Embarrassing times in the Supreme Court

by liberal japonicus

Everyone is jumping on Scalia's racist uncle act, (perhaps the take by Andy Borowitz is best) but to me, Roberts is the embarrassment.

This increased diversity, Garre argued, satisfied the university's educational goal of bringing unique perspectives to its classrooms. This assertion drew a caustic response from Roberts: "What unique perspective does a minority student bring to a physics class?"

This is ground that we've actually already gone over here, believe it or not, in the women in sports thread. It is not a simple question of women's abilities, it is the entire pipeline that brings a person from child to pro pitcher. And Roberts fails to understand (or pretends not to, which is probably worse) that research often advances when outsiders come in. Like this

To get an idea of just what a sh*t sandwich African Americans are getting, here are the numbers for UT Austin that are being argued about

Solicitor General Donald Verrilli took issue with this data, pointing out that the number of black students admitted at UT increased from 141 in 2004 (the last year before race was added to holistic admissions) to 262 in 2007.

Enrollment at UT Austin in 51,313, so we are talking about .2 percent. Sheesh.

105 thoughts on “Embarrassing times in the Supreme Court”

  1. Not sure that percentage is correct, lj. The UT data states that enrollment of African Americans in 2014 was 4.4%. Still not huge, obviously, and doesn’t take away from your larger point.

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  2. Not sure that percentage is correct, lj. The UT data states that enrollment of African Americans in 2014 was 4.4%. Still not huge, obviously, and doesn’t take away from your larger point.

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  3. Not sure that percentage is correct, lj. The UT data states that enrollment of African Americans in 2014 was 4.4%. Still not huge, obviously, and doesn’t take away from your larger point.

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  4. According to a Propublica story:
    “It’s true that the university, for whatever reason, offered provisional admission to some students with lower test scores and grades than Fisher. Five of those students were black or Latino. Forty-two were white.
    Neither Fisher nor Blum mentioned those 42 applicants in interviews. Nor did they acknowledge the 168 black and Latino students with grades as good as or better than Fisher’s who were also denied entry into the university that year. Also left unsaid is the fact that Fisher turned down a standard UT offer under which she could have gone to the university her sophomore year if she earned a 3.2 GPA at another Texas university school in her freshman year.”
    http://www.propublica.org/article/a-colorblind-constitution-what-abigail-fishers-affirmative-action-case-is-r

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  5. According to a Propublica story:
    “It’s true that the university, for whatever reason, offered provisional admission to some students with lower test scores and grades than Fisher. Five of those students were black or Latino. Forty-two were white.
    Neither Fisher nor Blum mentioned those 42 applicants in interviews. Nor did they acknowledge the 168 black and Latino students with grades as good as or better than Fisher’s who were also denied entry into the university that year. Also left unsaid is the fact that Fisher turned down a standard UT offer under which she could have gone to the university her sophomore year if she earned a 3.2 GPA at another Texas university school in her freshman year.”
    http://www.propublica.org/article/a-colorblind-constitution-what-abigail-fishers-affirmative-action-case-is-r

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  6. According to a Propublica story:
    “It’s true that the university, for whatever reason, offered provisional admission to some students with lower test scores and grades than Fisher. Five of those students were black or Latino. Forty-two were white.
    Neither Fisher nor Blum mentioned those 42 applicants in interviews. Nor did they acknowledge the 168 black and Latino students with grades as good as or better than Fisher’s who were also denied entry into the university that year. Also left unsaid is the fact that Fisher turned down a standard UT offer under which she could have gone to the university her sophomore year if she earned a 3.2 GPA at another Texas university school in her freshman year.”
    http://www.propublica.org/article/a-colorblind-constitution-what-abigail-fishers-affirmative-action-case-is-r

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  7. “What unique perspective does a minority student bring to a physics class?
    That if Scalia, Alito, and Roberts fell from a great height at equal rates of speed and landed on Clarence Thomas’s head simultaneously, you’d have four immediate openings on the Supreme Court and two bonus dead Italians, thus confirming the theory of Gravity?
    Of more importance on the Austin campus this week is “what unique perspective does an armed right-winger bring to a physics class”?

