May 21, 2009
(Page 3 of 9)
Who should Barack Obama nominate for the Supreme Court and why?
Solicitor General Elena Kagan, because she's bright, young (49 years old), and generally highly regarded, as evidenced by the support she received from some conservative lawyers when she was confirmed for solicitor general. Her positions aren't viewed as consistently left-wing as many of the other leading contenders, so she'd draw less fire in the confirmation process. Since Obama's likely to have at least one additional opportunity to make a nomination to the Supreme Court, he could wait to nominate an Hispanic to score points with Hispanic voters—and thereby avoid a distracting confirmation controversy that a more doctrinaire and less highly regarded nominee would tend to provoke at this stage.
Who will Obama nominate and why?
My crystal ball's rather cloudy, but the name Janet Napolitano seems to be almost legible. She reportedly has Obama's confidence from her work in his Cabinet and has Earl Warren-like experience as a former governor.
Obama says that his ideal Supreme Court justice would have the "empathy" to identify with society's downtrodden. Do you agree with his criteria?
No. The notion of empathy as a criteria conflicts with the concept that justice should be blind, and thereby undermines the rule of law. Judges should rule on the merits of the case, without regard to the identity of the parties.
What issue(s) will dominate the court over the next three years and why?
The bulk of the cases won't involve highly-charged issues such as racial preferences, campaign finance regulation, and national security issues, although such cases are likely to be before the Court. Instead, given the Obama administration's political agenda, the Court's docket will likely be dominated by bankruptcy, antitrust, securities regulation, and environmental regulation cases—as well as the normal volume of criminal law, civil procedure, and administrative law cases. Still, many challenges to Obama's aggressive regulatory policies may not reach the Court within the next three years, given the time it normally takes to get a ruling from the intermediate appellate courts.
Manuel Klausner serves as general counsel to the Individual Rights Foundation (the legal arm of the David Horowitz Freedom Center) and was chairman of the Federalist Society's Practice Group on Free Speech & Election Law from 1996-2005. He has filed amicus briefs for the Individual Rights Foundation in significant Supreme Court cases, as well as for the Reason Foundation, Ward Connerly, and the Libertarian Law Council.
Judge Andrew P. Napolitano
Who should Barack Obama nominate for the Supreme Court and why?
Judge Janice Rogers Brown is a minority and a female (which will please many of the president's constituents), has experience on the California Supreme Court and the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit, and she understands federalism and the Constitution. Judge Alex Kozinski has over 20 years experience on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit (he speaks with a foreign accent which will please many of the president's folks) and is an intellectual giant who is utterly faithful to, and fully understands, the natural law and the Constitution. He also understands tyranny, since he escaped from it in Eastern Europe as a child.
Who will Obama nominate and why?
My guess is that Obama understands the Court better than any president since Richard Nixon, and takes a long rather than a political view. I'd expect a person whose personality and intellect he thinks are the functional equivalent of Antonin Scalia (though I do not know that such a person exists). I also expect that he wants someone he is personally comfortable with. Thus, my guess is he will nominate his former University of Chicago Law School colleague Judge Diane Wood of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit, or his long-time mentor, Professor Charles Ogletree of Harvard Law School.
Obama says that his ideal Supreme Court justice would have the "empathy" to identify with society's downtrodden. Do you agree with his criteria?
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Janice Rogers Brown. She's a black woman, and that's all that
matters. She's also good on some issues that some Democrats like.
No, really!
[While being dragged away by the Stasi] No, really, it's
okay! Appoint her, damn you, appoint her!!! Don't tase me,
bro'!
Maybe you guys could get an interview with Jan Crawford Greenberg. Now there's someone who understands the SCOTUS.
Too bad Judge Napalataniano or however you spell it is not in the running, he would get most things right.
Confident predictions:
(1) Obama's nomination will be catastrophically bad on limited
government issues.
(2) The Republicans will makes fools of themselves and squander an
opportunity.
(3) Obama's nomination will be approved.
What's to discuss? We are getting ass raped by progressively
bigger cocks.
The left/right makeup of the SCOTUS is meaningless, as they both
favor fucking us.
The nominee should not be one who is an Ivy grad. He or she should have no government employment in their background.
He or she should have no government employment in their
background.
He should also smell like rainbows and shit out Twinkies.
Female. Probably not white. Legal expoerience and judicial philosophy will only be considered by the Obama staff after that.
