This is one of the best letters that Heather Cox Richardson has written since I started reading her posts. It puts the current Supreme Court’s radical decisions into historical perspective. This Court, hand-picked by Leonard Leo and the Federalist Society, is engaged in a shameless effort to move the clock back to the world as it existed before the New Deal. This Court threatens our democracy and our rights.
She writes:
Today the Supreme Court followed up on yesterday’s decision gutting affirmative action with three decisions that will continue to push the United States back to the era before the New Deal.
In 303 Creative LLC v. Elenis the court said that the First Amendment protects website designer Lorie Smith from having to use words she doesn’t believe in support of gay marriage. To get there, the court focused on the marriage website designer’s contention that while she is willing to work with LGBTQ customers, she doesn’t want to use her own words on a personalized website to celebrate gay marriages. Because of that unwillingness, she said, she wants to post on her website that she will not make websites for same-sex weddings. She says she is afraid that in doing so, she will run afoul of Colorado’s anti-discrimination laws, which prevent public businesses from discriminating against certain groups of people.
This whole scenario of being is prospective, by the way: her online business did not exist and no one had complained about it. Smith claims she wants to start the business because “God is calling her ‘to explain His true story about marriage.’” She alleges that in 2016, a gay man approached her to make a website for his upcoming wedding, but yesterday, Melissa Gira Grant of The New Republic reported that, while the man allegedly behind the email does exist, he is an established designer himself (so why would he hire someone who was not?), is not gay, and married his wife 15 years ago. He says he never wrote to Smith, and the stamp on court filings shows she received it the day after she filed the suit.
Despite this history, by a 6–3 vote, the court said that Smith was being hurt by the state law and thus had standing to sue. It decided that requiring the designer to use her own words to support gay marriage violated the First Amendment’s guarantee of free speech.
Taken together with yesterday’s decision ruling that universities cannot consider race as a category in student admissions, the Supreme Court has highlighted a central contradiction in its interpretation of government power: if the Fourteenth Amendment limits the federal government to making sure that there is no discrimination in the United States on the basis of race—the so-called “colorblind” Constitution—as the right-wing justices argued yesterday, it is up to the states to make sure that state laws don’t discriminate against minorities. But that requires either protecting voting rights or accepting minority rule.
This problem has been with us since before the Civil War, when lawmakers in the southern states defended their enslavement of their Black (and Indigenous) neighbors by arguing that true democracy was up to the voters and that those voters had chosen to support enslavement. After the Civil War, most lawmakers didn’t worry too much about states reimposing discriminatory laws because they included Black men as voters first in 1867 with the Military Reconstruction Act and then in 1870 with the Fifteenth Amendment to the Constitution, and they believed such political power would enable Black men to shape the laws under which they lived.
But in 1875 the Supreme Court ruled in Minor v. Happersett that it was legal to cut citizens out of the vote so long as the criteria were not about race. States excluded women, who brought the case, and southern states promptly excluded Black men through literacy clauses, poll taxes, and so on. Northern states mirrored southern laws with their own, designed to keep immigrants from exercising a voice in state governments. At the same time, southern states protected white men from the effects of these exclusionary laws with so-called grandfather clauses, which said a man could vote so long as his grandfather had been eligible.
It turned out that limiting the Fourteenth Amendment to questions of race and letting states choose their voters cemented the power of a minority. The abandonment of federal protection for voting enabled white southerners to abandon democracy and set up a one-party state that kept Black and Brown Americans as well as white women subservient to white men. As in all one-party states, there was little oversight of corruption and no guarantee that laws would be enforced, leaving minorities and women at the mercy of a legal system that often looked the other way when white criminals committed rape and murder.
Many Americans tut-tutted about lynching and the cordons around Black life, but industrialists insisted on keeping the federal government small because they wanted to make sure it could not regulate their businesses or tax them. They liked keeping power at the state level; state governments were far easier to dominate. Southerners understood that overlap: when a group of southern lawmakers in 1890 wrote a defense of the South’s refusal to let Black men vote, they “respectfully dedicated” the book to “the business men of the North.”
In the 1930s the Democrats under President Franklin Delano Roosevelt undermined this coalition by using the federal government to regulate business and provide a social safety net. In the 1940s and 1950s, as racial and gender atrocities began to highlight in popular media just how discriminatory state laws really were, the Supreme Court went further, recognizing that the Fourteenth Amendment’s declaration that states could not deprive any person of the equal protection of the laws meant that the federal government must protect the rights of minorities when states would not. Those rules created modern America.
