September 5, 2018

Observations from the Kavanaugh hearings.

1. I'm watching the Senate Judiciary Committee hearings on the nomination today, now that they've moved beyond the introductory orations, and I'll make some notes here, using a numbered list, updated throughout the day. I'm using a DVR, so I'm behind real time, and the updates will come as I get to things in my recording, but just as the people in the gallery are — under Senator Grassley's rule — free to shout out whatever they want at any time, you can talk about what you like in the comments. I mean, you can talk about anything in the hearings. The people in Grassley's domain might be yelling about anything. I can't make out the words. I've tried. Was someone shouting "Death is death"? I don't know!

2. Grassley, the Committee chair, seems to have made a decision — in consultation with whom, I don't know — to allow the protests to interrupt the Senators and the nominee willy nilly. Grassley is  not terribly articulate, but he mumbled something about "free speech" and the ability of 300 million Americans to make our own judgment. I interpreted this to mean that he (presumably in consultation with others) has decided that the disruption hurts the anti-Kavanaugh side. Kavanaugh either actively agrees or understands the game, and he's showing patience and fortitude and an ability to maintain focus as he gets right back, in the same calm voice, to whatever point he was in the middle of making. The protesters probably think they represent society's victims, but they sound like nothing but noise, and they're making the serene and diligent Kavanaugh seem like the victim of crude disrespect.

3. Kavanaugh has a little booklet-sized copy of the Constitution, and he's got the effective stage business of holding it up when he says "Constitution." We can see how small it is. It does not partake of the prolixity of a legal code, we constitutional scholars know very well. So he demonstrates his dedication to the document, but also — for those who can see it — demonstrates that everything he contends is in there can't possibly be there except as a high level abstraction, leaving the specific details for most things to be discovered elsewhere. Attesting to his dedication to precedent, Kavanaugh held up the Constitution and said it's rooted in Article III, where the words are "judicial power." The judge still must figure out what the judicial power is, and Kavanaugh was soon enough off onto what's in Federalist 78, but why Federal 78 and not something else? He has his favorite sources, and those sources require interpretation too. Once you find the judges are required to follow precedent, you still have to figure out how far. Kavanaugh keeps bringing up Brown v. Board of Education, but not in the context of precedent, and Brown v. Board of Education went against precedent. This is all first-week-of-Conlaw1 stuff, and of course, Kavanaugh knows it. He's got to simplify to talk to the Senators and to the American people, and it's sophisticated not to get too sophisticated.

4. Kavanaugh says that in all of the roles he undertakes, he looks at how the people who have gone before him have done their work. As a judge he is following the case law, and now, as he sits before this committee, he's following what he calls the "nominee precedent." He's read the old transcripts of hearings, and he's using the precedent, notably the precedent of the very influential Ruth Bader Ginsburg performance of the nominee role. What does it mean to "follow" those who have gone before? Obviously, he follows them in the literal sense of chronology. But he's not bound to do the same. Presumably, he'll use what works well and avoid what he can see with hindsight does not. Maybe someone will ask him if his adherence to judicial precedent is analogous. In "nominee precedent," you're following Ginsburg and not Bork. Aren't you picking and choosing, based on what's pragmatic? There's no authority that binds. Bork's Senate performance is like Plessy v. Ferguson. It's bad. You're using your human judgment and power to see that it's bad, and that's how you follow it.

5. One reason Kavanaugh, like Ginsburg, won't talk about how he will decide cases is that he puts great value on judicial independence. He wants litigants coming before him to feel that he has an open mind, and that the one with the better legal argument wins. If he'd talked about the subject to the Judiciary Committee, he'd feel morally bound to the Senators, and then he wouldn't be a proper judge, but a "delegate of the Judiciary Committee." Saying that, he was implicitly telling the Senators that they are violating the Constitution if they try to nail him down about anything.

6. This only gets me to the end of Grassley's questioning (and he reserved some of his time). You see why I can't really live-blog this thing or even delay-blog it completely. There's too much. Not sure how much of this I can do. Feel free to encourage me.