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  8. “What unique perspective does a minority student bring to a physics class?
    That if Scalia, Alito, and Roberts fell from a great height at equal rates of speed and landed on Clarence Thomas’s head simultaneously, you’d have four immediate openings on the Supreme Court and two bonus dead Italians, thus confirming the theory of Gravity?
    Of more importance on the Austin campus this week is “what unique perspective does an armed right-winger bring to a physics class”?

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  9. “What unique perspective does a minority student bring to a physics class?
    That if Scalia, Alito, and Roberts fell from a great height at equal rates of speed and landed on Clarence Thomas’s head simultaneously, you’d have four immediate openings on the Supreme Court and two bonus dead Italians, thus confirming the theory of Gravity?
    Of more importance on the Austin campus this week is “what unique perspective does an armed right-winger bring to a physics class”?

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  10. Good points regards to number sapient. Here’s a link about the total makeup of UTAustin
    http://www.dailytexanonline.com/opinion/2013/11/25/for-black-male-students-at-ut-austin-data-tells-different-story-about-diversity
    From that link
    The University of Pennsylvania’s Center for the Study of Race and Equity in Education found a 66 percent difference between the percentage of players on the UT football and basketball teams that are black and the percentage of black men in the total undergraduate student body — the highest such difference in the Big 12 Conference.
    UT’s 1.6 percent black male presence is even lower than UCLA’s 3.3 percent, so this is clearly an area where improvement is needed.

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  11. Good points regards to number sapient. Here’s a link about the total makeup of UTAustin
    http://www.dailytexanonline.com/opinion/2013/11/25/for-black-male-students-at-ut-austin-data-tells-different-story-about-diversity
    From that link
    The University of Pennsylvania’s Center for the Study of Race and Equity in Education found a 66 percent difference between the percentage of players on the UT football and basketball teams that are black and the percentage of black men in the total undergraduate student body — the highest such difference in the Big 12 Conference.
    UT’s 1.6 percent black male presence is even lower than UCLA’s 3.3 percent, so this is clearly an area where improvement is needed.

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  12. Good points regards to number sapient. Here’s a link about the total makeup of UTAustin
    http://www.dailytexanonline.com/opinion/2013/11/25/for-black-male-students-at-ut-austin-data-tells-different-story-about-diversity
    From that link
    The University of Pennsylvania’s Center for the Study of Race and Equity in Education found a 66 percent difference between the percentage of players on the UT football and basketball teams that are black and the percentage of black men in the total undergraduate student body — the highest such difference in the Big 12 Conference.
    UT’s 1.6 percent black male presence is even lower than UCLA’s 3.3 percent, so this is clearly an area where improvement is needed.

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  13. Roberts also fails to take into account that there is a vast amount of education in college that takes place outside the classroom. Perhaps the majority (if not vast majority) of it.
    The justification for affirmative action does get a bit squirrelly once it moves beyond “remedy for discrimination,” it seems to me.

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  14. Roberts also fails to take into account that there is a vast amount of education in college that takes place outside the classroom. Perhaps the majority (if not vast majority) of it.
    The justification for affirmative action does get a bit squirrelly once it moves beyond “remedy for discrimination,” it seems to me.

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  15. Roberts also fails to take into account that there is a vast amount of education in college that takes place outside the classroom. Perhaps the majority (if not vast majority) of it.
    The justification for affirmative action does get a bit squirrelly once it moves beyond “remedy for discrimination,” it seems to me.

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  16. I guess you aren’t allowed to ask the Justices questions, but I would have said to Roberts something like ‘if that’s the case, why don’t we just give the students a book with all the formulas they need and let them work it out themselves?’

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  17. I guess you aren’t allowed to ask the Justices questions, but I would have said to Roberts something like ‘if that’s the case, why don’t we just give the students a book with all the formulas they need and let them work it out themselves?’

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  18. I guess you aren’t allowed to ask the Justices questions, but I would have said to Roberts something like ‘if that’s the case, why don’t we just give the students a book with all the formulas they need and let them work it out themselves?’

