moron:is this racist?
5/26/2009 5:28:14 PM
5/26/2009 5:31:23 PM
5/26/2009 5:32:58 PM
I'm curious what you think the context of the quote is?Because i'm going to presume you're not naive enough to take an EarthDogg post from The Headquarters of the Conservative Underground at face value.If so, then you and people who think like you are the exact reason the media in the US is so messed up. How about doing some critical reading and understanding on your own, instead of relying on me, EarthDogg or THe COnservative Underground to spoon feed you.http://www.nytimes.com/2009/05/15/us/politics/15judge.text.html?pagewanted=1&_r=1Here's the full text of the speech in which she made the quote btwWhy didn't the Conservative Underground quote this from her:
5/26/2009 5:39:39 PM
i found this to be a rather interesting decision.
5/26/2009 5:45:54 PM
5/26/2009 5:47:38 PM
5/26/2009 6:01:26 PM
She very well may be the least racist person on the planetI still don't see how her comment about latina women being able to make better decisions than white males isn't a completely racist statement
5/26/2009 6:11:00 PM
^^ she was giving a memorial lecture for a latino person titled "Raising the Bar: Latino and Latina Presence in the Judiciary and the Struggle for Representation". That's not "identity politics."And I think she's generally right to note that someone's background and the environment they are raised in is going to taint their world view and decisions. That makes perfect sense.[Edited on May 26, 2009 at 6:18 PM. Reason : ]
5/26/2009 6:14:13 PM
^ You know, I'd point out how she makes numerous examples of how somehow judges make decisions turning upon race rather than say, prevailing societal norms within this speech, but as we've learned before in this forum, you absolutely hate reading source material, and will bullshit for pages on end.So, I will simply leave it at that. Another episode of moron bullshitting us. Again.
5/26/2009 6:18:12 PM
That's quite a different tone than a page ago. I'm guessing you realize you were completely wrong... again.
5/26/2009 6:19:23 PM
Sotomayor should more appropriately be described as a chicana. In any event, whether you like her or not, it appears that the media has now found a word it likes even better than "closure": "Sotomayor."
5/26/2009 6:19:57 PM
5/26/2009 6:22:18 PM
OK ..I read her 2001 speech in more detail...
5/26/2009 6:37:29 PM
I think the issue that's being danced around goes deeper than this nomination specifically. What sort of decisions that the supreme court will be making do we think will be in any way positively impacted by choosing people in part on their life experiences? What sort of decisions do we think that a white male, a hispanic female and a chinese hermaphrodite will have differing opinions on in the supreme court? In lower courts where we may be looking for and at motivations and behaviors of individuals, sure I could see it playing a role, but this high up the court system?
5/26/2009 6:38:53 PM
Because judges never have to consider cases where race or sex are factors, right?
5/26/2009 6:39:06 PM
5/26/2009 6:55:57 PM
Actually, this judge has shown a conservative temperment basing decisions on stare decisis. Then again, this is what happens when you get yourselves carried away with labels, you cannot even think straight anymore.
5/26/2009 6:57:00 PM
5/26/2009 7:15:22 PM
5/26/2009 7:25:47 PM
One of the things I really admire about President Obama is his refusal to play the victimization game or try to throw his ethnicity out there like it's some type of trump card. The era of race-based politics is over, and by-and-large the populace has turned the page. Unfortunately, it doesn't appear that Judge Sotomayor ever got the memo. It happens sometimes. These aging baby-boomers like to go with what they know, and often have trouble adapting to new times. Eh, fuck it. Just what we need, another ideologue in the supreme court. Maybe on matters not relating to race, she can attempt to be objective. One can hope, right?
5/26/2009 7:54:39 PM
I find this pretty disconcerting...
5/26/2009 8:09:15 PM
omg she's more liberal than the sitting court but agreed with the person she's replacing in all but two cases.
5/26/2009 10:06:48 PM
i only approve of this choice if they make a reality show... also for reference
5/26/2009 10:21:56 PM
5/26/2009 10:22:02 PM
Her conservative stance on stare decisis means she cannot be an activist judge. If you want to fault her, fault her for being to conservative.
5/26/2009 10:45:27 PM
the NPR piece I heard about this today painted a vastly different picture with that quote, even to the point that I don't even recognize it. What NPR reported I could almost agree with, but what I see here is so massively different that I can't see that I would have agreed with it.NOW, if a white guy had said that, he most certainly would have been skewered for it. And looking at her quote, I'm a bit miffed by it, because it's not absolutely racist, though I can see how someone might see it that way. Come on, moron, there is a way to see it that way. I'm not sure, though, how she thinks that a "wise latino woman" would come up with better conclusions than a white man. But, I can also see how she might not be saying that. She may, and I'm playing devil's advocate here, be saying that she would hope that would be the case.But, after reading the speech, there's not a really good way to read that line... Even in the further context provided by moron (i think), it's not too good...This is also from that speech
5/26/2009 11:45:08 PM
They did not choose her based on talent. She's had four of her opinions reversed, three of them due to incorrect interpretations of the law.But of course someone will come out with similar stats for current SC judges
5/26/2009 11:48:05 PM
5/27/2009 12:02:19 AM
i dunno, but he sure as hell picked a spicy pink taco!
