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Communing With Ronald Reagan's Ghost at CPAC 2016 Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=32445"><span class="small">Jeb Lund, Rolling Stone</span></a>   
Monday, 07 March 2016 09:37

Lund writes: "The GOP more or less believes Reagan is still alive, as was clear from his former assistant's packed presentation last Thursday."

Ronald Reagan at CPAC 1967. (photo: Cynthia Johnson/The LIFE Images Collection/Getty Images)
Ronald Reagan at CPAC 1967. (photo: Cynthia Johnson/The LIFE Images Collection/Getty Images)


Communing With Ronald Reagan's Ghost at CPAC 2016

By Jeb Lund, Rolling Stone

07 March 16

 

The GOP more or less believes Reagan is still alive, as was clear from his former assistant's packed presentation Thursday

f you have a white-collar job, you've probably been to a national conference, sitting through a weekend of presentations, held mid-winter in a warm-weather state. By day, you sit in a convention center and eat $20 sandwiches in between racking up accreditation or business cards. Later, bei Nacht und Nebel, you get ripshit on margaritas and maybe commit adultery.

The Conservative Political Action Conference, or CPAC, held in frozen mid-winter Maryland, is nothing like this. For one thing, everyone at least pretends to be against adultery. For another, this is a conference of desperate, existential true believers — like if the guy at the American Dental Association conference showing off a new dental bonding believed, literally, that without that glue the core of civilization would be ripped apart.

While the suits and the Powerpoints might look like an ADA talk, the mental and spiritual effect is a lot more like a militarized pep rally or a last-ditch USO show on American soil. You can always see one person dressed like a mascot, and everyone on stage is either a coach or a cheerleader. Our team cannot lose, but someone is always trying to stop us. We have simultaneously never been in a greater state of danger or institutional perfection.

Imagine trying to hold a class under such circumstances.

Folks watching 24-hour news at home see the big keynote speakers: Ted Cruz, Sarah Palin's Statler-and-Waldorf act with a Big Gulp, a gun whose laser sight projects an image of a minority with a voter ID card. What they can't see is day after day of activist training seminars and open discussions, all conducted under the tortured logic of an orthodoxy that grows ever more rigid even as it gets more simplistic. This is like taking classes in counting angels on the head of a pin while also taking it as an article of faith that there are No Fat Chicks and that math is bad.

Let's get the easy jokes out of the way first.

There was The Blaze's Oliver Darcy hosting a seminar called "Become the Press," perhaps because "The Blind Leading the Blind" was taken. One way into the media: "You can become a contributor. At The Blaze, we have a contributors program." Darcy also sagely noted that people have cameras in their phones now, which means that information is more democratized. If you don't want to fiddle with YouTube or have your own distribution platform, he suggested that you can send videos to journalists. You know who has journalists? The Blaze has journalists! 

After surfing a tide of uptalking? interrupted by um/like/yaknow as little as every eight seconds for a grueling almost 20 minutes, Darcy threw things to Q&A, where we had to discuss whether Twitter removing the verified checkmark from a Breitbart assclown's account was the first step in the liberal social media's plans to silence right-wing voices. The audience seemed to think it was, but Darcy, to his credit, demurred and only speculated about media double-standards.

But if it's social media you wanted, your best bet was a seminar called "Engaging Millennials."

Despite being scheduled for 30 minutes, the biographical introductions and general pitches took 26, which seems like overdoing it even if your point all along is that millennials are somehow generationally uncharacteristically self-absorbed. Let's look at those bios/pitches

Lawrence Jones: I became a conservative, and why don't we talk about hip-hop because it mentions money?
Zuri Davis: Here is my biography, and if you talk to people like me, they will listen.
Anthony Rodriguez: We don't all support Bernie Sanders, because we are different.
Iris Somberg: This is a direct quote: "I'm Iris Somberg, and I work at a boutique PR firm in Georgetown."
Kirk Higgins: (This guy wore a button-down and had a thick but trimmed beard, which made him look like playoff Kyle Orton. Then he stated that he — millennial — rarely uses the Internet and has never sent a tweet, and suddenly he seemed a lot more like Al from Home Improvement or one of those soft-rock 1970s ballad-mongers who always sang ambiguously enough about passion that it could have described a lover or Jesus Christ.)

Following the biographies, one millennial ran down some key strategies for addressing millennials. For instance, "We're emotional!" This puts them in rarified company with everyone in the United Federation of Planets who isn't a Vulcan, V'Ger or Mr. Data. 