This is what the radical right seeks to overturn. Yesterday the Supreme Court said that the Fourteenth Amendment could not address racial disparities, but today, like lawmakers in the 1870s, it signaled that it would not protect voting in the states either. It rejected a petition for a review of Mississippi’s strict provision for taking the vote away from felons. That law illustrates just how fully we’re reliving our history: it dates from the 1890 Mississippi constitution that cemented power in white hands. Black Mississippians are currently 2.7 times more likely than white Mississippians to lose the right to vote under the law.
The court went even further today than allowing states to choose their voters. It said that even if state voters do call for minority protections, as Colorado’s anti-discrimination laws do, states cannot protect minorities in the face of someone’s religious beliefs. In her dissent, Justice Sonia Sotomayor wrote that for “the first time in its history,” the court has granted “a business open to the public a constitutional right to refuse to serve members of a protected class.”
It is worth noting that segregation was defended as a deeply held religious belief.
Today, using a case concerning school loans, the Supreme Court also took aim at the power of the federal government to regulate business. In Biden v. Nebraska the court declared by a vote of 6 to 3 that President Biden’s loan forgiveness program, which offered to forgive up to $20,000 of federally held student debt, was unconstitutional. The right-wing majority of the court argued that Congress had not intended to give that much power to the executive branch, although the forgiveness plan was based on law that gave the secretary of education the power to “waive or modify any statutory or regulatory provision applicable to the student financial assistance programs…as the Secretary deems necessary in connection with a…national emergency…to ensure” that “recipients of student financial assistance…are not placed in a worse position financially in relation to that financial assistance because of [the national emergency]”.
The right-wing majority based its decision on the so-called major questions doctrine, invented to claw back regulatory power from the federal government. By saying that Congress cannot delegate significant decisions to federal agencies, which are in the executive branch, the court takes on itself the power to decide what a “significant” decision is. The court established this new doctrine in the West Virginia v. Environmental Protection Agencycase, stripping the EPA of its ability to regulate certain kinds of air pollution.
“Let’s not beat around the bush,” constitutional analyst Ian Millhiser wrote today in Vox, today’s decision in Biden v. Nebraska “is complete and utter nonsense. It rewrites a federal law which explicitly authorizes the loan forgiveness program, and it relies on a fake legal doctrine known as ‘major questions’ which has no basis in any law or any provision of the Constitution.”
Today’s Supreme Court, packed as it has been by right-wing money behind the Federalist Society and that society’s leader, Leonard Leo, is taking upon itself power over the federal government and the state governments to recreate the world that existed before the New Deal.
Education Secretary Miguel Cardona called out the lurch toward turning the government over to the wealthy, supported as it is by religious footsoldiers like Lorie Smith: “Today, the court substituted itself for Congress,” Cardona told reporters. “It’s outrageous to me that Republicans in Congress and state offices fought so hard against a program that would have helped millions of their own constituents. They had no problem handing trillion-dollar tax cuts to big corporations and the super wealthy.”
Cardona made his point personal: “And many had no problems accepting millions of dollars in forgiven pandemic loans, like Senator Markwayne Mullin from Oklahoma had more than $1.4 million in pandemic loans forgiven. He represents 489,000 eligible borrowers that were turned down today. Representative Brett Guthrie from Kentucky had more than $4.4 million forgiven. He represents more than 90,000 eligible borrowers who were turned down today. Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene from Georgia had more than $180,000 forgiven. She represents more than 91,800 eligible borrowers who were turned down today.”
In the majority opinion of Biden v. Nebraska, Chief Justice John Roberts lamented that those who dislike the court’s decisions have accused the court of “going beyond the proper role of the judiciary.” He defended the court’s decision and urged those who disagreed with it not to disparage the court because “such misperception would be harmful to this institution and our country.” But what is at stake is not simply these individual decisions, whether or not you agree with them; at stake is the way our democracy operates.
Norman Ornstein of the American Enterprise Institute didn’t offer much hope for Roberts’s plea. “It is not just the rulings the Roberts Court is making,” he tweeted. “They created out of [w]hole cloth a bogus, major questions doctrine. They made a mockery of standing. They rewrite laws to fit their radical ideological preferences. They have unilaterally blown up the legitimacy of the Court.”