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  19. ‘Longer, but even funnier New Yorker piece: Five Supreme Court Cases from the Second Trump Administration’
    I bid 2 No Trump.

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  20. ‘Longer, but even funnier New Yorker piece: Five Supreme Court Cases from the Second Trump Administration’
    I bid 2 No Trump.

    Reply
  21. ‘Longer, but even funnier New Yorker piece: Five Supreme Court Cases from the Second Trump Administration’
    I bid 2 No Trump.

    Reply
  22. Good points regards to number sapient.
    Arithmetic quibbles: I thought it was mostly a matter of comparing enrollment totals versus comparing annual admission totals to enrollment. (Though I would think it more appropriate to compare enrollment totals to one another or to compare admission totals to one another, rather than mixing them. And, that aside, using the latter number for African-American admissions versus total enrollment, I get 0.5%, which is still miniscule. The smaller, earlier admission number, rounded rather than truncated, gets you 0.3%.)

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  23. Good points regards to number sapient.
    Arithmetic quibbles: I thought it was mostly a matter of comparing enrollment totals versus comparing annual admission totals to enrollment. (Though I would think it more appropriate to compare enrollment totals to one another or to compare admission totals to one another, rather than mixing them. And, that aside, using the latter number for African-American admissions versus total enrollment, I get 0.5%, which is still miniscule. The smaller, earlier admission number, rounded rather than truncated, gets you 0.3%.)

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  24. Good points regards to number sapient.
    Arithmetic quibbles: I thought it was mostly a matter of comparing enrollment totals versus comparing annual admission totals to enrollment. (Though I would think it more appropriate to compare enrollment totals to one another or to compare admission totals to one another, rather than mixing them. And, that aside, using the latter number for African-American admissions versus total enrollment, I get 0.5%, which is still miniscule. The smaller, earlier admission number, rounded rather than truncated, gets you 0.3%.)

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  25. I bid 2 No Trump.
    I’d bid 7 No Trump, on the theory that 7 years without Trump would be better than just 2. (Actually, I’d vote 8 No Trump if it were possible. Why put up with even 1 year of Trump?)

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  26. I bid 2 No Trump.
    I’d bid 7 No Trump, on the theory that 7 years without Trump would be better than just 2. (Actually, I’d vote 8 No Trump if it were possible. Why put up with even 1 year of Trump?)

    Reply
  27. I bid 2 No Trump.
    I’d bid 7 No Trump, on the theory that 7 years without Trump would be better than just 2. (Actually, I’d vote 8 No Trump if it were possible. Why put up with even 1 year of Trump?)

    Reply
  28. I’m guessing the numbers Verrilli pointed to reflected enrollment numbers for the 25% of admissions where the University uses the holistic approach. 75% of undergrad enrollment comes from UT accepting any applicant in the top 10% of their high school class.

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  29. I’m guessing the numbers Verrilli pointed to reflected enrollment numbers for the 25% of admissions where the University uses the holistic approach. 75% of undergrad enrollment comes from UT accepting any applicant in the top 10% of their high school class.

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  30. I’m guessing the numbers Verrilli pointed to reflected enrollment numbers for the 25% of admissions where the University uses the holistic approach. 75% of undergrad enrollment comes from UT accepting any applicant in the top 10% of their high school class.

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  31. Well, American Standard bidding does favour a strong No Trump opening…
    whereas Brits are usually happy to open No Trump with any old sh*t.

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  32. Well, American Standard bidding does favour a strong No Trump opening…
    whereas Brits are usually happy to open No Trump with any old sh*t.

    Reply
  33. Well, American Standard bidding does favour a strong No Trump opening…
    whereas Brits are usually happy to open No Trump with any old sh*t.

    Reply
  34. For a white kid from a part of a state where you were unlikely to ever see a black person, a semester sharing a physics lab bench with an urban black guy is a highly educational experience.

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  35. For a white kid from a part of a state where you were unlikely to ever see a black person, a semester sharing a physics lab bench with an urban black guy is a highly educational experience.

