Neomi Rao Was Right About Dwarf Tossing, Dignity, and Consent. She Deserves To Be a Federal Judge.
A defense of Brett Kavanaugh's nominated replacement on the D.C. Circuit.

Seven years ago Neomi Rao, President Donald Trump's pick to replace now-Justice Brett Kavanaugh on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, defended the concept of "dwarf tossing"—wherein someone with dwarfism voluntarily allows himself to be thrown, while wearing protective gear, onto a padded surface. While invoking the example was no doubt provocative, Rao's larger point dealt not with the sport itself but with the dignity inherent to making consensual arrangements.
Rao is best known for her strong background in the regulatory world—she currently serves as administrator of the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs. If she is confirmed, her docket at the D.C. Circuit will relate directly to her expertise.
In the meantime, some are criticizing her and misrepresenting her point about dwarf tossing. Her arguments deserve a more careful look.
Writing in The Volokh Conspiracy in 2011, Rao discussed the predicament of a man named Mr. Wackenheim. By her description, Wackenheim was a dwarf living in France who allowed others to throw him for sport. This was his source of income. After several French cities banned the practice, he "challenged the orders on the grounds that they interfered with his economic liberty and right to earn a living." Higher courts eventually upheld the bans, ruling that the practice of dwarf tossing offended human dignity.
As Rao explained, former French President Nicolas Sarkozy used similar justifications to support the country's ban on burqas. The former president, she noted, said that the religious wear "runs counter to women's dignity." But as Rao rightly responded, "the debate focuses little on what Muslim women think about the full veil or why some of them wear it in public. Instead of associating dignity with religious choice, those who would ban the veil treat dignity as a different social ideal—one that measures up to majority standards of individual self-expression."
"Respect for intrinsic human dignity, however, would favor individual choice," the now-D.C. Circuit nominee added. "As with other similar theories, it is a short step from having substantive ideals of dignity to coercion of individuals in the name of these ideals."
Rao's argument is a serious one. Her point is that one can disagree with another's choices, but dignity is about the right to make those choices instead of having the government make them for us.
If you only read about Rao's work in Mother Jones, however, you might have thought that Rao simply has a niche affinity for dwarf tossing. Mother Jones writer Stephanie Mencimer also criticized Rao for wanting to get rid of regulations. Yet notably, writer Mencimer did not make the obvious connection between regulatory skepticism and Rao's concern that certain regulations can reduce individual choice, thereby reducing one's dignity.
Additionally, Mencimer cited Rao's critiques of Justice Anthony Kennedy's writings on dignity as indicative of her unspoken opposition to the right to same-sex marriage. However, one paper written by Rao and linked in the Mother Jones piece barely touched on the subject. In another linked piece, rather than condemning same-sex marriage, Rao's critique of United States v. Windsor (2013), which struck down part of the federal Defense of Marriage Act, was narrow and limited to the precise approach taken by the Court. "The approach in Windsor," she wrote, "differs from other civil rights cases by separating dignity from rights—it recognizes the dignity of same-sex marriage, but not a right to same-sex marriage." She went on to lament that the Court dealt not with "a particular sexual behavior" nor "the fundamental right to marry," but only with "the dignity of having your personal relationships recognized by the federal government."
Indeed, Rao seemed to suggest that the opinion should have dealt directly with the fundamental right to marry rather than the dignity of having one's relationship recognized by the federal government. As Rao observed, "a right to recognition, standing alone, has never been part of our constitutional jurisprudence."
Twisting and trivializing Rao's words is a cheap attack. Her work on dignity is formidable and deserves a thoughtful examination.
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In the meantime, some are criticizing her and misrepresenting her point about dwarf tossing.
It's disingenuous assholes, all the way down.
Dwarf-tossing is OK, but making your own homemade lung flute is NOT OK!!!
BEWARE of making (or blowing upon) a cheap plastic flute w/o permission from a Government-Almighty-sanctioned doctor of doctorology!!!!
To find precise details on what NOT to do, to avoid the flute police, please see http://www.churchofsqrls.com/DONT_DO_THIS/ ? This has been a pubic service, courtesy of the Church of SQRLS!
Hopefully she doesn't also think that inappropriately deadpan "parody" is okay. There should be a very clear litmus test, that anyone who would dare to defend the "First Amendment dissent" of a single, isolated judge in our nation's leading criminal "satire" case should be eradicated, blocked, and banned from the bench, just the way we've cracked down on certain forms of "free expression" here at NYU. See the documentation at:
https://raphaelgolbtrial.wordpress.com/
It's Mother Jones - "disingenuous" is a very polite and credulous way to refer to them.