7. Dianne Feinstein endeavored to be gracious, but her patience wore thin as K consumed her time with his spelled-out explanations of specific cases and the rigors of judicial methodology. I was about to compliment her on refraining from interrupting when she interrupted him. She'd say, "Sorry to interrupt, but..." Once he kept speaking a little and then said, "Sorry to interrupt" — that is, apologizing for interrupting her interruption. K expressed empathy with DF's concerns. He was super-nice to her, and as things progressed, what I read in her face was pain — pain over wanting him to feel pain. But he's so heavily swaddled in judicial values that he's safe from everything. As a judge, he does what he must do as a judge, even when it pains him. He's pre-pained, inoculated to pain, and there's no way to further pain him. The children who die in school shootings... the women who would die from illegal abortions... these causes for empathy receive his empathy, but they do not change what he must do. His cold, dry judicial virtue is supreme and sublime, and he must, as ever, humbly submit. Feinstein was reduced to scoffing that K had learned (from Senators?) to "filibuster."

8. Orrin Hatch. Maybe I should skip the Republicans. It's not as though they're giving me a breather.

9. Patrick Leahy. The gravelly-voiced Senator — who I'm surprised to see is only 78 — laid an elaborate trap that hyper-focused on some typo-ridden email that a fellow named Miranda had stolen from him. The idea seemed to be that Kavanaugh knew about this terrible theft (which I think may have upset Leahy not so much because it was "stolen" as because it was so embarrassingly badly written). It was was only a draft as anyone could see, so anyone would know it was stolen, stolen... Or something like that. Miranda was a mole, a mole, I tell you!! I think this is video of Leahy...



Kavanaugh kept his cool, but he needed to see the email under discussion, so we had a minute of watching Kavanaugh read. Then Kavanaugh asked Leahy to tell him where to look to see what he was talking about, and Leahy, facing the requirement that he too read on camera, and quite apparently not up to the task, said he'd move on to some other question. So much for the trap. Leahy proceeded to some other document-heavy trap that didn't work, and he tried to blame Grassley for keeping something confidential and — with the 85-year-old Feinstein sitting between them — the 84-year-old Grassley went ballistic on Leahy. Zero progress was made against Kavanaugh, and I think Kavanaugh had to suppress laughter. Here at Meadhouse, we frequently paused and laughed and were all Ahh, but the strawberries that's... that's where I had them. They laughed at me and made jokes but I proved beyond the shadow of a doubt and with... geometric logic...

10. From my handwritten notes, quoting Dick Durbin: "The things I did were unimaginable." He was referring to his work in a slaughterhouse, after getting Kavanaugh to say that the "dirtiest job" Kavanaugh ever had was construction work (or maybe mowing lawns). I wonder what exactly Dick Durbin did in the slaughterhouse, but it was a set-up to excoriate Kavanaugh for going out of his way to decide a case against some workers in a slaughterhouse. It reminded me of the Gorsuch hearings, the way the Democratic Senators got pretty far along toward proving Gorsuch didn't care if a man froze to death. GOP nominees lack empathy. They don't know the suffering in the real world. That's the theme.

11. Senator Whitehouse had some good material, but he was too disorganized and self-indulgent to make it work. A hardworking, on-task, on-the-ball Senator might have built the argument deftly, but Whitehouse was not the man for the job. The idea was something about the role of the Federalist Society in getting judges (including Kavanaugh) nominated, the participation of right-wing groups in bringing cases and filing amicus briefs, and the success of corporations in winning 5-4 Supreme Court cases (where the 5 Justices in the majority were appointed by Republican Presidents). Whitehouse kept reminiscing about his own cases — back in the day when he was a lawyer — and musing generally about various suspicions that have crossed his mind and it's just not good if people think the Court is political. Of course, Kavanaugh coasted through all of this, repeating the standard message that he's dedicated to judicial independence and deciding cases according to the law.