Next, we were on to things to focus on during millennial outreach efforts, including: be authentic, be forward-looking, have a vision of positive goals rather than focusing on negatives, recognize prospective voters' individual interests, then stress freedom and opportunity. In short, talk to them like every other prospective voter in the same way as every campaign in modern history.

Things not addressed: college debt, how repealing Obamacare would make almost all millennials uninsured, the dearth of quality blue-collar jobs for millennials who forego college and potential debt, and the paucity of jobs for everyone else. Oh well. At least in this respect millennials are being underserved on the issues as much as anyone else.

The day's most informative seminar, by far, was Mike Madrid's "Talking to Minority Voters: Making the Case for Conservatives Nationally." Madrid is a messaging expert in California, specifically on Latino issues, and you could see the horrible bind he was in.

Madrid outlined a ton of great news for conservatives: that there's a new Latino voter every 30 seconds in the United States — from birth, he emphasized, rather than immigration — but that Latino immigrants tend to have high military participation rates, come from very religious countries and that Latinos overall have the highest entrepreneurial rate in the country. Better still, while Latino registered Democrats outnumber registered Republicans 4:1, Latino Republicans are far more reliable voters. 

"I'm not saying there aren't undocumented people on welfare," he said. Then he added, "People do not put themselves and their families through all that to go on welfare. They do. not. come. to. this. country. to. get. on. welfare."

He's right, and to hear him tell it, the Republican Party could sit back, stamp their boilerplate ideas and watch Latinos mint election win after election win.

The second part of his seminar's title, "Making the Case for Conservatives Nationally," was where Madrid's presentation hit a snag. He welcomed questions, and when people started asking them, the rosy picture he painted began to wilt away and leave a coiled field of thorns in its place, like concertina wire. 

"I was upset to see that the media didn't pick up on the fact that Ted Cruz was the first Latino to win a primary in this country. I think we should be pointing that out," a member of the audience said.

"Ted Cruz was that," Madrid agreed, "but he also said he'd deport 11 million people — who are already here. What are people going to listen to more? They're gonna listen to that."

Madrid then outlined something hundreds before him have said: that the Republican Party can win elections simply by eating into the percentage of the Latino vote, without even bothering to grow the overall numbers — that, in fact, if the Republican Party had only maintained the small increasing trend in Latino voters it had enjoyed just a few decades ago, it would be winning now. What reversed that trend was the Republican Party. 

Unspoken, hanging in the air, was the name Trump. But alongside it sat the names Cruz and Rubio. And Bush, too. And Romney. And Kris Kobach and Jeff Sessions. And Jan "Headless Bodies in the Desert" Brewer, and Steve "Calves Like Cantaloupes" King, and a long, long list of national leaders who have said the same and worse.

Mike Madrid was, at heart, conducting a seminar in decades of systemic, relentless self-sabotage. Unspoken, too, was that he has no answer. Because his party will not accept it.

Immediately on the heels of Mike Madrid's stone bummer came a bit of a palate cleanser: Peggy Grande's "If Reagan Ran Today: What 2016 Activists Must Learn from Reagan’s Leadership Style."

"I'm going to talk about this man, this person. He really showed me how to lead, how to live," Grande began. "There were not two Ronald Reagans. He was the same man before the cameras and behind them… 

"He never takes a bad picture, by the way…

"He was a man of authenticity…

"There was nothing like seeing the president behind the wheel of his Jeep…

"He lived a life of humility…

"Sometimes his eyes would even mist with tears as he sang about his beloved America."

These were the lessons activists could learn about leading today. Really. Along with, apparently, bring thank-you cards with you, so you can begin writing your thank-you card for winning the Medal of Freedom on the flight home on your private jet.

Grande's presentation was one of those rare offerings that instantaneously roasts itself. She illustrated the intimacy of their relationship by talking about their "wonderful system of communication and scheduling," including mentioning how she would make sure he had cash in his pocket when he went out for haircuts. It's heartwarming until you remember that this is a person who was in charge of the free world and who almost certainly suffered from Alzheimer's disease as early as 1984. 

If you wanted to be a hater, you could focus on Grande mentioning all the global political leaders who insisted on visiting Reagan at his ranch, all of whom were by then either loathed or irrelevant in their home nations and thus the sort of people who traveled abroad but had no reason to stop in DC. Or her recounting of pre-Reagan history as, "Morale was low. Taxes were high. Interest rates, right?" Or her reading her own prompt, "Now I'm going to convict all of you the way he convicts me."