In a shot across the bow of this radical court, in her dissent to Biden v. Nebraska, Justice Elena Kagan wrote that “the Court, by deciding this case, exercises authority it does not have. It violates the Constitution.”
—

These Supreme Court decisions violate both the Constitution and any sense of democratic fairness; equity, Justice!
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They do. They make a mockery of the term “justice.”
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So now the federal judiciary has become an extension of the Jesus-loving billionaire class. Pack the court. Enough already
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The Supreme Court is putting our democracy at risk”
Actually, what the Supremes are showing is that our system is not a democracy. Not even close.
“It’s Just us. We are the actors and the rest of you will be left to merely study what we do.” ~ The Supreme Maker…I mean Majority
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yup
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system is not a democracy…
Hear here, the state-actors,
of the foundational cornerstone,
of said critique (democracy),
equate support for their actions,
as support of democracy.
One without the other, won’t
fly…
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HAPPY BIRTHDAY, DIANE!!!
We are all very fortunate that you have gotten to live this long! It can be challenging to see it, with so many people like the SCOTUS majority, who fight only for their own beliefs, themselves (and their donors) and care little if anything about others, but the world WILL become a better place because of your tireless work towards improving the lives of those who are less fortunate, including children, teachers, people of color, women, the LGBTQ+ community, immigrants and anyone else who is disadvantaged.
Thank you so much for all that you have done and continue to do! I hope you know how much you are appreciated!!!
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YES, have a great day!
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Thank you so much!
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Happy birthday, wonderful human!
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Happiest of Birthdays, Diane!
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Hau’oli La Hanau, Diane. May you have many more. And big mahalo for all your good work.
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They’re bringing us back to….1931 or 1877 or….much, much further back.
Like, to basic human vices such as greed that have plagued civilization and good government for time immemorial. (I hesitate to use the word “sin”. The holy and high rollers in our midst have bastardized that idea, like the smell of a Vegas gutter on a Sunday morning.)
Chief Justice Roberts felt compelled this week to warn his fellow justices that their sharp disagreement with recent court decisions could ‘mislead’ the public and ‘harm’ the court…and the country.
https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2023/jun/30/chief-justice-john-roberts-warns-supreme-court-jus/
Meanwhile, rampant, grotesque ethical issues on the highest court continue -right under his nose.
I searched online for “Ginni Thomas” for half a second and her slimy, tentacle-like connections to power grubbing and money grabbing popped right off my screen. To take one example:
https://www.washingtonpost.com/investigations/2023/05/04/leonard-leo-clarence-ginni-thomas-conway/
Of course, this is no surprise whatsoever. Conservatives, who like to jabber on about American exceptionalism, have made the United States a laughingstock complete with our own violent mutiny on January 6. A mutiny that is actually being celebrated by some in the G.O.P.
Nope, no shining city here. The swamp has been drained….right on our citizens’ heads.
How low can we go? Time will tell.
The (real) God, whoever he or she or they might be…help us all.
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Roberts is a dishonest clown.
He is actually worse than the rest of the majority because he pretends to be something he is not.
He wants everyone to believe that he is a “moderate” with respect for precedent and concerned with the institution of the Court … while he joins the rest of the extremists in shredding the constitution and established precedence.
Roberts has done more than anyone else to destroy the institution of the Supreme Court. If had any respect for the latter — and for himself — he would resign and let Biden nominate a replacement who actually believes what Roberts claims to believe.
But he won’t because he is fundamentally dishonest.
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And Christian?
My anus.
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Roberts had better hope and pray that there is no Hell, cuz if there is, he already has a place reserved in its hottest corner.
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The Supreme Court is interpreting our laws through the lens of right wing Christianity and states rights, both of which are being used justify dismantling decades of social justice and individual liberties.
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For an analysis of the student loan decision by a knowledgeable legal expert – not an hysterical left-wing historian – read the link below. This writer favored the impeachment, removal, and permanent disqualification for federal office of Trump after the events of January 6, 2021.
https://www.nationalreview.com/2023/07/justice-barrett-helps-restore-constitutional-order/
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hysterical?
Deeply, profoundly sexist
and backward (I mean, we’re talking about 19-century backward)
and stupid.