5/27/2009 12:05:32 AM
5/27/2009 12:10:29 AM
I must agree with my conservative friends in this thread. I can not stand to hear any more media dick sucking about the affirmative action move by Obama to put an "Hispanic female" on the bench.A supreme court judge should be picked for their merits, qualities, and qualifications. Such decision should not be based on achieving some liberal happy unicorns and rainbows diverse supreme court.If all the people BEST qualified to be on the supreme court were all Asian than so be it. I just can't help to feel that this woman was picked for the PR not her abilities. This is the one of the top things that bothered me about the Obama election. If you vote for Obama b.c you want "change than so be it. If you vote for Obama b.c you believe in the liberal doctrine than so be it. If you vote for Obama b.c you think McPalin was a fucking joke of a ticket and want the GOP to get a nice slap in the face for a wake up call following George Dubya shitty 8 years than so be it.I just hated all the people voting just because its a 1/2 black president; or all the attention Obama gets on being a "breaking moment for ethnicities" not on the real qualities that he does possess in order to do his job.
5/27/2009 12:11:50 AM
5/27/2009 1:11:41 AM
Yay, 2 wrongs make a right!
5/27/2009 1:24:47 AM
It's hard for me to get worked up by the identity politics angle. After all it was Reagan who pledged, during his campaign, to nominate the first woman to the Supreme Court. And he did.Should the Supreme Court be used as a playing field for so-called identity politics? I don't know. It's not like there's a shortage of qualified jurists in the U.S. All other things being equal, there has to be some deciding factor that isn't related to pure professional qualifications. In that light it's reasonable to pick somebody, once their basic qualifications are established, based on background, life experience, personality, you name it.It's too simplistic to say "pick the most qualified person!" There isn't some linear scale whereby there's the "most" qualified. What, we're going to dig through law school grade transcripts? Even then I think there would be more than a few equals.Personally I am not sure what makes a "great" judge, insofar as it's one of the most unaccountable professions there is. Scalia, for all his faults, is probably my personal favorite for his unique philosophy but how many of him are there in the world?
5/27/2009 2:48:50 AM
5/27/2009 6:11:56 AM
5/27/2009 8:04:44 AM
5/27/2009 9:30:31 AM
^ Since Obama indicated that Sotomayor should identify with people's hopes and struggles, this should be rendered moot. Or is this empathy selective--(GASP!) could it be?
5/27/2009 9:42:06 AM
are you off the meds again?
5/27/2009 9:43:45 AM
^ I have no need for meds, just making a point. Obama says that law and precedent don't always apply:
5/27/2009 9:50:32 AM
Yes, Obama is clearly saying stare decisis has no basis for any court ruling evar.
5/27/2009 9:53:21 AM
^ No, Obama clearly stated that 5 percent of the time, justices should ignore law and precedent and just go with their hearts--who determines which cases fall within this mythical 5 percent?Furthermore, Obama used this ethereal 5 percent as a justification to vote against Justice Roberts:
5/27/2009 10:01:49 AM
do you have any understanding of the merits of the case outside of biased opinion pieces?
5/27/2009 10:04:15 AM
so was the media like this before o'connor got picked? where they pretty much pick the person for the president?
5/27/2009 10:04:44 AM
^^ I'm simply basing my posts on Obama's own words.[Edited on May 27, 2009 at 10:05 AM. Reason : .]
5/27/2009 10:05:23 AM
Why don't you base your points on this selection and not on hypotheticals?
5/27/2009 10:08:44 AM
^ But Obama said that words matter.http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9mQ_eCGbdg0[Edited on May 27, 2009 at 10:19 AM. Reason : I'm trying to make a point. You know, like you do--except without accusing anyone of pedophilia. ]
5/27/2009 10:17:51 AM
you are attempting to say this candidate isn't qualified based upon things obama has said. Why don't you talk about the candidate instead of hypotheticals, or is that too much to ask of you?
5/27/2009 10:21:37 AM
^ Okay, there has been much talk of Sotomayor's background and overcoming hardship. Was this same puff treatment given to Clarence Thomas? You know, he had to overcome being a black man, which many here and elsewhere describe as being a burden. Discuss.
5/27/2009 10:31:07 AM