After leading the room through multiple presidential yuk-yuk ain't he just like one of us, and with such a sunny disposition! anecdotes, Grande grew hushed describing his funeral.

"You could hear the clip-clop of hooves and the whinny of horses. Sounds that you knew he would love so much. And we had to reluctantly say goodbye."

On its own, this shouldn't seem too bad. Everyone has their heroes, and everyone lays it on a little thick when it comes to legends within their particular fandoms.

But the Republican Party has spent the last eight years condemning Democrats for treating Obama like a rock star (there was even a 2008 campaign ad about this) and later as the "Obamessiah." The conservative vision of Democrats is of people with such insipid loyalty that they adopted a mindless cult of personality as their only moral and philosophical lodestar.

The sort of people only too happy to issue those condemnations spent 30 minutes Thursday essentially watching a slideshow conducted by the personal secretary of a man who died 12 years ago and hasn't been in office for a quarter-century. On multiple occasions, she lapsed into present tense, as if Reagan were still alive, which the GOP more or less believes.

Grande's seminar was held in the same room as Mike Madrid's. The attendance for hers was much better.


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Why Bernie Sanders Won Super Tuesday Print
Sunday, 06 March 2016 15:06

Uygur writes: "Time is on Bernie's side. The more he runs, the more people find out about him. Everyone already knows Clinton. She's gaining no new voters. Every day he gains ground."

Bernie Sanders. (photo: Rick Wilking/Reuters)
Bernie Sanders. (photo: Rick Wilking/Reuters)


Why Bernie Sanders Won Super Tuesday

By Cenk Uygur, Reader Supported News

06 March 16

 

ernie won Super Tuesday! Let me explain why.

Going into tonight it was unclear what was going to happen because the polling was so shoddy in some states, especially Colorado and Minnesota. Those two states are so important because of what they mean for the future.

It turns out that Hillary Clinton won all of the states she was supposed to win -- and a narrow victory in Massachusetts (remember she won Mass. by 15 points against Obama and still lost the primary in 2008). But Bernie Sanders had resounding wins in CO & MN. Those two states are much more indicative of the states that are coming in the rest of the primary schedule.

All of these Southern states were Hillary Clinton's best states (by the way, also irrelevant places to have strength in for the general election). She's used up most of her ammo and doesn't even know what kind of trouble she's in. Right before the voting, she pivoted toward the right again in anticipation of the general election. Big mistake. She can't help herself; she lives and breaths arrogance.

Tonight could have been the knock out punch if Clinton had won CO & MN. But she didn't! She lost them big. Now, he has a $40 million war chest and favorable map in front of him. Feel the Bern!

Time is on Bernie's side. The more he runs, the more people find out about him. Everyone already knows Clinton. She's gaining no new voters. Every day he gains ground. So, now he lives to fight many other days. She is in a race against time and she didn't close the door tonight. Tick, tock. Tick, tock!

March 8th is huge because whoever wins Michigan has momentum going into March 15th -- the real Super Tuesday (FL, OH, IL, NC and MO). That's Colossal Tuesday. And maybe the Ides of March for Hillary Clinton.



Reader Supported News is the Publication of Origin for this work. Permission to republish is freely granted with credit and a link back to Reader Supported News.

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Majority US Public Opinion Is Mocked by the Ongoing Presidential Election Print
Sunday, 06 March 2016 15:04

"What 'democracy' is it exactly that might die in the United States? As is rarely if ever noted in 'mainstream' U.S. corporate media news and commentary, a quiet progressive U.S. majority has long supported greater economic equality, increased worker rights, a roll-back of corporate power, and trade regulation."

Republican presidential candidates Jeb Bush, Marco Rubio, and Donald Trump participate in a debate. (photo: Mark J. Terrill/AP)
Republican presidential candidates Jeb Bush, Marco Rubio, and Donald Trump participate in a debate. (photo: Mark J. Terrill/AP)


Majority US Public Opinion Is Mocked by the Ongoing Presidential Election

By Paul Street, teleSUR

06 March 16

 

In a recent column opinion writer Roger Cohen notes that “Europe is alarmed by America's’ embrace of a latter-day Mussolini” – namely Donald Trump.

hat Democracy?

In a recent column the liberal New York Times opinion writer Roger Cohen notes that “Europe is alarmed by America's’ embrace of a latter-day Mussolini” – namely Donald Trump.