12. Not long after that I got tired. The channel I was watching (Fox News) turned away to cover President Trump and someone from Kuwait — a great country with a lot of great people many of whom Trump has known for a long time. It was refreshing to hear Trump talk after all that Senatorial smeech. The reporters were yelling questions at Trump, and Trump was rattling out answers. Woodward's book is "fiction." Canada will come to a trade agreement. Three million innocent people are surrounded in Syria and Trump is watching, so the Syrian military had better be careful. After that it was hard to settle in to Mike Lee walking Kavanaugh through the Quirin case. It has rained all day, and it was getting dark. What a crazy slog! It's absurd to expect the nominee to be up for this grilling for 8 hours with scarcely a rest. But it was kind of hard on me too. And it's almost 7 o'clock. The "Team of 9" we're thinking of here is not the Supreme Court, but the Milwaukee Brewers. It's the 3rd game of the series with the Chicago Cubs, and we've won the first 2. What an amusing game last night, no? I love when runs are scored in all sorts of weird ways. What was it — 8 runs in a row scored on plays that were not hits?

13. So that's it for me on the Kavanaugh hearings today.

14. It was the emir of Kuwait. Here's video:



15. Here's the video of the Kavanaugh hearing today, including the part that is still happening as I write this (at 7:17 PM Central Time). How brutal! I do wish I'd jumped ahead to see the more junior Senators. I'm especially interested in the 3 who might be running for President (Klobuchar, Booker, and Harris). I'll probably get to these tomorrow.

257 comments:

«Oldest   ‹Older   201 – 257 of 257
Ann Althouse said...

"I understand why Althouse is focusing on the questioning of Kavanaugh by Democrats, but Volokh was some pretty interesting clips from his dialogue with Sen. Lee (R)."

There's interesting stuff throughout, but it's very hard to blog the entire thing. You have to cut corners one way or the other.

I could see deciding to just pick any one Senator and to go deep on whatever exchange he had with K.

Although my channel cut away during Mike Lee's questioning. I know I can find it elsewhere, but it sort of broke the spell for me.

wildswan said...

The protestors get up sequentially shouting which is continuously noisy; but Sen. Grassley who must have found out in advance how the demo was organized just continues the hearings over the noise. Probably the Dems expected Grassley to call for closed hearings and then they would walk out. But he didn't so the Dems had to go ahead unprepared. Leahy handed out a memo which didn't say what he expected, Hirono mumbled. But my guy, Kavanaugh, answered crisply and looked good. So, Republican victory. Plus, as featured above there are pictures of money being handed out to women who then were arrested inside the Capital, shouting. So Dems won't scream without pay these days. How much do the get? There's probably a pay rate it's so common right now.

Birkel said...

Althouse,
I took no offense and have no desire to repost anything.
I just wanted (on the off chance you cared) you to know I was trying to play by your rules.
I respect that this is your website and we are here by your leave.

And I never want you to feel otherwise.

Thank you.

Josephbleau said...

Durbin the Dick: "But Mr. Kavinaugh Jr., What About Dingle Norwood? I would like to know your opinion of Dingle Norrrrwood."

Josephbleau said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Lloyd W. Robertson said...

"The channel I was watching (Fox News) turned away to cover President Trump and someone from Kuwait — a great country with a lot of great people many of whom Trump has known for a long time. It was refreshing to hear Trump talk after all that Senatorial smeech. The reporters were yelling questions at Trump, and Trump was rattling out answers. Woodward's book is "fiction." Canada will come to a trade agreement. Three million innocent people are surrounded in Syria and Trump is watching, so the Syrian military had better be careful. After that it was hard to settle in to Mike Lee walking Kavanaugh through the Quirin case."
This is very funny. I think you're getting the feel, the rhythm, the humour of Trump--how he can cut through all the chatter and speak to us. He's really very close to saying "to hell with people I haven't actually met"; yet he knows he has to say something diplomatic, so he makes a realeffort. This guy here is probably OK, and I've met many great people from Kuwait.

Guildofcannonballs said...

http://www.unz.com/akarlin/stupid-people/

I felt really well about myself and my lot.

Then Althouse demonstrated why without deep convictions of moderation free feelz might be un\dis- ordered.

I always wanted to relate to the common man, and realization I am one (not sure if PERIOD!!! full stop finito el ende fuchin' ovahhhh.)

Anyway, I am, per hur hil (Churchill c.f.) at dang Althouse feet again. Truly all the encouragement me musterin' allowx for.

Lloyd W. Robertson said...