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  36. For a white kid from a part of a state where you were unlikely to ever see a black person, a semester sharing a physics lab bench with an urban black guy is a highly educational experience.

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  37. I think Garre handled the question well. And indeed, the whole argument. Obviously CJ Roberts can’t always rule for his protege, but this was a strong presentation, I think.

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  38. I think Garre handled the question well. And indeed, the whole argument. Obviously CJ Roberts can’t always rule for his protege, but this was a strong presentation, I think.

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  39. I think Garre handled the question well. And indeed, the whole argument. Obviously CJ Roberts can’t always rule for his protege, but this was a strong presentation, I think.

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  40. The Justices, being none of them educated in science (or engineering) themselves, seem to have rather odd ideas about what is useful in science and what is irrelevant. Perhaps it is the Supreme Court which is in need of some diversity — the educational field kind.

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  41. The Justices, being none of them educated in science (or engineering) themselves, seem to have rather odd ideas about what is useful in science and what is irrelevant. Perhaps it is the Supreme Court which is in need of some diversity — the educational field kind.

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  42. The Justices, being none of them educated in science (or engineering) themselves, seem to have rather odd ideas about what is useful in science and what is irrelevant. Perhaps it is the Supreme Court which is in need of some diversity — the educational field kind.

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  43. But true objectivity can come only from total non-involvement (cf. celibate male priests making rules for use of the human reproductive system, in particular the female one). Being knowledgeable means bias.

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  44. But true objectivity can come only from total non-involvement (cf. celibate male priests making rules for use of the human reproductive system, in particular the female one). Being knowledgeable means bias.

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  45. But true objectivity can come only from total non-involvement (cf. celibate male priests making rules for use of the human reproductive system, in particular the female one). Being knowledgeable means bias.

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  46. And “reality has a liberal bias.” (Actually, folks on the far left think that reality has a conservative bias. Since their ideology also has problems when it tries to deal with real people.)

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  47. And “reality has a liberal bias.” (Actually, folks on the far left think that reality has a conservative bias. Since their ideology also has problems when it tries to deal with real people.)

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  48. And “reality has a liberal bias.” (Actually, folks on the far left think that reality has a conservative bias. Since their ideology also has problems when it tries to deal with real people.)

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  49. seem to have rather odd ideas about what is useful in science and what is irrelevant…
    An even odder ideas about what is constitutionally relevant.

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  50. seem to have rather odd ideas about what is useful in science and what is irrelevant…
    An even odder ideas about what is constitutionally relevant.

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  51. seem to have rather odd ideas about what is useful in science and what is irrelevant…
    An even odder ideas about what is constitutionally relevant.

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  52. Actually, folks on the far left think that reality has a conservative bias.
    Ttch. No, society has a conservative bias, which causes people to misinterpret reality, which perfectly corresponds to theory, as being messy and unpredictable.
    (This problem tends to mirror itself in all-encompassing theories everywhere on the political spectrum, to be honest.)

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  53. Actually, folks on the far left think that reality has a conservative bias.
    Ttch. No, society has a conservative bias, which causes people to misinterpret reality, which perfectly corresponds to theory, as being messy and unpredictable.
    (This problem tends to mirror itself in all-encompassing theories everywhere on the political spectrum, to be honest.)

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  54. Actually, folks on the far left think that reality has a conservative bias.
    Ttch. No, society has a conservative bias, which causes people to misinterpret reality, which perfectly corresponds to theory, as being messy and unpredictable.
    (This problem tends to mirror itself in all-encompassing theories everywhere on the political spectrum, to be honest.)

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  55. Here’s a problem with where SCOTUS gets its “facts.”
    Some of the factual assertions in recent amicus briefs would not pass muster in a high school research paper. But that has not stopped the Supreme Court from relying on them.

    Some of the factual assertions in recent amicus briefs would not pass muster in a high school research paper. But that has not stopped the Supreme Court from relying on them.

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  56. Here’s a problem with where SCOTUS gets its “facts.”
    Some of the factual assertions in recent amicus briefs would not pass muster in a high school research paper. But that has not stopped the Supreme Court from relying on them.