“Europe knows that democracies can collapse,” Cohen writes, adding that “Once lost, the cost of recovery is high.” Cohen is right to suggest disturbing parallels between Trump and the onetime Italian fascist leader:

“…Trump retweets to his six million followers a quote attributed to Mussolini: ‘It is better to live one day as a lion than 100 years as a sheep’…Trump refuses to condemn David Duke, the former grand wizard of the Ku Klux Klan, who has expressed support for him…Violence is woven into Trump’s language as indelibly as the snarl woven into his features — the talk of shooting somebody or punching a protester in the face, the insulting of the disabled, the macho mockery of women, the anti-Muslim and anti-Mexican tirades….[all evoking] echoes…of times when the skies darkened [over Europe].. after lost wars, in times of fear and anger and economic hardship, when the pouting demagogue appears with his pageantry and promises.”

But what “democracy” is it exactly that might die in the United States? As is rarely if ever noted in “mainstream” U.S. corporate media news and commentary, a quiet progressive U.S. majority has long supported greater economic equality, increased worker rights, a roll-back of corporate power, and trade regulation.

Most Americans continue to favor real national health insurance on the single-payer Canadian model over corporate health insurance; large-scale government job programs over “deficit reduction;” a significant “peace dividend” to move federal resources from the giant Pentagon budget to meeting social needs; serious environmental regulation and protection over the destruction of livable ecology; and a significantly more democratic distribution of wealth and income.

The United States’ unelected and interrelated “deep state” dictatorships of money and empire go back long before Trump cam on the scene as a serious presidential candidate. They have always given a cold response to such popular sentiments: So what? Who cares?

Public opinion is pitilessly mocked by harshly lopsided socioeconomic realities and coldly plutocratic politics and policy in the U.S. America is mired in a New Gilded Age of savage inequality and abject financial “corporatocracy” so extreme that the top one percent owns more than 90 percent of the nation’s wealth along with an outsized portion of the nation’s “democratically elected” officials.

Over the past three plus decades, the leading mainstream U.S. political scientists Martin Gilens (Princeton) and Benjamin Page (Northwestern) reported in the fall of 2014, the U.S. political system had functioned as “an oligarchy,” where wealthy elites and their corporations “rule.”

Examining data from more than 1,800 different policy initiatives in the late 20th and early 21st centuries, Gilens and Page found that wealthy and well-connected elites consistently steer the direction of the country, regardless of and against the will of the U.S. majority and irrespective of which major party holds the White House and/or Congress.

“The central point that emerges from our research is that economic elites and organized groups representing business interests have substantial independent impacts on U.S. government policy,” Gilens and Page wrote, “while mass-based interest groups and average citizens have little or no independent influence.”

As Gilens explained to the liberal online journal Talking Points Memo, “ordinary citizens have virtually no influence over what their government does in the United States.” Such is the harsh reality of “really existing capitalist democracy” in the U.S., what Noam Chomsky called “RECD, pronounced as ‘wrecked,’” with the “liberal” Democrat Barack Obama in the White House.

The Electoral Extravaganza

Consistent with Page and Gilens’ findings, public opinion is being badly mocked by the ongoing presidential election – the latest corporate-managed quadrennial electoral extravaganza to pass for “democratic politics” (supposedly the only politics that matters) in the U.S.

Under the reign of RECD, it’s irrelevant that the nominal socialist Bernie Sanders is the only one of the top presidential candidates actually and sincerely running in accord with majority public opinion on numerous key issues.

The people don’t choose the nation’s ultimately viable presidential contenders: big money election funders (including self-funders like the billionaire Trump), major party officials, and corporate media managers do. And these “elites” have decided that Americans next November will have the choice between a thoroughly documented and longstanding fake-progressive corporatist and imperialist Democrat, Hillary Clinton, and the noxious, neo-fascistic nationalist Trump.

That verdict is clear from the results of yesterday’s giant “Super Tuesday” primary elections held in twelve U.S. states. Sanders, Ted Cruz, and Marco Rubio can hang on a bit longer but the die is cast.

So what if the blustering real estate tycoon and television bully Trump stands to the right of U.S. public opinion? So does Mrs. Clinton.

The U.S. corporate media has been following “The Donald’s” every preposterous and offensive word, tweet, and facial gesture while consistently downplaying Bernie Sanders’ huge rallies on behalf of progressive policies that the majority of citizens support. It is the bombastic, latter day Il Duce, Trump, not the calm and civilized New Deal liberal Sanders who has been designated as the “authentic” and “populist” alternative to the neoliberal corporatism of the Clintons.

