enough to vote against
you in the next election. All our rights are now at risk.
|
895.49 | | BLUMON::GUGEL | Adrenaline: my drug of choice | Wed Jul 03 1991 15:42 | 6 |
|
re .47:
Mike, I'm not sure what the answer is, but I'm sure it's
not giving up fighting.
|
895.50 | | JURAN::VALENZA | I don't have wings. | Wed Jul 03 1991 16:16 | 3 |
| Ellen, you are right, of course. I'm just feeling cynical today. :-)
-- Mike
|
895.51 | If we're still free we can argue details later | 44SPCL::HAMBURGER | FREEDOM and LIBERTY: passing dreams, now gone | Wed Jul 03 1991 16:26 | 5 |
| Mike, there are lot's of issues you and I disagree on but
1) Marshalls passing will hurt us all.
2) don't stop fighting for liberties.
Amos
|
895.52 | a few cents worth | BUSY::KATZ | Come out, come out, wherever you are | Mon Jul 08 1991 13:37 | 34 |
| A few cents worth at this stage...
1) Thomas has awesome iconography. In other words, Bush couldn't have
picked a person better suited as far as the story of his life goes.
Thomas stands as an example of someone raised in trying circumstances
at best who has been very sucessful. Bush's political manuevering was
brilliant on that count. Although this is certainly ironic from the "No
Quotas" PResident
2) To call Judge Thomas "the best man for the job" is an insult to the
American people, the judicial system and the Constitution. Thomas is
certainly a bright and capable person, but he is by no means the
"best." He has barely a year's experience as a federal jurist, he has
almost no background whatsoever in Constitutional law and he even has
very little experience as a practicing lawyer. The ABA has given him a
mediocre review. Most of his career has been spent in appointed posts.
With Souter at least you could say that he was undeniably a brilliant legal
scholar. If Thomas is confirmed to the Supreme Court, he will be the least
qualified person to make it in recent memory. In due time, he may be a
"qualified" choice for the court, but not at this time in his career.
3)If Thomas is confirmed it will effectively rewrite the way this
country thinks about civil rights. All issues of 'quotas' not
withstanding, the man is singularly hostile to the entire notion of
class action suites which have been an integral part of descrimination
cases in our legal system. His track record at the Equal Opprtunity
Office for the Reagan administration is proof of that. We can only
infer his attitude towards Roe but I don't have my hopes up.
All things considered, this nominee makes me scared...I hope ther
Senate has the courage to recognize his flaws apart from his
iconography and not confirm his nomination.
\D/
|
895.53 | | CARTUN::NOONAN | Patchouli? *Really*?!!! | Mon Jul 08 1991 13:41 | 4 |
| Actually, I kept getting just a titch upset at "he's the best *man* for
the job." Okay, but is he the best *person* for the job?
E Grace
|
895.54 | | BUSY::KATZ | Come out, come out, wherever you are | Mon Jul 08 1991 13:59 | 6 |
| re: .53
Yeah, me too...that's the direct quote from Mr. Bush however...and
that's why I put in in quotes too.
Lots of persons better qualified than this person.
|
895.55 | Not to worry | CARTUN::NOONAN | Patchouli? *Really*?!!! | Mon Jul 08 1991 14:05 | 4 |
| Daniel, I was not addressing that to *you*. I had meant to mention
that last week and forgot. Your post just reminded me of it.
E Grace
|
895.56 | okay! :-) | BUSY::KATZ | Come out, come out, wherever you are | Mon Jul 08 1991 14:08 | 1 |
|
|
895.57 | | RUBY::BOYAJIAN | One of the Happy Generations | Wed Jul 10 1991 03:25 | 5 |
| The trouble is, unfortunately, that the Senate is between a rock and
a hard place. If they fail to confirm Thomas, the Executive branch
will undoubtedly suggest that racial discrimination was the basis.