But please, tell us what the National Review, one of whose co-founders was the neo-Nazi who mentored William Luther Pierce III, founder of the National Alliance and author of The Turner Diaries, has to say about this cogent, careful, learned legal analysis.
Hysteria. From the Greek hysterikós, which means “suffering in the womb.”
https://www.dictionary.com/e/hysterical/
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In 2020-21, the utterly vile and loathsome creature now determined by a court to have been a sexual predator Jabba the Trump oversaw several concurrent attempts to overthrow the legally elected government of the United States.
Sedition. Interference with official proceedings. Interference with elections. And conspiracy to do these things.
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No person shall be a Senator or Representative in Congress, or elector of President and Vice-President, or hold any office, civil or military, under the United States, or under any State, who, having previously taken an oath, as a member of Congress, or as an officer of the United States, or as a member of any State legislature, or as an executive or judicial officer of any State, to support the Constitution of the United States, shall have engaged in insurrection or rebellion against the same, or given aid or comfort to the enemies thereof.
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Bob “shall not” . . . . Music to my ears, but then, look what Trump has done to the emoluments clause.
The irony is that, when the Justices or anyone takes an oath to their country and Constitution, and then breaches that oath, besides breaking their own word, they also break their promise to God . . . no matter . . . today . . . It’s only sound and paper. CBK
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The emoluments clause, the Hatch Act–why do these even exist if they are always going to be flaunted?
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*Bob** Erosion not explosion. CBK
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Bob . . . erosion not explosion, then “in moderation.” CBK
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BS in moderation.
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Nothing in moderation
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Diane thanks . . . Sometimes I feel I am being targeted by that damn thing. Sorry for your trouble. CBK
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Diane my response to you went to moderation. Sigh . . . .
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The President, Vice President and all civil Officers of the United States, shall be removed from Office on Impeachment for, and Conviction of, Treason, Bribery, or other high Crimes and Misdemeanors.
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Ben Woodster writes: “This writer favored the impeachment, removal, and permanent disqualification for federal office of Trump after the events of January 6, 2021.”*
The point is not only “favored” by but stated in the U. S. Constitution in at least two places. CBK
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Revilo_P._Oliver
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Revilo. Can’t make that s#!t up!
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Luther_Pierce
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Wow, he actual “favored” Trump’s impeachment?
How anomalous among those who understand our laws snd Constiution.
He must be a real legal expert.
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High Bars
The highest legal bar:
“Supporting Trumps removal”
Like seatbelts in a car
Which garner one’s approval
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rofl
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hysterical?
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But the conservative impulse and the reactionary impulse do not, with some isolated and some ecclesiastical exceptions, express themselves in ideas but only in action or in irritable mental gestures which seek to resemble ideas.
–Lionel Trilling, The Liberal Imagination
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Could not find a “Ben Woodster” online. Is this a nom de troll?
BTW, the National Review should be renamed The Journal of Apologetics for the Indefensible. This is the principle that runs through the entire history of the magazine, from its foundation by hardcore racists to the present day.
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Given the construction “wood+ster,” that this is a nom de troll seems quite likely. If I were saying stuff this outlandish online, I would want to use a made-up name as well.
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More convincing than Woody Woodpecker
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The full name of Woody, from Toy Story, is Woody Pride.
Hmmm.
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I almost always get the feeling, reading something in the NR, that the author is trying desperately to concoct a plausible defense of something terrible. Contortions that would make Aquinas and Bill Buckley proud. They should list the writers at the beginning of the magazine under the heading ‘Contortionists.”
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And much more convincing than Ben Fraudster
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My 16-year-old students thought this kind of thing terribly funny, too–crossing out the name at the top of someone’s paper and replacing it with Ben Gerkin or Stacy Rect.
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Gherkin
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“Couldn’t find on-line”
Lorie Smith is proclaimed by media to be an evangelical Christian. I never could find where media identified Joseph Kennedy’s religious sect (the prayer on the football field- earlier SCOTUS decision).
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Bravo! Ms. Richardson! And Bravo! Diane for reposting this!!!
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I watched CNN last night and listened to several constitutional scholars discuss the cases. Ms. Richardson’s letter does so eloquently capture the essence and truth of what is being done by the court. In the website design case, there certainly was no “case and controversy” and the case was used solely for political purposes. The people of America have every right to voice their opinions on the credibility and character of the court and the individual justices. We should do so loudly and clearly.