"The channel I was watching (Fox News) turned away to cover President Trump and someone from Kuwait — a great country with a lot of great people many of whom Trump has known for a long time. It was refreshing to hear Trump talk after all that Senatorial smeech. The reporters were yelling questions at Trump, and Trump was rattling out answers. Woodward's book is "fiction." Canada will come to a trade agreement. Three million innocent people are surrounded in Syria and Trump is watching, so the Syrian military had better be careful. After that it was hard to settle in to Mike Lee walking Kavanaugh through the Quirin case."
This is very funny. I think you're getting the feel, the rhythm, the humour of Trump--how he can cut through all the chatter and speak to us. He's really very close to saying "to hell with people I haven't actually met"; yet he knows he has to say something diplomatic, so he makes a realeffort. This guy here is probably OK, and I've met many great people from Kuwait.

Rick said...

Why are you worrying so much about trolls?

Don't waste your time on what you can detect is crap... Just read efficiently and critically


Identifying whose comments can be skipped in their entirety is quite efficient.

BUMBLE BEE said...

The wife started watching at the opening bell. She's had to stop. She's watching reruns of Law and Order. I wonder if these protesters are being paid a "living wage"? He's no wise latina but Kavanaugh looks to be bullet proof in these hearings. I can't wait to read his opinions.

hawkeyedjb said...

"she is just Hillary without the charm"

Double negative. I don't think that's allowed.

buwaya said...

This is as so often a tremendous effort. A whole day of paying attention.
The material is often very tedious and most people could not casually listen to so much bumf.
Althouse has a great deal of patience, which is perhaps a professional trait.

hawkeyedjb said...

All these policy preferences and outcomes demanded by the lefty senators really does make it clear - the Supreme Court is just another legislative branch to them. They think they can take the House, maybe the Senate, but they see the Court slipping away. And because it's easier for the Court to make new laws, that's the one they really want.

Birkel said...

hawkeyejdb,

You were not supposed to notice that the courts are now super-legislatures.
Shame on you for noticing.

Original Mike said...

Kamala Harris will never be President (IMHO). She’s not very bright.

PeterK said...

you should really watch on c-span.org. there you can also record the whole thing. better than watching it on cable tv where they are more than likely to interrupt

stephen cooper said...

Here is the sad thing.

Conservatives are not watching these silly Q and As, they do not want to think that Kavanaugh might be a traitor to the cause like Souter and Kennedy were, and to a lesser degree, Roberts. They just do not want to entertain that thought. So they avoid watching, at any level of detail, the answers of Kavanaugh.

So basically, in a country of hundreds of millions of people, one or two dozen people, at most, are willing to say that this individual does not look virtuous. I could be wrong, but to me, the guy looks more like Iago or Hamlet than he should. And for that reason he does not deserve our support, just as, had we been less foolish, we would have understood that Souter and Kennedy and, to a lesser degree, Roberts, did not deserve our support, if we cared about the rule of law. Well, I could be wrong, but poor Kavanaugh said Kennedy was his hero. Can you imagine saying those words with any ounce of self-respect, if you know anything about recent Supreme Court history? That statement by Kavanaugh is a huge red flag. When you say Anthony Kennedy is your hero you are basically saying you have contempt for people who consider Anthony Kennedy to be a very foolish and bad judge. Which he was, trust me. Read the poor sap's idiot-wind opinions on abortion issues, just for starters.


Liberals are watching, but only in the desperate hope of finding a gotcha moment. Well, apparently there was not one today.

This is not the way a republic should be run.

Saint Croix said...

thanks AA, great post, I missed all of the confirmation hearings today (work) so I really appreciate your play-by-play

LA_Bob said...

Stephen Cooper said, "Here is the sad thing..."

Well, if you're right (and I certainly hope you're not), in a couple of years, you can call him Justice Cave-Enough.

Saint Croix said...

When you say Anthony Kennedy is your hero you are basically saying you have contempt for people who consider Anthony Kennedy to be a very foolish and bad judge.

Specifically, he said this...

"Some 30 years ago, Judge Anthony Kennedy sat in this seat." (True).

“He became one of the most consequential justices in American history,” Kavanaugh said. (True).

