Strollerderby
Morning News – GOP Calls Sotomayor Racist
The Republican/Conservative Hive Mind Coalition has decided how to
attack Supreme Court nominee Judge Sonia Sotomayor. What is it? Drum
roll, please… She’s a racist!
This comment from Rush Limbaugh is… well, you decide: “Limbaugh
called the president ‘the greatest living example of a reverse racist,’
and said that he has picked another for the Supreme Court vacancy of
retiring Justice David Souter. Limbaugh later equated Sotomayor to
former Ku Klux Klan leader David Duke.” David Duke? Huh? The comment
Limbaugh, Newt Gingrich and Hive Mind members are clinging to is one
that Sotomayor made at a Duke Law School symposium in 2001: “a wise
Latina woman would more often than not reach a better conclusion than a
white male who hasn’t lived that life.”
I haven’t read much about Judge Sotomayor, but I think the GOP Hive
Mind is grasping at straws by clinging to one quote that she made. How
difficult would it be to review cases that were before her while she
served as a judge, and to talk about those? I’ve said plenty of things
that I wouldn’t want thrown back at me if I were up for an important
post. (Supreme Court seems unlikely since I don’t have a law degree,
but maybe I could be the head of the Department of Video Games and
Comic Books.) Also, as a white man who grew up in the Bronx and worked
for two years at a job where there were many Latina women, I can
honestly say that a great many of them reached better conclusions than
I did. So there.
Speaking of the GOP, Mitt Romney seems to think he’s still running for President. He’s mad at President Obama for the way he’s handling our foreign policy.
(Grrr… Mitt is angry… Grrrr…) I love how it’s OK for people to
criticize the President when said President is a Democrat. Remember how
we were all supposed to support President Bush because we were a nation
at war? That attacking the Commander-in-Chief of the United States
could be damaging to troop morale, and make us look bad in the eyes of
foreign leaders? I guess that doesn’t matter anymore.
One more political item — Dick Cheney (aside: if my name were
“Richard” I wouldn’t use “Dick” as my nickname) admitted that there was
“no link”
between Saddam Hussein and the September 11th attacks. But he still
thinks we did the right thing by marching into Iraq. He, too, took
issue with President Obama’s policies. I’m not 100% positive about
this, but didn’t various Bush administration officials and the
Republican/Conservative Hive Mind spend a lot of time and energy
telling the public that Saddam Hussein was, in fact, involved in the
September 11th attacks? If so, what is Cheney saying now — sorry, my
bad?
On to less important matters. Susan Boyle checked into the hospital after losing
“Britain’s Got Talent.” She is said to be “suffering from exhaustion,”
which I think officially makes her a real celebrity, since I have never
heard of anyone other than a celebrity checking into a hospital because
they were tired. (I know, that’s reductionist, and an
over-simplification, and probably other words that basically mean the
same thing as those two. Bear with me, I’m exhausted.) The funny thing
about Susan Boyle? She didn’t “lose.” She came in second. She was a
complete unknown and now she’s famous enough to check into a hospital
for exhaustion without being laughed at. She will certainly have some
sort of career in the entertainment business if she wants to. How is
that “losing”? A year from now, let’s see who has had a better career
– Susan Boyle or the dance troupe Diversity. My money’s on Boyle.
OK, one more serious thing: a federal judge has ruled
that “Guantanamo evidence must be made public.” This is “the
unclassified evidence that it says justifies the continued imprisonment
of more than 100 Guantanamo Bay prisoners.” So, you know. So there.
Here’s a headline
you don’t like to see: “Federal Reserve puzzled by yield curve
steepening.” It’s one thing if I’m puzzled by financial matters facing
our nation. But the Federal Reserve? They shouldn’t be puzzled. They
should know stuff. Lots of stuff.
Finally, something silly and utterly unimportant. Kathy Griffin says that Eminem walking out of the MTV Movie Awards was “a stunt.” What happened? Sasha Baron Cohen, aka Bruno, stuck his heinie in the rapper’s face.
Here’s what happened:
And here’s what Kathy Griffin thinks of it:
See? Now you know everything you need to know to start your day. Enjoy!
Image: Latina.com
Read more:
Katie Roiphe Doesn’t Like You Or Your Kids
Dad Charges Daughter With Grand Theft Auto
Morning News – Mike Tyson’s Daughter Injured
13 Year Old Alfie Definitely Not A Dad
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7 Comments
Anonymous commented on Jan 01 70 at 12:00 amTwintown – What does a judge’s life experience have to do with making impartial rulings based on the Constitution and federal law? And why does Sotomayor assume that a Latina woman has a richer life experience than a white man? And why would a richer life experience lead to wiser decisions anyway? Your life experiences have nothing to do with your understanding of the law.
Anonymous commented on Jan 01 70 at 12:00 amIs context no longer valid? Can we all just toss out random phrases with blatant disregard for the context in which they’re spoken? In CERTAIN situations, based on their LIFE EXPERIENCES, some people may be more understanding, empathetic or WISER. Older people are often considered to have more wisdom to share. Is this age discrimination against the young? I think not, nor would anyone pretend that it is. And, yes, the caps are on purpose.
Anonymous commented on Jan 01 70 at 12:00 amIt WAS a racist comment made in a pre-written speech. To assume that an individual of one racial group is wiser than another is inherently racist.
Frankly, her ruling on the firemen test showed inappropriate racial preferences.
Anonymous commented on Jan 01 70 at 12:00 amI wouldn’t listen to anything Rush Limbaugh has to say…he might still be jacked up on Hillbilly Heroin.
Anonymous commented on Jan 01 70 at 12:00 amI think that any time fat, rich, white men start calling people of color “racist” is a time when extreme skepticism is called for. There was a context for Sotomayor’s one (!) remark that is being completely ignored. She is clearly qualified and so cannot be attacked on that basis, nor on the basis of her past decisions. And I think it can only be good for our country to have a variety of perspectives on the Supreme Court. That’s not racism — that’s representative of what we actually are as a country.
Anonymous commented on Jan 01 70 at 12:00 amIf Justice Roberts or Justice Alito had said that “a wise whtie male would more often than not reach a better conclusion than a Latina woman who hasn’t lived that life” how would you react? While I don’t think that Sotomayor is a racist, she is clearly a racialist – she vews events and comes to conclusions through the prism of race. Her paltry one paragraph decision in the Ricci reverse discrimination case and the fact that she belongs to a group called La Raza (The Race) shows it.
Anonymous commented on Jan 01 70 at 12:00 am“…who hasn’t lived that life” Okay, there was context here, apparently. I wonder what it was…
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