It's a shame that anyone would need to respond to the 'arguments' presented there.
If she is such a fan of human dignity stemming from individual choice, I look forward to her dismissing all the drug charges that will be brought before her bench. Something tells me I should not hold my breath.
This.
It's a panel.
Ah, yes, U. S. v. Windsor.
Remember Rand Paul's reaction? "The good side to this ruling is they have affirmed to states that this is a state issue and states can decide."
https://politi.co/2QodEPG
Wasn't that a relief? If eased the fears of those who thought the court would impose a single rule on all of the states.
Peter Jackson made dwarf-tossing jokes in his Lord of the Rings movie. Should that disqualify him from the federal bench?
No, what should disqualify him is trying to turn The Hobbit into an epic trilogy.
But he should probably be hunted down on Twitter and shamed.
A trilogy could possibly have worked - but not that trilogy.
He should have stuck with 2 films - one ending with the arrival at Laketown and the other covering the rest. Get rid of Tauriel, the White Orc and a bunch of other fluff.
Worked for "Kill Bill".
Peter Jackson gets a lot of flak for that, but he was kinda forced into it by New Line, who had already decided to do a trilogy with Guillermo del Toro as the director. He left the project, and Peter Jackson got called to fill in when he had no cohesive plan about how to tell that story.
I wasn't aware of that.
If he had no cohesive plan about how to tell that story then he could easily have passed on it. Oh, right: follow the money. Sorry. I shed no tears for Jackson and his miserable creative choices
I guess now we know why Citizen Crusty doesn't post as often anymore.
Gotta say, never woulda figured him for a "Shoshana", though. I suppose I just always assumed he was Chilean.
Ya no estas en Chile.
Do dwarves test their strength by holding giant-tossing contests? That would be more of a challenge than the other way around.
The real question is, do tossers test their endurance by giant-dwarfing.
I think this joke needs to go somewhere to sleep it off.
Typical of a papalist to not appreciate an onanism joke.
Onanism or Odinism? Onionism?
I think these jokes need to go somewhere to sleep it off.
You know who else needed to go somewhere to sleep it off?
Holofernes?
Christine Blasey Ford?
ZING!!
Rip Van Winkle?
Dwarf tossing, BFD. Get a bunch of dwarves in full battle gear, put them on catapults and hold a dwarf catching contest.
I don't want to give to much information out of fear for my safety. But since being driven underground, our dwarf tossing competitions have become much more dangerous, with much higher fatality rates.
Thus proving that government can, in fact, sometimes intervene to fix market failures.
If dwarf tossing is outlawed only outlaws will toss dwarfs.
I warned you about tossing them by their pubic hair.
The first rule of dwarf tossing club is YOU DON'T TALK ABOUT DWARF TOSSING CLUB!
Was it Balko, Sanchez or Wilkinson who tried to finger Rao as the "un-named Trump official" NYTs op-ed writer?
It was one of those commie faggots .
If this allegation is true, it's worse than Kavanaugh.
Knew nothing about this judge before reading this but I'm optimistic at this point. Thanks for the article.
What's her position on dwarf salad-tossing?
She looks like she hasn't been introduced to salad.
What kind dressing's good on dwarf salad?
What a small question.
I wonder what she'll be credibly accused of in the near future.
Something about dwarves?
Or maybe I should capitulate to the Philistines and say dwarfs?
She's a female of color, shouldn't matter what her opinion is.
Ms. Rao is the kind of "libertarian" who takes the bigoted side on gay marriage, the authoritiarian side of the drug war, the Republican side on bigoted and authoritarian immigration policies, and the superstitious right-wing side on abortion.
WIth libertarians like her, who needs authoritarian, superstitious, Trump-loving bigots?
You need them. You yearn for them. Delusions of them are what give your life meaning.
Man, I wonder what the superstitious side of the abortion debate is. You get seven years of bad luck for a late-term abortion?
The consensus on abortion is that it should be retroactively applied to frothing retards like you.
Dwarf tossing is a bit misleading. I wonder how many dwarves have shown up to these events expecting a hand job only to get thrown across a room.
"wherein someone with dwarfism voluntarily allows himself to be thrown, while wearing protective gear, onto a padded surface"
Allows. I have to pay good money for this. And because I'm not a dwarf, they charge me double.
Dwarf privilege!
Twisting and trivializing [Rao's] words is a cheap attack
As has been done with almost 40 year old inscriptions in a high school year book. That is apparently the best they can do.
Now apply this to minimum wage and self-contracted negotiation and we have a winner.
Congress would have to be outlawed if the government regulated dignity.
Dwarf tossing is consentual.
Wearing the hijab is not.
No she doesn't deserve it.