Democracy matters and without it, we cease to be a free people. Again, the “core value” of the free speech clause is to discover truth out of multiple tongues. Many of them are honest and some are intellectually dishonest.
The time to stand for Democracy and intellectual honesty is now. The people of America need to speak loudly about the integrity of our Supreme Court and those who are elected to Congress and our Presidency.
Character matters and so does — integrity.
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Rikch Migliore writes: “The people of America need to speak loudly about the integrity of our Supreme Court and those who are elected to Congress and our Presidency. Character matters and so does — integrity.”
In another note here, I quoted the no religious test clause of the U.S. Constitution . . . because some here suggest that we should have been able to question the religious foundations of recent candidates for the Court, and that to avoid such questions is a clearly “hands-off” view of the presence of “Catholic” influence and the NOT ME! of what would look like anti-Catholic bias, but I presume of other kinds of associations as well.
The problem with that idea, however, besides being unconstitutional in the selection of judges, is that it resonates so well with the same views of those (same people) who want to keep religious or other associations or identities (e.g., gay, black, etc.) out of public establishments and services.
Anyone: If I am missing a difference above, and NOT exposing a tacit and reactionary suggestion that would only add to our demise as a democracy, please let me know.
But when did we ever expect SCOTUS nominees to blatantly lie or to conveniently forget about the solemnity of their oaths of office? What do we do when integrity can no longer be depended on, even at these levels of government? CBK
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Rikch Migliore On integrity . . . SCOTUS “rulings up for sale.”
“SHARON ZHANG, TRUTHOUT
“‘This SCOTUS’s corruption undercuts its own legitimacy by putting its rulings up for sale,’ wrote Ocasio-Cortez.”
https://na01.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Ftruthout.us14.list-manage.com%2Ftrack%2Fclick%3Fu%3D913e3fb0c16829e59f7694d2a%26id%3Daf68b262e9%26e%3D50a395fa52&data=05%7C01%7C%7Cf057a69ba98f40b45b9a08db7a6e0a43%7C84df9e7fe9f640afb435aaaaaaaaaaaa%7C1%7C0%7C638238385268241566%7CUnknown%7CTWFpbGZsb3d8eyJWIjoiMC4wLjAwMDAiLCJQIjoiV2luMzIiLCJBTiI6Ik1haWwiLCJXVCI6Mn0%3D%7C3000%7C%7C%7C&sdata=CW%2FZZ6yD54EKLa0qLpXoAWlYaeeA579YfDyOWNs%2Fwtk%3D&reserved=0
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Interesting. Think about this. If the debt is cancelled banks make less money off of interest. True? So if one owns stock in banks or has a financial interest, then they, certainly would not want the debt cancellation.
My experience with corrupt banks like Wells Fargo is that all they do is think up schemes to exact fees and interest out of their customers. Howe much did the banks profit from all of the Pandemic relief loans?
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“Chief Justice John Roberts lamented that those who dislike the court’s decisions have accused the court of “going beyond the proper role of the judiciary.” He defended the court’s decision and urged those who disagreed with it not to disparage the court because “such misperception would be harmful to this institution and our country.” “
This is exactly what the distant right of American politics has been doing since Earl Warren. Roberts just does not want to be called out for his own contradictions. The right has now created a court that ignores precedent, legislates specifics, and creates law way more than the moderates like Warren ever even considered.
When you consider that congress explicitly gave the president power to do what he did to forgive student loans, that particular decision should make the scales fall from the eyes of any person who does not believe that this court believes in judicial activism, and that they will practice it for the good of a tiny minority at the expense of individual freedoms.
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Roy Turrentine Well said. Roberts apparently thinks he has nothing to do with the disparagement he warns us about . . . I hereby crown John Roberts King of Na-Na Land. CBK
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PS I, too, thank Diane for her hard work with this website and this open forum as well as her study and works on the history of education. Thanks Diane.
We need more education in Democracy and more Democracy in Education.
I was enticed to join in our conversations because of the Science of Reading post. This morning, I read in my Philadelphia Inquirer about the Moms for Liberty convention in my beloved Philadelphia, the birthplace of our democracy. The Florida Secretary of Education, Manny Diaz, Jr., railed about the state of education in America, the need to ban books, and the failure of our public schools to teach the “science of reading ”
Moms for Liberty are not about liberty at all, they are about the suppression of liberty, suppression of the freedom of thought and the vibrant discussion of matters of public importance in our public schools.