    Some of the factual assertions in recent amicus briefs would not pass muster in a high school research paper. But that has not stopped the Supreme Court from relying on them.

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  57. Here’s a problem with where SCOTUS gets its “facts.”
    Some of the factual assertions in recent amicus briefs would not pass muster in a high school research paper. But that has not stopped the Supreme Court from relying on them.

    Some of the factual assertions in recent amicus briefs would not pass muster in a high school research paper. But that has not stopped the Supreme Court from relying on them.

    Reply
  58. Here’s a problem with where SCOTUS gets its “facts.”
    And sometimes they just pull ’em out of nether regions.
    One particular instance, some case involving FISA and secret court proceedings, Alito made reference to the ‘courtroom in Independence Hall having to close its doors’.
    Alito was an appellate court judge in Philly. And if he had actually toured Independence Hall, he’d have seen with his own eyes: the courtroom HAS NO DOORS, and the NPS guides explain why: so that justice is done publicly.
    Yeah, perhaps he was just confused. But giving “Strip Search Sammy’s” record of disingenuousness, it seems unlikely.

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  59. Here’s a problem with where SCOTUS gets its “facts.”
    And sometimes they just pull ’em out of nether regions.
    One particular instance, some case involving FISA and secret court proceedings, Alito made reference to the ‘courtroom in Independence Hall having to close its doors’.
    Alito was an appellate court judge in Philly. And if he had actually toured Independence Hall, he’d have seen with his own eyes: the courtroom HAS NO DOORS, and the NPS guides explain why: so that justice is done publicly.
    Yeah, perhaps he was just confused. But giving “Strip Search Sammy’s” record of disingenuousness, it seems unlikely.

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  60. Here’s a problem with where SCOTUS gets its “facts.”
    And sometimes they just pull ’em out of nether regions.
    One particular instance, some case involving FISA and secret court proceedings, Alito made reference to the ‘courtroom in Independence Hall having to close its doors’.
    Alito was an appellate court judge in Philly. And if he had actually toured Independence Hall, he’d have seen with his own eyes: the courtroom HAS NO DOORS, and the NPS guides explain why: so that justice is done publicly.
    Yeah, perhaps he was just confused. But giving “Strip Search Sammy’s” record of disingenuousness, it seems unlikely.

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  61. So, a contribution which fits my self-imposed rule of trying to comment with information rather than opinion (or at least not my opinion).
    FWIW, and I am the only source:
    By an accident of geography and history, the Chief Justice (or equivalent title – I am trying to protect their identity) of a jurisdiction far, far away is a very old friend of mine, whom I have known since student days. When s/he was in London not that long ago, maybe a year, we had lunch together
    During our wide-ranging chat, I said “So I have read that foreign courts used frequently to cite SCOTUS judgements for precedent, because SCOTUS was widely admired, but that this is no longer the case in the wake of such judgements as Citizens United etc. Is this true?” To which my friend replied “Well, they are generally still widely read and admired, but we have learnt to completely disregard any judgements which seem influenced by party political considerations, and these do seem increasingly frequent.”

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  62. So, a contribution which fits my self-imposed rule of trying to comment with information rather than opinion (or at least not my opinion).
    FWIW, and I am the only source:
    By an accident of geography and history, the Chief Justice (or equivalent title – I am trying to protect their identity) of a jurisdiction far, far away is a very old friend of mine, whom I have known since student days. When s/he was in London not that long ago, maybe a year, we had lunch together
    During our wide-ranging chat, I said “So I have read that foreign courts used frequently to cite SCOTUS judgements for precedent, because SCOTUS was widely admired, but that this is no longer the case in the wake of such judgements as Citizens United etc. Is this true?” To which my friend replied “Well, they are generally still widely read and admired, but we have learnt to completely disregard any judgements which seem influenced by party political considerations, and these do seem increasingly frequent.”