To me that word, "consequential," is an interesting choice. He doesn't say he was a great judge, a model judge, a wonderful judge, an inspirational judge. What he says is there were consequences to putting Kennedy on the Supreme Court. I don't disagree with that in the slightest!

“I served as his law clerk in 1993. To me, Justice Kennedy is a mentor, a friend and a hero."

To me this is a personal remark about a man he knows well. That's why he preceded it with To me. It's like saying nice things about George Washington or Thomas Jefferson instead of saying "horrible slave-owner."

“As a member of the court, he was a model of civility and collegiality. He fiercely defended the independence of the judiciary,” said Kavanaugh. (True)

Kavanaugh is no longer talking about his personal feelings about a man he knows well. Now he's describing his work as a Supreme Court Justice.

“And he was a champion of liberty,” said Kavanaugh. “If you had to sum up Justice Kennedy's entire career in one word, liberty, Justice Kennedy established a legacy of liberty for ourselves and our posterity.”

I think this is bullshit, personally. There is no liberty when you have unelected jurists doing whatever the fuck they want to do while citing the word "liberty" in the 14th Amendment, like it gives them carte blanche to upend the law and dictate whatever shit you want to be free to do. I think this jurisprudence is anti-liberty. But certainly Kennedy prattled about liberty a lot.

hey, you could always bring back Lochner, Kavanaugh!

What I liked is that Kavanaugh brought out the Constitution, like Hugo Black used to do. Althouse made fun of that. But I'm a big fan of the actual text of the Constitution. The more they stick with that, the happier I am.

Anyway, the man's trying to be confirmed without actually lying. Cut him a little slack.

Guildofcannonballs said...

"Mexican White,
Work me all night.

C'Mon let's work,
Little baby

Let the music move you.

Work, little baby,
Let.the music take contol,
Letyour body move you."

Cocaine and Cocaine Musit Factorh.

stephen cooper said...

Bob - it is not a question of me being right or not. I really don't know. I look at the guy's face and he looks like someone who never once took a strong stand for anything in his entire life, and then I look again and he seems just as solid as Scalia or Alito would have looked, had they been born the same year he was. I am just pointing out that we don't know, and that seems wrong. People who are being hired for jobs this important should be more forthcoming.

I hope he does not want to be Justice Cave-Enough.

Still, I will never respect a man who calls Justice Kennedy his hero. You have to be of a certain age to remember how devastated good American lawyers were when Kennedy started issuing his desolatingly selfish and arrogant opinions, about 3 years into his lifetime appointment. As Althouse likes to say, that (i.e., the failures of Kennedy to be competent) s Con Law 101, but it is really worse than that. People worked so hard for Reagan and Bush to get elected, and those people were rewarded with losers like Souter and Kennedy. Imagine if Obama had nominated Roseanne Barr to the Supreme Court, if you want to understand the level of betrayal Kennedy, Kavaaugh's "hero", engaged in.

Well I hope I am wrong too.

stephen cooper said...

Saint Croix - those are all good points, and I hope you are right.

langford peel said...

Wasn't Kamela Harris the whore who got her start by spreading her legs for Willie Browm?

Where are all the #MeToo bitches who don't want to see a woman get ahead by giving head?

Guildofcannonballs said...

Starship Troopers: Sarah Palin.?

I love Sarah now more than I had (or hadn't).

I appreciate Heilein more than I had.

Guildofcannonballs said...

I went and saw Palin open for Trump at the WCSC. it was in CO and e ferred.to as wester summit con.

saw danny caplus and craig silverman as we walked.out becore Trump: we both came for Palin.

Saint Croix said...

Saint Croix - those are all good points, and I hope you are right.

Me too!

I'm the guy who didn't vote for Trump because I didn't believe he was a pro-lifer and I didn't trust him to pick from his list of jurors, so I voted for Gary Johnson instead, who was also not a pro-lifer. I felt like I had zero pro-life options in 2016.

So imagine my happiness that he nominated Neil Gorsuch and Brett Kavanaugh!

I mean, this could have gone so many bad ways it's not even funny.