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Sad how people and groups co-opt names and twist them into their opposites. Like people who want to privatize education call themselves “reformers,”
And Moms for Liberty don’t believe anyone should have liberty but them. They should be called Moms for Repression or Moms for Fascism.
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Yes it is sad. Trump is there, too as well as DeSantis and Haley. It is all about lies, misinformation and more lies. The First Amendment is all about “discovering truth out of.multiple tongues.” This case it not really about freedom of speech. It is about the suppression of the rights of minority populations to be treated equally without discrimination.
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Diane What do “we” do for the future?
IF WE GET A CHANCE educators and those who have legislative power need to be sure every person gets a free and good education in civics, history, the arts and literature. . . so that the development and transfer of moral and political power can be made well for most if not all. IF we get a chance.
But hay, that’s been known as “the core curriculum” for years in many public K-12 schools and in colleges and universities for decades. Hmmmmm… CBK
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Secretary Cardona and President Biden should continue to call out individual congressmen that agree with the decision, on the favors that were granted to them through COVID relief. Their names should be listed with what they took due to “hardship”, and broadcast for all to see.
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Or the government should investigate the use of COVID FUNDS and send them a bill for misappropriation. Then give those funds to those with predatory student loans.
Why can’t these buffoons EVER be brought to justice for their crimes?
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https://www.newyorker.com/news/our-columnists/why-the-champions-of-affirmative-action-had-to-leave-asian-americans-behind
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“Asian Americans, the group whom the suit was supposedly about, have been oddly absent from the conversations that have followed the ruling. The repetitiveness of the affirmative-action debate has come about, in large part, because both the courts and the media have mostly ignored the Asian American plaintiffs and chosen, instead, to relitigate the same arguments about merit, white supremacy, and privilege. During the five years I spent covering this case, the commentators defending affirmative action almost never disproved the central claim that discrimination was taking place against Asian Americans, even as they dismissed the plaintiffs as pawns who had been duped by a conservative legal activist. They almost always redirected the conversation to something else—often legacy admissions.
The deflections were understandable. The evidence the plaintiffs had amassed that Harvard, in particular, discriminated against Asian applicants through a bizarre and unacceptable “personal rating” system is overwhelming. These facts, and, more important, the conservative composition of the Supreme Court, placed the defenders of affirmative action in a bit of a discursive and legal corner. If you acknowledged that Harvard was, in fact, engaging in behavior that by any reasonable standard would be considered discriminatory and rooted in harmful stereotypes, it was nearly impossible to then turn around and say that the university should have the right to conduct its admissions in whatever manner it pleased. Why would anyone trust Harvard to do anything?
An air of inevitability also hung over the Court’s decision, which mostly made the specific claims of the plaintiffs irrelevant. The end of affirmative action really started in 1978, with Justice Lewis F. Powell, Jr.,’s opinion in Regents of the University of California v. Bakke—the first Supreme Court case on the matter—which tried to split the difference between a divided Court by arguing that the race of a candidate could be considered, but not as part of a reparative, quota-based program that tried to reduce the harms of slavery and injustice. Rather, race could only be considered by an admissions office that wanted, for the benefit of itself and its students, to produce a “diverse” student body.
Affirmative action, in my view, was doomed from that moment forward because it had been stripped of its moral force. It is one thing to argue that slavery, lynchings, Jim Crow laws, mass incarceration, and centuries of theft demand an educational system that factors in the effects of those atrocities. If that principle were to express itself in, say, a Black student who was descended from slaves and had grown up in poverty in an American inner city receiving a bump on his application when compared with a rich private-school kid from the suburbs, so be it. But that is not, in fact, how affirmative action usually plays out at élite schools. Most reporting on the subject—including my own, as well as a story in the Harvard Crimson—shows that descendants of slaves are relatively underrepresented among Black students at Harvard, compared with students from upwardly mobile Black immigrant families. It is easy and perhaps virtuous to defend the reparative version of affirmative action; it is harder to defend the system as it has actually been used.“
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This excerpt is nonsensical.
