Lucien V. Truscott IV explains Justice Clarence Thomas’ devotion to gun owners.
He writes:
Well, I guess somebody has to stand up for the rights of spousal killers, wife beaters, child abusers, and the Second Amendment, and I’ll just bet you can guess who it is. Today, Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas stepped up and took one for the team, voting alone against the 8-1 decision in United States v. Rahimi that bars people from possessing firearms while they are under domestic violence restraining orders. Not stripping them of the right to own guns, mind you, but only suspending that right under the Second Amendment until such an asshole can get the restraining order straightened out so he can get his guns back.
Thomas must be spending so much time in the history stacks in the Fairfax County library, where he lives in Virginia, that they’re probably considering buying a cot for him to take naps on during his long hours of study of our laws in the 1700’s and 1800’s, not to mention old English law and a few ancient Greek statutes he quoted in his Bruen gun rights decision. Perusing the laws that were in existence at the time of our nation’s founding, Thomas wrote in his dissent in today’s case that “Not a single historical regulation justifies the statute at issue.” The “statute at issue” suspends the right of those under domestic violence restraining orders from possessing guns.
Chief Justice John Roberts appears to be the one who convinced four of the other six gun nuts on the court, all of whom voted to allow bump stock equipped machine guns earlier in the week, to join him in at least temporarily coming to their senses. Roberts was able to somehow resurrect enough common sense on the court that he got enough votes to rule, as the author of the decision, that “an individual found by a court to pose a credible threat to the physical safety of another may be temporarily disarmed consistent with the Second Amendment.” I mean, whoop-de-fucking-doo, but I guess we are in the position of taking them when we can get them, right?
The plaintiff in the case, one Zacky Rahimi, is a convicted drug dealer who had beaten his girlfriend to the ground in a parking lot and was dragging her back to his car when a bystander intervened. Rahimi fired a shot at the bystander, and the girlfriend took that opportunity to escape. Rahimi called her later and threatened violence – specifically, he said he would “shoot” her – if she told anyone about the incident. The girlfriend asked a Texas court to issue a restraining order and amazingly they agreed, finding that Rahimi had committed “family violence” and suspended his right to possess guns while the restraining order was in effect.
Rahimi managed to hang onto enough firearms that he was involved in five shootings in the following months, according to the Supreme Court brief filed by the Biden Department of Justice. Rahimi was charged with illegal possession of a firearm, was convicted in federal court and sentenced to six years in prison. But Rahimi continued to argue that his rights under the Second Amendment had been violated. The Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled against Rahimi at his first hearing, but after Justice Thomas wrote the decision in Bruen, ruling that laws restricting firearms had to be rooted in the “history and tradition” of this country, the Fifth Circuit reheard the case and, incredibly, ruled for Rahimi. Citing the Bruen case a Trump appointee on the court wrote that while the federal law banning people under restraining orders from possessing firearms was “meant to protect vulnerable people in our society…our ancestors would never have accepted” laws against domestic violence.
The decision by the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals was unanimous, so Rahimi’s right to keep and bear arms under the Second Amendment was restored.
The case was appealed by the DOJ to the Supreme Court, where many legal experts feared it would hit the “history and tradition” brick wall of Thomas’ Bruen decision. Chief Justice Roberts, however, appeared to back the court away from that decision a bit today. “Some courts have misunderstood the methodology of our recent Second Amendment cases. These precedents were not meant to suggest a law trapped in amber,” Roberts wrote. “The Second Amendment permits more than just those regulations identical to ones that could be found in 1791.” Roberts cautioned that if courts hearing gun cases were to consider only laws in existence at the founding of the country, they would find laws dealing with “muskets and sabers.” Instead, Roberts urged courts that will interpret his decision in the future to consider whether a gun regulation at issue is “relatively similar” to regulations that were in effect closer to the nation’s founding. “For example,” Roberts wrote, “if laws at the founding regulated firearm use to address particular problems, that will be a strong indicator that contemporary laws imposing similar restrictions for similar reasons fall within a permissible category of regulations.”
In the amazingly dull and nearly impenetrable language of the Supreme Court, that comes as close as we will ever get to a relaxation of the Thomas decision in Bruen, which courts like the Fifth Circuit have interpreted as turning back the clock to the way guns were regulated in 1791, which is to say not at all.
That may be why Thomas was the lone dissenter in the decision today, because it took some of the edges off his celebration of guns-for-everybody in the Bruen decision. Or maybe Thomas, in his history-stacks-diving on domestic violence laws discovered, as he has before, a favorite old English construction of what husbands and domestic partners are permitted to do to the women in their lives: the “Rule of Thumb.”