--- jerry
|
895.58 | love to see *that* one | BUSY::KATZ | Come out, come out, wherever you are | Wed Jul 10 1991 09:17 | 5 |
| re: -.1 now *that* would be cute! watching the veto-civil-rights
president accuse Ted Kennedy, Paul Simon and George Mitchell of rascim!
oh, what a hoot!
\D/
|
895.59 | There's a difference | ASIC::BARTOO | Network Partner Excited | Wed Jul 10 1991 09:29 | 4 |
|
He didn't veto civil rights. He vetoed quotas.
|
895.60 | says him | BUSY::KATZ | Come out, come out, wherever you are | Wed Jul 10 1991 09:32 | 1 |
|
|
895.61 | that is a very subjective statement - stated as fact | BLUMON::GUGEL | Adrenaline: my drug of choice | Wed Jul 10 1991 09:58 | 5 |
|
re .59:
Not everyone believes that - and you know it, Nick.
|
895.62 | moved AA notes to rathole | CUPMK::SULLIVAN | Singing for our lives | Wed Jul 10 1991 15:00 | 7 |
|
I've moved the discussion of AA and quotas to the rathole -- if
discussion of it continues there, we can start a new note about it.
Let's keep this string for a discussion of the Justice Marshall's
retirement and his likely replacement.
Justine - Womannotes Comod
|
895.63 | | CARTUN::NOONAN | Slow down. Live to enjoy ME. | Wed Jul 10 1991 15:51 | 5 |
| For a second I thought I had somehow missed a discussion about recovery
from alcoholism, Justine! (*8
E Grace
|
895.64 | I did a double and triple take on that one, too! | TLE::DBANG::carroll | Hakuna Matata | Wed Jul 10 1991 15:56 | 6 |
| For a second I thought I had somehow missed a discussion about recovery
from alcoholism, Justine! (*8
Great minds think alike???
D!
|
895.65 | Ditto | BOMBE::HEATHER | Lost inside the picture frame | Wed Jul 10 1991 16:18 | 3 |
| Yup....Me too!
-HA
|
895.66 | in his own words | FORTSC::WILDE | why am I not yet a dragon? | Sat Jul 27 1991 02:16 | 132 |
| This is a long note, but I feel this information is of interest to
enough of the noters that it is worth the work. Those who are not
interested should enter <NEXT UNSEEN>. This is an excerpt from
a commencement speech given to the Savannah State College, Georgia,
graduating class on June 9, 1985 by Clarence Thomas, George Bush's
nominee to the Supreme Court.
"I grew up here in Savannah. I was born not far from here. I am a
child of those marshes, a son of that soil. I am a descendent of the
slaves whose labors made the dark soil of the South productive.
I am the great-great-grandson of a freed slave, whose enslavement
continued after my birth. I am the product of hatred and love - the
hatred of the social and political structure which dominated the
segregated, hate-filled city of my youth, and the love of some
people - my mother, my grandparents, my neighbors and relatives - who
said by their actions, 'you can make it, but first you must endure'.
You can survive, but first you must endure.
You can live, but first you must endure.
You must endure the unfairness. You must endure the hatred.
You must endure the bigotry. You must endure the segregation.
You must endure the indignities.
I stand before you as one who had the same beginning as yourselves - as
one who has walked a little farther down the road, climbed a little
higher up the mountain.
I come back to you, who must now travel this road and climb this steep
mountain that lies ahead. I return as a messenger, a scout. What lies
ahead of you is even tougher than what is behind you. That mean,
callous world out there is still very much filled with discrimination.
It still holds out a different life for those who do not happen to be
the 'right' race or the 'right' sex. It is a world in which the
'haves' continue to reap more dividends than the 'have-nots'.
You will enter a world in which more than one-half of all black children
are born primarily to youthful mothers and out of wedlock. You will
enter a world in which the black teen-age unemployment rate, as always,
is more than double that of white teen-agers. Yours will be a world
in which computers and computer technology are a way of life.
There is a tendency among young, upwardly mobile, intelligent minorities
to forget. We forget the sweat of our forefathers. We forget the
blood of the marchers, the prayers and hope of our race. We forget who
brought us into this world. We overlook who put food in our mouths.