The example of Asian Americans being discriminated against using “personal ratings” has NOTHING to do with affirmative action! The fact that elite college admissions personnel are giving Asian applicants low ratings so rich white applicants can be admitted over them is not going to change because of the end of affirmative action.
Those low ratings given to Asian students were not to admit more students via affirmative action. They were used to admit more white private school students.
In fact, those low ratings were an example of implicit bias and had absolutely nothing to do with the admissions committee saying “Is this student Asian? Then they are getting low personal ratings.” By giving Asian students lower personal rating scores, the college could admit affluent white students with worse academic records.
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ALL: As an aside, when we all start wondering “who’s reading these notes?” in view of the possibility of being thrown out of a high-rise window, then we will better understand the freedoms we presently have, and what it might be like to live under a dictator, . . . er, . . . Trump, or that idiot from Florida (Did I write that?). CBK
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Indeed
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The right in America seems quite ready to start doing that.
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Bob Yes, I know. And YOU and GregB cannot wash that target off your backs. My best to you both, however. Marjorie . . . er . . . CBK
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Greg made me say all those things.
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Bob Right. Like Hillary throws Russian generals off high rise buildings. CBK
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Yes, so Josh said, think.
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Haaaaa!
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Dying for principles is a legacy the grandfather I never met left me.
Had two troubling encounters today that make me worry even more, if that were even possible. Dem canvassers knocked on my door today to make sure we voted against Ohio’s republican party attempt to make their rule permanent in perpetuity (I live on the line and one went one house over). Both very active who consider themselves educated. When I mentioned to the first, as our conversation drifted, that ALEC and Leonard Leo are now the most powerful voices in America, she had no clue what or who I was talking about. It didn’t take her long to connect, but still, it bothered me. If rank and file Democrats who will volunteer their time don’t know this, how can we ever win?
The other falls into the category of there’s never a stupid question, don’t be afraid to ask, because if you do, it likely means there are a lot of people too embarrassed to ask. We were discussing the Idiot’s treason and I realized he didn’t understand the mechanics of what happened on that call. So for those of you for whom this is elementary, please forgive me. The reason the Idiot showed the Iran war plans to them was because he was trying to make the point that he was against the war and Milley was trying to drive him toward one and he wanted to prove it. It’s not that easy. The reason that war plan was highly classified was because there are literally hundreds, if not thousands of such fictitious scenarios that are classified as well. The Pentagon has weekly gaming sessions asking intelligence officials to put together detailed scenarios for “what if” situations — just speculating, but what if Britain and Europe were hit with nuclear bombs, if Somalia had a scenario where they would invade a neighboring nation, if this, that, or the other. They are never used, but if such a scenario develops, like a football coach, decision makers will have a plan to consider that has been thought through by many. So it gets them up to speed, not as a directive, but an important guide. For the Idiot to have portrayed them as policy plans, that we were going to war with Iran, means he pulled one of these scenarios — not concrete plans backed by policy — and tried to portray it as truth, the he was peacemaker and the Pentago “factions” (in reality, study groups gaming it) were the war hawks. This was treason and we will never know the full extent of what damage he has done and continues to do against this nation.
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Yup. Exactly. I suspect that The Idiot doesn’t even grok the gaming, or scenario spinning, aspect of this routine behavior.
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Bob It’s a “pattern” which I believe has a refined legal meaning. I hope the jury sees it, should they ever convene one. Or should I say “juries.” CBK
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No, Milley already knew what he was dealing with in Trump.
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GregB Don’t need to apologize for explaining that scene with Trump and the battle plans. Don’t forget the Federalist Society–it’s big group. Also, I have wondered more than once what Milley thought when he first heard that tape. I’ll bet his eyes popped out at the same time his head exploded. CBK
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“troubling info found today”
The USCCB submitted an amicus brief in the Lorie Smith case. They posted an explanation at their site. The pretense continues that the issues are not right wing religious. Cardinal Dolan was quoted, “This case was never about discrimination. It was about moral judgement.”
The other brief signers were the Colorado Catholic Conference, a Billy Graham organization and a Franklin Graham organization and then, the small sects – 7th Day Adventists and Assemblies of God.
I don’t see how there can be wins for liberals as long as the enemy is too feared to be named.
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lol
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Two additional organizations that submitted briefs for Lorie Smith, the Koch’s Cato and AFP.