...their views on what sort of justice Obama should-and
will-appoint to the Court...
Both sorts are probably pretty well known, in general terms.
They're way not the same list.
The left/right makeup of the SCOTUS is meaningless, as they both favor fucking us.
And in general, in the confirmation process the more libertarian a
Republican-proposed candidate seems, the harsher the confirmation.
Big government conservatives are always more preferable to
Democratic Senators.
In the past, Republicans really haven't fought Supreme Court
nominations. Justice Ruth Ginsburg was confirmed 96 to 3; Stephen
Breyer 87 to 9. That almost qualifies as the Republicans getting it
right from a libertarian point of view; to me, Breyer is almost the
anti-libertarian justice. He's certainly the anti bright line, pro
"balancing" pragmatic justice. Ginsburg is considerably better on
civil liberties than Breyer.
What we don't need from Obama: another Breyer:
To those of us suffering under the delusion that the Constitution
was supposed to "secure the Blessings of Liberty," Breyer reveals
that its purpose was "to create a framework for democratic
government -- a government that, while protecting basic individual
liberties, permits citizens to govern themselves." But how can it
protect "individual liberties" when such protection is precisely
what doesn't allow "citizens to govern themselves"? Or is "basic"
actually Breyerspeak for as few as possible?
At this point a certain feeling may be creeping over many, an eerie
kind of déjà vu. It grows only stronger when [E.J.] Dionne
reclaims the mic. "Breyer's argument," he explains, "leads not to
judicial activism but to judicial humility. He insists that courts
take care to figure out what the people's representatives intended
when they passed laws. You might say that justices should not
behave like imperious English professors who insist they can
interpret the true meaning of words better than those who actually
wrote them." Now that tore away the disguise, didn't it?
This isn't the "living document"/"evolving Constitution" rhetoric
that the Left's been blaring all these years. The exalting of
majoritarian democracy over individual liberty, the insistence that
this view reflects the "intentions" of the Framers of the
Constitution -- who can mistake it? Who can still not see that
behind the meek figure of Stephen Breyer looms -- as his alter ego
-- the monstrous presence of ...
READ "The Strange
Case of Justice Breyer and Mr. B."
What's to discuss? We are getting ass raped by progressively
bigger cocks.
Well, the color of the cock - I expect the professional jounalists
and chattering class to discuss that for endless and painful hours
about if the cock is brown enough. What about strap ons? I've heard
that they let girls on the court now too.
Actually discussing - and actually placing primary importance on -
Liberty? fuck that noise.
File under duh:
Most of us here would be happy if one of us was nominated and
confirmed, narcissism of minor differneces aside (to borrow a
phrase recently discussed).
libertymike - I was offered a deep fried chocolate covered Twinkie the other day. I passed.
"permits citizens to govern themselves"
I think he meant "govern each other". You don't really need a
government to govern yourself, do you?
Check out this Onion-style parody of Obama's criteria for
picking judges:
http://optoons.blogspot.com/2009/05/obama-unveils-new-statue-at-us-supreme.html
We need one justice who represents the 10% of Americans who are one stripe or another of libertarian. Affirmative action at work, people!
Amen, Pro Lib! I hereby nominate Radley Balko. Yo, fuck "new professionalism."
Much as I disdain identify politics, I would urge him to nominate a very smart, scholarly, unabashedly liberal, young enough woman, like Kathleen Sullivan.
Kaminer's disdain for identity politics couldn't be characterized
as fanatical, I guess. That's a bullshit qualifier if I've ever
seen one.
politics be damned...we need a hotty!
Like this lady
http://www.tvweek.com/blogs/cristina-perez/2008/10/23/JudgeCristinaSmall.jpg
Obama will follow the james Watt principle:
"a black, a woman, two Jews and a cripple."
Noone will admit it and Watt got a lot of flak for saying it, but
that's pretty much been the formula for quite a while now.
And naturally, Napolitano is out.
With Scalia and Alito the Italian quota is full.
Is it just me, or is there something suspicious about a panel of 13 experts two of whom are named "Ilya"?
He'll nominate Michelle. She's been bitching about the first lady not being a paid job title, you know.
President Obama should nominate a person with proven
experience and integrity who has also demonstrated a deep
understanding of the Constitution as a document designed to secure
liberty through limited government.
My thoughts exactly, but I don't expect him to nominate the person
who best fits that description: Ron Paul.
Andrew Napolitano would be a good second choice, though, and
younger than Paul.
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