It’s not like this subject hasn’t been dealt with before. In January of 1982, the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights issued a report that was entitled “Under the Rule of Thumb: Battered Women and the Administration of Justice.” The Commission found that when it came to domestic violence, “American law is built on the British Common Law that condoned wife beating and even prescribed the weapon to be used. This ‘rule of thumb’ stipulated that a man could only beat his wife with ‘a rod not thicker than his thumb.’”
The Commission noted that William Blackstone, who “greatly influenced the making of law in the American colonies,” commented thusly on the rule of thumb: “For as the husband is to answer for her misbehavior, the law thought it reasonable to entrust him with this power of chastisement, in the same moderation that a man is allow to correct his apprentices or children.”
American courts, bless their bleeding hearts, can be said to have taken up the rod passed to them by the Brits. Have a look at this from an 1864 court in a case of a man who choked his wife: “The law permits him to use towards his wife such a degree of force, as is necessary to control an unruly temper, and make her behave herself; and unless some permanent injury be inflicted, or there be an excess of violence, or such a degree of cruelty as shows that it is inflicted to gratify his own bad passions, the law will not invade the domestic forum, or go behind the curtain. It prefers to leave the parties to themselves.” The Civil Rights Commission quoted a Mississippi Supreme Court case from 1824: “Let the husband be permitted to exercise the right of moderate chastisement, in cases of great emergency, and use salutary restraints in every case of misbehaviour, without being subjected to vexatious prosecutions, resulting in the mutual discredit and shame of all parties concerned.”
After an Alabama court had rescinded the right of a man to beat his wife in 1871, a North Carolina court came along and provided some relief to all those poor men who had to deal with those damn recalcitrant women: “If no permanent injury has been inflicted, nor malice, cruelty nor dangerous violence shown by the husband, it is better to draw the curtain, shut out the public gaze, and leave the parties to forget and forgive.”
Thomas, in his dissent that would allow abusive husbands and male partners under court restraining orders to own guns, would appear to smile upon Ye Ole Rule of Thumb as well. It’s history and tradition, you understand — Thomas’ favorite harkening back to the good old days when a man was allowed to own not only a gun, but a stick big enough to beat his wife with.

Rename the court. The Extreme Court and Gun Club.
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So, that’s one way to make a name for oneself in the history books–as the “Just Ass” who supported domestic abuse.
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That will depend on who is allowed to write the history. If conservatives have their way, Thomas will go down in history as the staunch defender of personal freedom, protected in his quest by a benevolent god, his shield and defender against the forces of evil.
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I just threw up a bit in my mouth reading that.
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I didn’t know you wuz a horse
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No, but I have been called a horse’s ass by the less charitable among us.
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If the law profession is asked, he will be called a rank embarrassment.
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There is a reason why he has almost never commented during oral arguments.
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No man is an island?
Yeah. Right.
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Why has Thomas failed, as yet, to work into one of his decisions harrowing progressives with currycombs?
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reading Heather Cox Richardson’s Letter from last night would be a good addition to the points made here
in my mind, chaos is what they want and chaos is what they are creating. As well furthering the Climate Crisis we are in is an added benefit
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I understand where the ex-president, our woke-obsessed Missouri AG, our outrageous Sen. Hawley are coming from. I hate it but see it. WHERE is Clarence Thomas coming from?
Former (well respected) Senator John Danforth has said his support for Josh Hawley was “the worst mistake” of his life. His support for Clarence Thomas has to be a close second. (Danforth has since railed on the trump and the neo-GOP – but sorry Mr. Danforth, way too little, way too late)
Mr. Thomas is dismissive of century old norms and ignores basic norms of accepting (millions in) gifts and perks. He is totally out of touch with people and socially appropriate behaviors.
He has zero respect for victims.
Justices should not have ideologies or even be political. Some do and are. Mr. Thomas is out there somewhere else.
There is no justification or rationalization for the actions and stunts of trump (the debate is reality tv (“homefield advantage”) and we should all be worried) and actions and outrageous statements of the others, but I can explain them.
Who is this guy?
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I do not understand where Trump or Hawley are coming from, unless you suggest something way south of hell.
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“Justices should not have ideologies or even be political.”
That is an impossible, and undesirable, ask.
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So I guess by Thomas’s reasoning he would be 3/5 of a justice?
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Great point! Thomas defends the original wording. If he were sincere, he would not be allowed to vote and his marriage would be dissolved.
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Obviously, Clarence Thomas is NOT sincere about “originalism” — which is itself a phony wholly-made up legal ploy that conservatives use to STOP things they don’t like and then discard whenever it’s convenient, which is a lot.
Thomas is a liar, a poser. A charlatan, a grifter. And he’s married to a deeply-troubled, psychologically-damaged seditionist.
“She realized she had fallen in with a group she considered ‘a cult’ and sought to be ‘deprogrammed’ from it, she said in decades-old remarks obtained by NBC News.”
