3 Questions for Supreme Court Nominee Ketanji Brown Jackson
The SCOTUS contender should discuss her views on congressional power, unenumerated rights, and qualified immunity.

The Senate Judiciary Committee is holding hearings this week on the nomination of Ketanji Brown Jackson to the U.S. Supreme Court.
Jackson is a respected federal judge with an impressive legal background. But her views on some crucial constitutional issues either remain unclear or deserve further attention. Here are three questions I'd like to hear her address this week before the committee.
* In Pierce v. Society of Sisters (1925), the Supreme Court overturned Oregon's Compulsory Education Act, which had banned parents from sending their children to private schools. "The child is not the mere creature of the state," the Court said. "We think it entirely plain that the [Oregon law] unreasonably interferes with the liberty of parents and guardians to direct the upbringing and education of [their] children."
Pierce is an example of the Court offering judicial protection for an unenumerated constitutional right. Unlike the right to freedom of speech or the right to keep and bear arms, the right of parents to direct the upbringing of their children is not explicitly listed in the Constitution.
Do you agree that the Constitution protects unenumerated rights? And if you do not agree, what do you think the 9th Amendment means when it says, "the enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people"?
* In Gonzales v. Raich (2005), the Supreme Court upheld the authority of the federal government to prosecute medical marijuana users in California under Congress' power to regulate interstate commerce, even though the medical marijuana at issue was cultivated and consumed entirely within the borders of a single state.
Do you agree that the Interstate Commerce Clause gives Congress the power to ban that sort of wholly local activity?
* Section 1983 of Title 42 of the U.S. Code authorizes federal civil rights lawsuits against state officials over alleged constitutional rights violations. Yet in Harlow v. Fitzgerald (1982), the Supreme Court shielded state officials from facing such lawsuits if the conduct that they are being sued over "does not violate clearly established statutory or constitutional rights," a qualification that was not enacted by Congress but was instead concocted by the Court. This doctrine, otherwise known as qualified immunity, now routinely prevents police officers from facing civil rights suits in cases of obvious police misconduct.
Do you agree that qualified immunity is consistent with the statute first enacted by Congress? Or do you agree with Judge Don Willett of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit, who has said that "the real-world functioning of modern immunity practice—essentially 'heads government wins, tails plaintiffs lose'—leaves many victims violated but not vindicated"?
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Where was she on the night of sometime between June and September of 1987?
Have you stopped putting pubic hairs on Justice Thomas' coke cans?
Anyone with pubic hair is too old for her.
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No one is allowed to ask questions. If we do, it’s an attempt pt to get her murdered.
https://thepostmillennial.com/msnbc-guest-josh-hawley-scotus-nominee-criticizing-record
Also, here’s Alan Dershowitz take on her:
https://www.breitbart.com/politics/2022/03/21/exclusive-alan-dershowitz-my-encounter-with-ketanji-brown-jackson-at-harvard-in-1991/
I'm sure she'll make a fine judge who rules precisely the way we Koch / Reason libertarians want on literally every important issue:
The Constitution protects the right to access abortion care.
The Constitution does not protect the right to own a gun.
The Constitution requires schools and businesses to practice affirmative action.
The justice system is too harsh and we should #EmptyThePrisons.
Indeed, putting more RBG-style justices on the Supreme Court was one of the things Koch-funded libertarians had in mind when they voted for Joe Biden.
#LibertariansForKBJ
The important matters at hand are: how long until she gets her own comic book and action figure, like all progressive icons invariably do?
Got to teach them young!
Asking specific legally-oriented questions about specific cases, Root has no idea what he's talking about! - Sullum
They SHOULD ask about her stance on open borders and free and unrestricted immigration.
-Fiona
My three questions:
1. If the Constitution says a right "shall not be infringed," in what circumstances does the government have a compelling interest to infringe that right?
2. In what circumstances does "interstate commerce" apply to commerce within a particular state?
3. If I make a list of 10 items, is it customary to ignore the 9th item listed?
These are all trick questions, but really shouldn't be.
Those are good questions. You sho7ld pitch them to some of the Republican senators.
Or compare the ninth one to an ink blot?
"Do you agree that the Interstate Commerce Clause gives Congress the power to ban that sort of wholly local activity?"
Good question; or even better that it was totally contorted via FDR threatening to pack the Supreme Court?
Dare ask a SCOTUS nominee:
Do you think Federal Reserve’s risk weighted bank capital requirements decreed weights: 0% Federal Government, 100% We the People, is what the Founding Fathers had in mind when framing the US Constitution?
https://subprimeregulations.blogspot.com/2013/11/have-risk-weights-of-current-bank.html
1) Are you...experienced? Have you ever been experienced?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XNRhIdog47Q
2) How much wood would a woodchuck chuck if a woodchuck could chuck wood?