If New Republic is correct in its investigative reporting, there’s been substantial fraud in the presentation of info to Robert’s court in the 303 Creative case.
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This is slightly off topic BUT, our Democracy is at risk also because of poverty being the fourth leading cause of death. Indiana has a minimum wage of $7.25 an hour. Everyday, we can read about major corporations that are either firing people or are going bankrupt and closing its doors. Many workers hours are being cut and they don’t get paid enough to survive. People don’t have money to spend and many are losing their homes and starving. Food banks don’t have enough food to give out.
Money is going to the wealthy who don’t need more money. The Trump tax scam of 2017 gives tax breaks to the wealthy and corporations. Congress doesn’t change these laws because most politicians are wealthy and don’t want to pay more in taxes.
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Poverty 4th Leading Cause of Death in U.S. as Calls Grow for Third Reconstruction: Bishop Barber
A recent study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association found poverty is now the fourth leading cause of death in the United States. Child poverty is on the rise after the expanded child tax credit was allowed to expire, and this summer hundreds of thousands of Americans are being kicked off Medicaid.
Democracy Now! interviewed Bishop William Barber, co-chair of the Poor People’s Campaign, who recently led a mock funeral in D.C. and is supporting a new resolution introduced by Democratic Congressmembers Pramila Jayapal and Barbara Lee to end poverty in the United States by addressing systemic racism, economic and public health inequity, militarism and other issues.
“Why do we hear so much about crime rates and opioids and gun violence in America, when poverty kills more people than all of those things? Why is there no surgeon general’s warning on low-wage jobs as a form of death?” Barber asked.
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Or, that 3 out of 5 gun deaths are suicides?
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Curious what Josh Hawley thinks about men killing themselves with guns at a rate about 7 times greater than women (2019). Oh, that’s right, the deaths are not about availability of guns. The male deaths are women’s fault as all bad things are- Adam eating the forbidden apple because Eve tempted him, etc.
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Here are the thoughts coming from Elizabeth Warren concerning the extremists that now have taken over the Supreme Court.
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I could go on, and on, and on about all the reasons why the extremist conservative majority on the Supreme Court made a deeply wrong decision on student debt cancelation.
Or I could just quote Justice Elena Kagan’s dissent:
“In every respect, the Court today exceeds its proper, limited role in our Nation’s governance.”
“The result here is that the Court substitutes itself for Congress and the Executive Branch in making national policy about student-loan forgiveness.”
“Congress authorized the forgiveness plan (among many other actions); the Secretary put it in place; and the President would have been accountable for its success or failure.”
“The HEROES Act’s text settles the legality of the Secretary’s loan forgiveness plan. The statute provides the Secretary with broad authority to give emergency relief to student-loan borrowers…What the Secretary did fits comfortably within that delegation. But the Court forbids him to proceed.”
It’s clear: President Biden was well, well, well within his legal authority.
The fact is, the extremists on the Supreme Court had to go out of their way to block student debt cancelation. And they only were able to because a bunch of Republican politicians sued to stop hard-working Americans from getting relief.
But there is still a path forward. On Friday afternoon, President Biden announced a new path to provide student debt relief through the Higher Education Act. He is right to fight back on behalf of working people and the law is on his side.
I’m staying in the fight to cancel student debt and fix our broken higher education system. No one should have to get crushed by debt for continuing their education after high school.
In town hall after town hall, in selfie line after selfie line, in phone call after phone call, I’ve heard the stories of people who fought and scraped their way through their educations — because that’s what they were told to do their whole lives, to get a ticket to the middle class — only to get weighed down by debt. They whispered in my ear about how they just didn’t see a way they’d ever be able to pay it off. They need relief. And I’m going to keep working to ensure people get that relief.
Stay tuned for more updates. And please take care of yourself.
Thanks for being a part of this,
Elizabeth
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I love Elizabeth Warren and would vote for her for president!
Yes, our Democracy is at risk.
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Mainstream media running defense for the Catholic church-
The Guardian posted (July 3) an article about Barrett and Trinity Schools (closely linked to People of Praise). Not, in the entire article which includes references to Notre Dame, is Catholic identified.
Premier Christian News reported 8-11-2021, the majority of members of People of Praise are “considered Catholic.”
If Richardson wants to explore “democracy at risk,” the right ring Catholic Church should be a major area of focus.
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