Reagan could have gone with Mary Ann Glendon. Instead he selected Sandra Day O'Connor. (Oops).

Clarence Thomas could have meekly resigned to spend some time with his family. Instead he got mad!

Anyway, I am reasonably certain that Roe v. Wade will be overturned in my lifetime. It's a super-weak precedent. Among other things that makes it wobbly, it's already been partially overruled once, in Planned Parenthood v. Casey.

And people are still pissed off, on both sides. Plus you still have the problem of the media having to censor this violence and hide it from the American people. What is the Supreme Court going to do or say if and when we start seeing imagines of a 22-week unborn child who has been decapitated and dismembered on ABC, CBS, or NBC? I mean, pro-lifers don't have to convince Dan Rather to be more pro-life. We just have to convince Fox News.

Saint Croix said...

To me, the way you overturn Roe v. Wade is by saying…

1) an unborn baby is a person with a right to life
2) the Constitution does not speak to when life begins or when people die
3) that is to be decided by state law
4) all the Constitution requires is that whatever your death statute says, it must apply to all people in equal fashion
5) aside from this, abortion is to be decided by the states

I don't think any of them are going to do this. None of the dissenters have ever argued the unborn, or partially born, infant is a person, a human being with rights. I don't think Kavanaugh is going to do this, either. He'll either confirm Roe v. Wade, again, which will piss off the right, again. Or he'll vote to overturn Roe v. Wade and send it back to the states. That will piss off the left, which in turn will piss off the right.

If you actually want to settle it, the equal protection clause is an excellent way to do that, since applying the same rule to other people that you apply to yourself is a brilliant way of making sure we're as fair as possible.

Defining an unborn baby as an other, as a sub-human, as a non-person, as property, like a dog or a cat, except beneath a dog or a cat, because we can pass laws protecting dogs and cats, right now the unborn human child is sub-dog and sub-cat, that is a guarantee that your "law" is going to lead to atrocities.

But so far nobody on the Supreme Court is willing to speak for the humanity of the child and her legal rights. Without that, overturning Roe v. Wade doesn't fix the anger, it just unleashes it.

Michael Fitzgerald said...

Stephen Cooper, were you the one who wrote the NYT's anonymous op-ed?

Guildofcannonballs said...

Say tbis: despite untruth happiness.

Guildofcannonballs said...

Say this, is despite untruth happiness.

Saint Croix said...

The Originalists claim that they can Devine the original intent of the founders by going back to the original documents and arguments at the Convention…

The Living Document adherents maintain that the Constitution must be interpreted by the modern meaning of the words and clauses.


What I believe in (and Kavanaugh says this too) is the public meaning of words. Not secret meaning, and certainly not anti-meaning.

What does the word "person" in the Fourteenth Amendment mean? It means live human being. That's what the word has always meant. That's the public understanding of the word. It is quite upsetting--I would say dishonest--to argue that some human beings can be defined as non-persons.

So, yes, you could use "original intent" to subvert the text. You could say, for instance...

The Framers of the Fourteenth Amendment did not intend to protect unborn children, or white people, or women, and so they are outside the clause.

To make that argument, you would have to argue that some human beings can be defined as non-persons. You would have to reject the common understanding of the word "person." And in place of this written text, you are claiming that you understand the authors secret thoughts, which contradict the written text.

It's quite dubious!

Anyway, that's one way the text can be subverted. Another way is to simply ignore the text, or wrench it out of context. Or make the power grab. White men used to be persons, in the 19th century, but they are no longer so.

There are many ways to deconstruct text. But to argue there is no text, no written law that can be understood and followed, is just silly. After all, we put our arguments into words because we have faith that our words can be understood by others. Just the fact that you write on this blog suggests that you are a textualist. If you have such little faith in the public understanding of words, why write at all?

Rosalyn C. said...

I noticed that Corey Booker started out hysterical in his first round and by the second round he had calmed down, maybe someone told him how absurd his histrionics were, but he still had trouble allowing Kavanaugh the opportunity to speak. When Kavanaugh spoke he set Booker straight. Kamala Harris likewise was extraordinarily hostile in her first round and by the second round IMO she also calmed down and in fact appeared to be laying on the charm and feminine wiles. She's definitely got the charisma/flrtatiousness when she chooses.