    Reply
  63. So, a contribution which fits my self-imposed rule of trying to comment with information rather than opinion (or at least not my opinion).
    FWIW, and I am the only source:
    By an accident of geography and history, the Chief Justice (or equivalent title – I am trying to protect their identity) of a jurisdiction far, far away is a very old friend of mine, whom I have known since student days. When s/he was in London not that long ago, maybe a year, we had lunch together
    During our wide-ranging chat, I said “So I have read that foreign courts used frequently to cite SCOTUS judgements for precedent, because SCOTUS was widely admired, but that this is no longer the case in the wake of such judgements as Citizens United etc. Is this true?” To which my friend replied “Well, they are generally still widely read and admired, but we have learnt to completely disregard any judgements which seem influenced by party political considerations, and these do seem increasingly frequent.”

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  64. GftNC, I think we are all aware of the phenomena. While I grieve that it has happened, I can’t really grieve that courts elsewhere are at least aware of it. After all, they need to know.

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  65. GftNC, I think we are all aware of the phenomena. While I grieve that it has happened, I can’t really grieve that courts elsewhere are at least aware of it. After all, they need to know.

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  66. GftNC, I think we are all aware of the phenomena. While I grieve that it has happened, I can’t really grieve that courts elsewhere are at least aware of it. After all, they need to know.

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  67. wj, of course you’re right, but for me in America’s ongoing scary descent there have been a few terrible moments of clarity, e.g.”Oh my God, America is actually torturing people and justifying it“, and this was another which somehow shockingly got to me, as someone particularly interested in the legal world, “OMG the rest of the world’s courts no longer really respect SCOTUS”. It’s true that the all of you are probably becoming inured to this and no longer feel that shock, as numerous of you have already commented in these threads, but of course that’s also frightening and shocking in itself. And the GOP frontrunner is “honoured” to be complimented by a gangster who he tolerantly acknowledges kills journalists. It’s time to make America great again…..O tempora! O mores!

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  68. wj, of course you’re right, but for me in America’s ongoing scary descent there have been a few terrible moments of clarity, e.g.”Oh my God, America is actually torturing people and justifying it“, and this was another which somehow shockingly got to me, as someone particularly interested in the legal world, “OMG the rest of the world’s courts no longer really respect SCOTUS”. It’s true that the all of you are probably becoming inured to this and no longer feel that shock, as numerous of you have already commented in these threads, but of course that’s also frightening and shocking in itself. And the GOP frontrunner is “honoured” to be complimented by a gangster who he tolerantly acknowledges kills journalists. It’s time to make America great again…..O tempora! O mores!

    Reply
  69. wj, of course you’re right, but for me in America’s ongoing scary descent there have been a few terrible moments of clarity, e.g.”Oh my God, America is actually torturing people and justifying it“, and this was another which somehow shockingly got to me, as someone particularly interested in the legal world, “OMG the rest of the world’s courts no longer really respect SCOTUS”. It’s true that the all of you are probably becoming inured to this and no longer feel that shock, as numerous of you have already commented in these threads, but of course that’s also frightening and shocking in itself. And the GOP frontrunner is “honoured” to be complimented by a gangster who he tolerantly acknowledges kills journalists. It’s time to make America great again…..O tempora! O mores!

    Reply
  70. Americans, generally and with admitted aberations from time to time, are congenital optimists. Which I suspect is a large part of why most of us have not fallen into the gloom that you are experiencing.
    We are worried about the trends we see. But retain the expectation (not just the hope) that we will get thru this. And without irreperable damage to our country and the world. We may be wrong, of course. But we live in hope.

    Reply
  71. Americans, generally and with admitted aberations from time to time, are congenital optimists. Which I suspect is a large part of why most of us have not fallen into the gloom that you are experiencing.
    We are worried about the trends we see. But retain the expectation (not just the hope) that we will get thru this. And without irreperable damage to our country and the world. We may be wrong, of course. But we live in hope.

    Reply
  72. Americans, generally and with admitted aberations from time to time, are congenital optimists. Which I suspect is a large part of why most of us have not fallen into the gloom that you are experiencing.
    We are worried about the trends we see. But retain the expectation (not just the hope) that we will get thru this. And without irreperable damage to our country and the world. We may be wrong, of course. But we live in hope.

    Reply

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