3) The tortoise lays on its back, its belly baking in the hot sun, beating its legs trying to turn itself over, but it can't. Not without your help. But you're not helping. Why is that?
I'd totally approve of asking all presidential appointees question #3, if only to see how many got the reference.
What make you think that hairstyle would look good on you?
KBJ believes in CRT and social justice, and she interprets the law and Constitution accordingly. That's why Democrats nominated her. She is also a good enough (trained) actress not to reveal this in Congressional hearings. She will be confirmed and she will be just another radical leftist on the court. The whole thing is a farce.
I'm just hoping that her opinions will be outrageous enough that she will further erode the trust Americans have in SCOTUS.
Damon Root is obviously a left-leaner...
"Pierce is an example of the Court offering judicial protection for an UN-enumerated constitutional right."
That's not how you read the Constitution. The Constitution doesn't "grant" inalienable rights. Inalienable rights are (free-will) human rights...
The Constitution is "The People's" law over their government. It sets boundaries FOR the Government. It doesn't instruct there almighty powers to "grant" people rights (NOT a list of "entitlements"); only limits them from intruding human rights (free-will)......
Funny how people of the USA need 1st-Grade level education when it comes to the very foundation of the USA. Commie-Education has really indoctrinated way tooooooo much.
the 9th and 10th amendments were castrated by 1850 if not earlier. So much for the constitution
How about the question of what the 'enumerated' powers of the federal government are and exactly how (F'En twisted) one can pretend 90% of what the federal government is doing can get those grants of authority????? Even if they want to play the 'Implied' Powers...............
Now that would certainly throw a wrench in the Nazi-Regime building.
And no seated Senator would ever ask that question (save for one or two of them)!
It would go right to the heart of why they spend tens to hundreds of millions in the effort to "serve" their constituents. What a joke!
The more power they have the more rent they can extract. Just look to the Biden crime family to see how it all works. And they may not even be the worst examples.
Qualified Immunity is a monstrosity that should have been still born.
Yeah, but teacher's unions... so... no can do on that one going anywhere soon.
No--she should be rejected out of hand, because she is a low-IQ virulent racist phony who abhors our Constitution and way of life. Biden could not have picked a more picture-perfect caricature of the results of "affirmative action" than this brain-dead rattlesnake.
^ this is the perfect summary of the situation
This is the racist asshole who previously claimed she was a classmate on Jackson at Harvard.
Woodchipper is just a racist.
The more important questions:
1. Is liberty and freedom more important than diversity/inclusion/equity
2. Are rights from nature or govt?
3. Do self-described "marginalized" peoples have rights that are not given to "non marginalized"?
4. Is the CRA need updating to ensure individual liberty and freedom for both sellers and buyers?
5. Is the Bill of Rights absolute? Is there any situation where you would rule against the 1st, 2nd, and 4th Amendments?
The wrong answer should disqualify her.
We all know the answers this vile seething abomination of hate and resentment would give under the influence of a truth serum. She and all her kind would be better employed as bus-drivers--a job they might actually be qualified for. Maybe.
Dude, women drivers?
You better shut up before we report you to Women’s Lib!
Jackson is a respected federal judge with an impressive legal background.,
This is a normative statement and has nothing to do with reality. She might be great. She might be terrible. "Impressive legal background" is just spin regardless.
Reason’s really amping up the objective coverage of the two major parties they start gearing up for the midterms.
Do you agree that the Interstate Commerce Clause gives Congress the power to ban that sort of wholly local activity
She 100% agrees with that who are you kidding?
Do you agree that the Constitution protects unenumerated rights?
You already know the anwer bro
Do you agree that the Interstate Commerce Clause gives Congress the power to ban that sort of wholly local activity?
She has to say yes. Otherwise the FDA, DEA, and other federal efforts are all invalid. She can't say that.
Translation: she kissed the right asses, slept with the right people, mouthed the right political phrases, and belonged to a favored minority group.
This article assumes that Senators are intelligent enough to articulate actual substantive policy questions rather than make performative ideological poses designed to fire up their base. The writer is clearly delusional.
It's becoming more and more obvious what three questions Reason would ask--
1. Do you know how amazing you are?
2. Aren't Republicans icky?
3. Did that four year old just wink at me?
"When did you last sexually assault someone?"
"Do you still drink beer?"
"Have you stopped sucking Moochelle's dick?"
Next Questions for the nominee: Is former President Obama black or white? Why? What is the definition of Latino/Hispanic? Is former MLB player David Ortiz Latino or black? Is Vice President Harris African American? Why? Is a blond haired blue eyed woman from South Africa who now lives in the US an African American? Is a red-headed jew born and raised in Mexico City a Latina?
Are there legal definitions of race? If so, what are they?