The weird thing about these "progressive" Senators attempting to denigrate the character of the judge is that Kavanaugh has been extraordinarily proactive about encouraging black lawyers (from Yale) to apply for clerkships and generous in helping them with the process of applying. It was impressive how he kept his cool and laid out the facts of how much he's been doing for black lawyers. It's hard to hate a guy who's doing so much to help your people, even if he is a white guy.

An interesting factoid somebody brought up was that in terms of voting on the DC court, Kavanaugh and Merrick Garland agreed about 93% of the time. So what's the big deal? Democrats are morons for making such a fuss.

Saint Croix said...

Kavanaugh and Merrick Garland agreed about 93% of the time. So what's the big deal?

When I was in law school, abortion was just one of the many, many legal issues that occupied my time and my thoughts. There are so many legal issues that come up! And it is interesting that Garland and Kavanaugh agree so often.

Hey, why not nominate Garland!

Or why not confirm Kavanaugh? He's 93% Garland!

The problem, of course, is the 7% of disagreement. That might seem minor, if you're a math nerd. But if the 7% disagreement is about whether you're going to stab a baby in the neck or not, that's a major disagreement, not a minor one.

Tom Grey said...

In the Trump Kuwait video, Trump talks about how he had been hearing even 10 years earlier that Bret Kavanaugh should be on the SC -- "you won't find anyone better ..."
As usual, if Trump likes you (today), you're great, none found could be better. Ready to buy now? (Now how much would you pay? but wait, there's more...)

Would the Democrats really destroy Social Security? Would Chavez, 20 years ago, really destroy Venezuela's society? We now know the answer is yes to #2. Even tho the Chavez supporters, including US Democrats, would say that was never his intention.

Dems will claim Trump's words about Dems destroying SS are "lies". But I actually see them as true. Yet in fact, predictions about the future today are never true or false, today -- they come true, or they don't come true, or they are never tried.

On Kavanaugh, "women will die" is a prediction that almost certainly won't come true in the way the hysterical Dems are screeching. What's that great word? Smeech?

Tina Trent said...

Senator Whitehouse is creepy like a villain from a 1980s tv show where the killer is always the upper class chubby guy who stayed home and inherited the town bank. Or, the senate seat. His argument is utterly inane. Democrats have their own massive nonprofit ideological apparatus for promoting and nominating judges. It is identical behavior on both sides. There are a dozen groups on the left serving as the Federalist Society does. There is the Constitution Society. The ACLU of course weighs in on nominations and appointments -- and lobbies hard. EMILY'S List, I believe, does judicial appointments. I'd have to check that. NALEO. NARAL. Planned Parenthood PAC. And so on.

Most importantly, though, the ABA, which exercises official influence over judicial nominarions and appointments, has become a hard leftist organization thanks to huge cash drops by George Soros. This is a disgrace upon the legal profession. All lawyers are forced -- forced -- to finance the network of state bar associations that undergird the ABA's federal political and professional power. And they take that money and work for one political party. It's like union thuggery. At the state level, the abuses are more or less kept in check. But the ABA has abandoned principle and purpose.

But only the Federalist Society brings politics into the process? Whitehouse should be embarrassed to make that point.

Kevin said...

“A 5-4 ruling is set in stone. Change the ideology of just one Justice, and you have the exact opposite ruling now set in stone. This is not law.”

Neither is a unanimous ruling from nine judges who ignore the Constitution in order to “evolve” it.

Kevin said...

The text of the Constitution is not that unclear we should constantly be receiving 5-4 decisions.

The rights of the people are mutually-reinforcing, weakening one puts stress on the others which is felt across society.

Known Unknown said...

85, 83, 78.

Fucking retire already.

Known Unknown said...

"she is just Hillary without the charm"

Hillary is Hillary without the charm.

Bad Lieutenant said...

I'm the guy who didn't vote for Trump because I didn't believe he was a pro-lifer and I didn't trust him to pick from his list of jurors, so I voted for Gary Johnson instead, who was also not a pro-lifer. I felt like I had zero pro-life options in 2016.