We forget committment to excellence. We procreate with pleasure and
retreat from the responsibilities of the babies we produce. We subdue,
we seduce, but we don't respect ourselves, our women, or our babies.
How do we expect a race that has been thrown into the gutter of
socio-economic indicators to rise above these humiliating circumstances
if we hide from responsibility for our own destiny?
Over the past 15 years I have watched as others have jumped quickly at
the opportunity to make excuses for black Americans. It is said blacks
cannot start businesses because of discrimination. But I remember
businesses on East Broad and West Broad that were run in spite of
bigotry. It is said that we can't learn because of bigotry. But I know
for a fact that tens of thousands of blacks were educated at
historically black colleges in spite of discrimination. We learned to
read in spite of segregated libraries. We built homes in spite of
segregated neighborhoods.
We have lost something. We look for role models in all the wrong
places. We refuse to look back in our not distant past for the lessons
and values we need to carry us into the uncertain future.
We ignore what has permitted blacks in this country to survive the
brutality of slavery. We overlook the reality of positive values and
run to the mirage of promises, visions, and dreams.
I dare not come to this city, which only two decades ago clung so tenaciously
to segregation, bigotry and Jim Crowism, to convince you of the fairness of
this society. My memory is too precise, my recollection too keen, to
venture down that path of self-delusion. I am not blind to our history
- nor do I turn a deaf ear to the pleas and cries of black Americans.
Often, I must struggle to contain my outrage at what has happened to
black Americans - what continues to happen - what we let happen, and
what we do to ourselves.
In 1964, when I entered the seminary, I was the only black in my class
and one of two in the school. A year later, I was the only one in the
school. Not a day passed that I was not pricked by prejudice. But, I
had an advantage over black students and kids today. I had never
heard any excuses made. Nor had I seen my role models take comfort in
excuses. The women who worked in those kitchens and waited on the bus
knew it was prejudice which caused their plight, but that didn't stop
them. My grandfather knew why his business wasn't more successful, but
that didn't stop him from getting up at 2 in the morning to carry ice,
wood, and fuel oil.
Sure, they knew it was bad. They knew all too well that they were held
back by prejudice. But, they weren't pinned down by it. They fought
discrimination. Equally important, they fought against the awful
effects of prejudice by doing all they could do in spite of this
obstacle. They could still send their children to school. They could
still respect and help each other. They could moderate their use of
alcohol. They could still be decent, law-abiding citizens.
I had the benefit of people who knew they had to walk a straighter line,
climb a taller mountain, and carry a heavier load.
You all have a much tougher road to travel. Not only do you have to
contend with the ever-present bigotry, you must do so with a recent
tradition that almost requires you to wallow in excuses. Unlike me, you
must not only overcome the repressiveness of racism, you must also
contend with the lure of excuses. You have twice the job I had.
Do not be lured by sirens and purveyors of misery who profit from
constantly regurgitating all that is wrong with black Americans and
blaming these problems on others. Do not succumb to this temptation of
always blaming others. Rather, become obsessed with looking for
solutions to our problems.
I have taken a long, hard look. I have seen two roads. On the first
road, a race of people is rushing mindlessly down a highway of sweet,
intoxicating destruction, with all it's bright lights and grand
promises, constructed by social scientists and politicians. To the
side, ther is a seldom used, overgrown road leading through the valley
of life with all it's pitfalls and obstacles. This is the road - the
old-fashioned road - traveled by those who endured slavery, who endured
Jim Crowism, who endured hatred. it is the road that might reward
hard work and discipline, that might reward intelligence, that might be
fair and provide equal opportunity. But there are no guarentees. You
must choose. The lure of the highway is seductive and enticing. But
the destruction is certain. To travel the road of hope and opportunity
is hard and dufficult, but there is a chance that you might somehow,
some way, with the help of God, make it."
copied without permission from the San Jose Mercury News, Friday July
26, 1991.
|