“It’s difficult to reconcile Thomas then and now, four people who worked with her at the height of her anti-cult activism through the late 1980s said in interviews. After she spent years trying to expose cults, these people found Thomas’ efforts to promote outlandish plans to overturn the 2020 results, particularly the text messages and emails in which she referenced false election conspiracies that originated in QAnon circles on the internet, surprising. Democrats and Republicans alike have said QAnon supporters exhibit cult-like behavior.”
https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/politics-news/untold-story-ginni-thomass-anti-cult-activism-was-deprogrammed-rcna22131
Jane Mayer wrote an excellent piece in the New Yorker about Ginni Thomas two years ago, titled ‘Is Ginni Thomas a Threat to the Supreme Court.’
The short answer is YES.
“Many Americans first became aware of Ginni Thomas’s activism on January 6, 2021. That morning, before the Stop the Steal rally in Washington, D.C., turned into an assault on the Capitol resulting in the deaths of at least five people, she cheered on the supporters of President Donald Trump who had gathered to overturn Biden’s election. In a Facebook post that went viral, she linked to a news item about the protest, writing, “love maga people!!!!” Shortly afterward, she posted about Ronald Reagan’s famous “A Time for Choosing” speech. Her next status update said, “god bless each of you standing up or praying.” Two days after the insurrection, she added a disclaimer to her feed, noting that she’d written the posts ‘before violence in US Capitol.’ (The posts are no longer public.)”
“Later that January, the Washington Post revealed that she had also been agitating about Trump’s loss on a private Listserv, Thomas Clerk World, which includes former law clerks of Justice Thomas’s. The online discussion had been contentious. John Eastman, a former Thomas clerk and a key instigator of the lie that Trump actually won in 2020, was on the same side as Ginni Thomas, and he drew rebukes. According to the Post, Thomas eventually apologized to the group for causing internal rancor. Artemus Ward, a political scientist at Northern Illinois University and a co-author of “Sorcerers’ Apprentices,” a history of Supreme Court clerks, believes that the incident confirmed her outsized role. ‘Virginia Thomas has direct access to Thomas’s clerks,’ Ward said. Clarence Thomas is now the Court’s senior member, having served for thirty years, and Ward estimates that there are ‘something like a hundred and twenty people on that Listserv.’ In Ward’s view, they comprise ‘an élite right-wing commando movement.’ Justice Thomas, he says, doesn’t post on the Listserv, but his wife ‘is advocating for things directly.’ Ward added, “’t’s unprecedented. I have never seen a Justice’s wife as involved.”
“Clarence and Ginni Thomas declined to be interviewed for this article. “
“Ginni Lamp[‘s] father ran a firm that developed housing in and around Omaha, and her parents were Party activists who had formed the backbone of Barry Goldwater’s campaign in Nebraska. The writer Kurt Andersen, who grew up across the street from the family, recalls, ‘Her parents were the roots of the modern, crazy Republican Party. My parents were Goldwater Republicans, but even they thought the Lamp family was nuts.’ Ginni graduated from Creighton University, in Omaha, and then attended law school there. Her parents helped get her a job with a local Republican candidate for Congress, and when he won she followed him to Washington. But, after reportedly flunking the bar exam, she fell in with a cultish self-help group, Lifespring, whose members were encouraged to strip naked and mock one another’s body fat. She eventually broke away, and began working for the Chamber of Commerce, opposing ‘comparable worth’ pay for women…”
“A current member of the Conservative Action Project told me that Ginni Thomas is part of the group not because of her qualifications but ‘because she’s married to Clarence.’ The member asked to have his name withheld because, he said, Ginni is ‘volatile’ and becomes ‘edgy’ when challenged. He added, “The best word to describe her is ‘tribal.’ You’re either part of her group or you’re the enemy.’ ”
There’s much, much more here:
https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2022/01/31/is-ginni-thomas-a-threat-to-the-supreme-court
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An acquaintance is worried about a friend of hers who has a restraining order on a husband that she divorced due to violence and threats. The restraining order says he has to stay a certain distance from the house where she lives. So he rented a place a few feet over that distance that I think is 1,000 feet.
The former wife is scared.
My acquaintance, who served in the US military as an EOD tech, is thinking of going north to stay with her friend for awhile. If she goes to help protect her friend, I think her friend’s former husband should be seriously worried.
“Explosive Ordnance Disposal (EOD) technicians in the Air Force work in dangerous situations to locate, identify, disarm, dispose of, and recover dangerous weapons. Their work can include conventional military ordnance, improvised explosive devices, chemical, biological, and nuclear weapons, and terrorist homemade items. EOD technicians use special tools and vehicles to protect people, property, and the environment. They may also provide protective support to the U.S. Secret Service and Department of State”
I wonder if that includes disposing of dangerous people too.