Saint, I thought I helped you get your mind right about Trump before the election. Sorry it didn't take. However, this is encouraging inasmuch as it implies there are millions of latent PDT voters out there, who withheld their support pending performance, and have seen the performance.

jimbino said...

Grassley needs lessons in pronouncing jucidiary. I'd hate to hear his treatment of auxiliary.

jimbino said...

Kavanaugh keeps holding up "judicial independence" as an important principle in judging. Judicial independence, like "separation of powers" and even "rule of law" are extra-constitutional principles, as are the concepts of "precedence" and "stare decisis."

It makes you wonder how many similar hidden principles (e.g. "adherence to Catholic doctrine") might be active in our Roman Catholic-Jewish SCOTUS.

readering said...

I know all the folks here who want recent FISA applications declassified aren't troubled about release of 17 year old WH emails.

Matt Sablan said...

"I know all the folks here who want recent FISA applications declassified aren't troubled about release of 17 year old WH emails."

-- There's a difference between "I would like the FISA applications declassified through the proper channels" and "Booker had a hissy fit and illegally released documents, while lying that they were about the Bush administration conspiring to racially profile black people."

The fact you associated the two kinds of declassifications shows you don't have a firm background on the issues related to the two of them.

RobinGoodfellow said...

"Can you think of any laws that give government the power to make decisions about the male body?" Harris asked.

He should have responded, “You mean like the military draft?”

readering said...

We have a dratf?

Birkel said...

We have Selected Services which only matters because a draft could be re-imposed.

John Pickering said...

So interesting that Ann evidently deletes without notice the comments she thinks are off topic, including those she finds embarrassing or insufficiently obsequious. Not a fair dealer! And a liar, when it comes to her promises to resume her Kavanaugh hearing blogging -- lots of stuff she doesn't like to hear, so she clams up. Not cool, Ann.

Rusty said...

John. You haven't been here very long, have you. Althouse doesn't like obsequious. Althouse likes a well thought out argument. Or at least something humorous.
And you got squat.

Birkel said...

John Pickering,
Kavanaugh will be confirmed.
Boo!

John Pickering said...

Rusty, Ann demonstrates day after day her inability to think her way out of a paper bag. Yesterday Ann decreed her comments section was off limits to anything but obsequies to Kavanaugh, when the news about the inside Trump leaker broke. That's when she edited the section to purge what she found disagreeable to think about. Ann loves obsequious, are you kidding? Kavanaugh? Trump? You may well bathe in the same milk white bath of love for this greasy grubby criminal in the white house that Ann does, and you may think with her same precision. Today, Ann said that she thinks there is no person who wrote the op-ed, that it was some edit of the woodward book. Really, Ann? Who edited, the Times editors? She shows no knowledge of the ground rules of the big newsrooms she likes to la-di-da about. So if you're down with Ann as an astute up to date interpreter, then I think she's pointing you down the wrong road. I mean this in good will as a person who has been reading here long enough to get the idea, and to have always thought of Ann as perhaps someone who sometimes might respond to the better angels of her nature, in the sense that Lincoln meant it.

Anyway, I only remember one joke at a time: What does the J in Donald J Trump stand for?

Jenius. Ha!

John Pickering said...

I want to add in the first sentence "or unwillingness" after "inability" because part of my point is that Ann wittingly deludes her readers, or encourages their delusions. Ann has an able mind that she sometimes disables, for reasons I don't think she acknowledges herself. Again, in good will.

Dex Quire said...

The was not just well done, that was brilliant Ms. A ...

John Pickering said...

Of course now I have to correct my post just above, I reread Ann's post and it affirms her trust in the NYT editors; I had first understood her to promote the conspiracy theory that she says she rejects. So that's all to the good, whew, she was showing her better angels right there. Come on Ann.

0_0 said...

I learned that Kamala has never heard of the Selective Service.

AZ Bob said...

Booker's violation of Senate rules by releasing confidential material is funny because he is calling himself Spartacus. The document he released is about racial profiling and sounds on the surface to be something damning. But the funny thing is that Kavanaugh actual statement in the document is against racial profilingt. Apparently Booker was never good at reading comprehension.

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