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Friday, March 02, 2007
Thomas Sowell :: Townhall.com Columnist
High Court and Low Politics: Part IV
by Thomas Sowell
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Will the Dems' health care Christmas Present to America be an improvement or detriment to our health care system?


One of the sad aspects of studying history is discovering how often petty considerations influenced the direction of momentous events. That is one of the painful aspects of reading about the Supreme Court in "Supreme Conflict" by Jan Crawford Greenburg.

That insightful book reveals the struggles among politicians over the choosing and confirmation of Supreme Court nominees -- and the struggles within the High Court itself over the difficult and divisive issues that come before it.

Perhaps the saddest thing in the book, though mentioned only in passing, is that some "highly qualified" potential nominees for the Supreme Court "had not wanted their names considered" because the Senate confirmation process had become "too bitter and too vitriolic" and "they just didn't want any part of it."

The momentous and lasting repercussions of Supreme Court decisions mean that people of the highest caliber and character are needed on that court. There are too few who are "highly qualified" to lose any of them.

The ugly and cheap circus atmosphere of Senate confirmation hearings is just one of the factors which cause top notch people not to be nominated, while others who are little more than warm bodies are seated on the highest court in the land.

According to "Supreme Conflict," Circuit Court Judge Laurence Silberman was passed over as "too controversial" for a Supreme Court nomination, in favor of David Souter, who was the closest thing to a blank slate that any human being could be.

Judge Silberman would have been one of the great Supreme Court justices of the age, while Souter has been one of the worst. The difference was momentous -- and disastrous -- for the whole future of American law, especially in a court with so many 5 to 4 decisions.

The quota mentality has been another factor filtering out the best in favor of the politically expedient. Even presidents who attack racial or sex quotas succumb to the quota mentality themselves. That is how Ronald Reagan made his worst appointment, Sandra Day O'Connor, who used rhetoric as a substitute for logic.

That is how George W. Bush nominated Harriet Miers, whose inadequate knowledge of Constitutional law became so painfully obvious during preliminary discussions with Senators that even Republican supporters of the president, inside and outside the Senate, urgently appealed to him to withdraw her nomination.

Now the next big push for a quota nomination is for the first Hispanic to be put on the Supreme Court. Continued...

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About The Author
Thomas Sowell is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institute and author of The Housing Boom and Bust.
 
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Please save me
Gonzales better? Supports affirmative action, illegal immigrants, goes after border patrolmen while giving a pass on drug smugglers and leakers of the most sensitive information. Anyone remember Mr. cash-in-the-freezer Jefferson who the FBI, at least thought important, until Bush-Gonzales decided to throw out the evicence and sit on the case. Now he is on the Homeland Security Committee and almost got onto the House Ways and Means Committee, except that even Nancy Pelosi had more sense than Bush-Gonzales. Please spare me.

Thomas is "not qualified"
Thomas is not qualified to write about the Supreme Court. He is not a legal scholar. And he doesn't seem to put much energy into preparing his columns. It looks to me that his "research" for these last four columns was: Reading one book.

Thomas, try to figure out what you are competent at, and stick to it.
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