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How About Violent Right-Wing Billionaires Abusers & Saboteurs Of USA Public Education?
Bernie Sanders had released a report 6/25 detailing how right-wing billionaires are bankrolling coordinated efforts to privatize U.S. public education by promoting voucher programs that siphon critical funding away from already-underresourced public schools.
The report notes that last year, the American Federation for Children (AFC)—an organization funded by former Trump Education Secretary Betsy DeVos—”ousted state lawmakers in Iowa and Arkansas who resisted proposals to subsidize private education in states and passed expansive private school vouchers.” The analysis also names billionaires Jess Yass of Susquehanna International Group, Richard Uihlein of Uline, and Bernard Marcus of Home Depot, all of whom have recently donated to the School Freedom Fund—a PAC that supports voucher programs and shuttering the U.S. Education Department.
https://www.commondreams.org/news/billionaires-public-education
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DeVos and Yass also funded the ousting of anti-voucher legislators in Texas.
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I just started reading The Originalism Trap, by Madiba K. Dennie. I am only a few pages into it, but it promises to be a good ride.
Dennie raises arguments that should disappoint, if not terrify, Justice Thomas and the other wingnuts on the Court. (I’m looking at you, Alito.) The Supreme Court has taken this “-ism” to absurd lengths, handing down decisions that can pose real, physical dangers to all citizens, especially women.
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Jsrtheta,
Originslism is a ridiculous judicial philosophy. If we are bound by the Founders’ views, then Thomas and all the women would not have the right to vote, to attend law school, or to serve as a judge. Thomas would not be married or own property. It was a very different world.
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Good chance that Thomas would BE property if that originalism was strictly adhered to. And/or lynched for having sexual relations with a white woman.
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Duane! You are so right!
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originalism is a philosophy of convenience. You pull it out when you want to justify your ideas, and you ignore it when it hinders you. If Heller and Citizens United are examples of originalism, I want to see some crazy stuff.
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I am not too familiar with Citizens United.
I am waytoo familiar with Heller. Scalia was not a deluded Constitutionalist. He was completely aware of what he was doing.
And it was all a lie.
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I don’t see how anyone can read the words of the 2nd Amendment and conclude that anyone should be allowed to own an AR-15 and carry it openly. We are all in danger.
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Sorry to quibble, but the 19th amendment gave women the right to vote. Originalism doesn’t include disregarding constitutional amendments.
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Would originalism force Justice Thomas to dissolve his marriage to Virginia? Where in the Constitutuon or the amendments is interracial marriage approved? If Thomas and his pals go after gay marriage, how does interracial marriage survive?
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Fair question on those points. If the substantive due process cases are all wrong and need to be reevaluated (which is what Thomas said in Dobbs), that would include Loving v. Virginia.
There is a certain intellectual appeal to originalism, which really is just about trying to determine what the drafters of a law intended the law to mean.
It seems common sense that one would consider (1) the actual text of the law and (2) what the those words and the concepts invoked by those words would have meant to someone writing at the time the law was drafted. But there is so much important precedent that just doesn’t fare well under that analysis. Do we really want to tear it all down just so our jurisprudence is intellectually consistent?
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Originalism is incoherent. A document written centuries ago was intended to be guidance, not a straitjacket. The originalists ignore the original when it doesn’t serve their purpose. What did the Founders say about abortion? What did they say about gay marriage? Nothing.
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That doesn’t mean originalism is incoherent. It just means the soi-disant originalists are incoherent.
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Originalism may not be incoherent, but it is stupid as hell.
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It makes sense in a vacuum. But in reality it’s like hiring an architect to design an addition to your house and while you’re at work he knocks the whole house down because it wasn’t designed according to the proper principles.
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It strikes me that the women who stand to accept the abuse heaped on them might do well to arm themselves. Would Thomas defend such a woman? I think I know the answer.
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I’ve prosecuted and defended domestic violence cases. It is not pleasant either way.
It can be quite difficult to decide whom to believe.
I am always leery of attorneys who like doing such cases. On either side.
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In this regard, JSR, you might be interested in the following essay about how memory works. Not news to you, I’m sure, but still I think you’ll find it interesting:
Memory and the Construction of Self | Bob Shepherd | Praxis (wordpress.com)
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I just started reading The Originalism Trap, by Madiba K. Dennie. I am only a few pages into it, but it promises to be a good ride.
Dennie raises arguments that should disappoint, if not terrify, Justice Thomas and the other wingnuts on the Court. (I’m looking at you, Alito.) The Supreme Court has taken this “-ism” to absurd lengths, handing down decisions that can pose real, physical dangers to all citizens, especially women.
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