There’s Another Politics

This is a good moment for American leftists to remember that, to quote Howard Zinn (writing against what he called “the election madness” that was “engulfing the entire society, including in the left” in early 2008), “voting is a poor substitute for democracy, which requires direct action by concerned citizens.”

Presidential balloting is an especially bad surrogate for democracy when it takes place just once every four years under the thumb of media, election, and party systems rigged to guarantee business- and empire-friendly outcomes.

It is a good time also to recall two warnings I issued about a potential Sanders campaign in 2014. First, candidate-centered campaigns tend to soak up most of the political energies of their activist. There’s not much left for other and arguably more urgent tasks. (This is especially true for the absurdly lengthy U.S. presidential race, which begins at least 18 months prior to the actual election date.)

Second, we need to guard against the possibility that a deepened sense of popular powerlessness will be engendered when Sanders is compelled to tell his supporters (as he promised from the start) to vote for Hillary, a candidate who epitomizes much of what he claims to be against.

Progressives must not let Sanders’ inevitable defeat fuel the illusion that progressive, social-democratic policies lack majority support in the U.S. They should remind their fellow Americans that candidate-centered politics is not the sum total of all the politics that matters. There’s also the more imperative job of building a great grassroots social movement to organize mass worker and citizen action beneath and beyond the quadrennial electoral extravaganzas, whatever their outcomes.

Such a movement should include in its list of demands the call for an electoral system that honors the longstanding majority'S view that two big business and empire parties are simply not enough to capture to the actual spectrum of public opinion. That would be an elections and party system that is truly worthy of passionate citizen engagement.


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Justice Scalia's Greatest Failure Print
Sunday, 06 March 2016 15:01

Stone writes: "When Justice Scalia was appointed to the Supreme Court by President Reagan in 1986, he no doubt thought that he would be able to make originalism the dominant approach to constitutional interpretation. It was, after all, so clearly the 'right' approach that it would surely win the day, especially with him as its champion. But it was not to be."

Antonin Scalia. (photo: Paul Morigi/Getty Images)
Antonin Scalia. (photo: Paul Morigi/Getty Images)


Justice Scalia's Greatest Failure

By Geoffrey R. Stone, Reader Supported News

06 March 16

 

n the 1960s, political conservatives accused the justices of the Warren Court of imposing their own liberal values and preferences on the nation in the guise of constitutional interpretation. They charged that the justices of that era consistently exploited the ambiguity of vague constitutional provisions guaranteeing, for example, "the freedom of speech," "the equal protection of the laws," "the free exercise of religion," and "due process of law," to inflict upon the nation liberal policies that were not, in fact, warranted by a more even-handed approach to constitutional interpretation.

The challenge for these conservatives was to figure out a way to constrain the temptation justices might have to construe ambiguous constitutional provisions in a way that comports with their own sense of what makes for a good society. The initial solution suggested by conservatives was a firm commitment to the principle of judicial restraint. Thus, in Richard Nixon's day, a "conservative" justice was a justice committed to the notion that a justice should automatically uphold the constitutionality of government action whenever there was any reasonable argument that could be made in its defense. A justice committed to this approach would invalidate laws only in extraordinary circumstances.

Although some measure of judicial restraint is essential to the legitimacy of constitutional interpretation, even conservatives recognized that judicial restraint in all cases would seriously abdicate a fundamental responsibility that the Framers themselves entrusted to the judiciary. As James Madison observed when he proposed the Bill of Rights, it would fall to the "independent tribunals of justice" to serve as "the guardians of those rights" and "to resist every encroachment" upon them. In short, the Framers did not intend for the judiciary to act with across-the-boards judicial restraint. Such an approach would clearly undermine a critical element of the American constitutional system, which relied on the judiciary to place a check on majoritarian abuse.

Recognizing this, but still seeking an approach to constitutional interpretation that would rein in the temptation of justices to impose their own values on the nation, political conservatives next came up with the theory of "originalism." First popularized by Robert Bork and Antonin Scalia in the early 1980s, originalism posits that courts should exercise judicial restraint unless the "original meaning" of the text clearly mandates a less deferential analysis.

Under this approach, for example, it would be appropriate for a court to invoke the Equal Protection Clause to invalidate a law that denied African Americans the right to serve on juries, but not to invalidate a law that denied that same right to women, because those who adopted the Equal Protection Clause were not thinking of women at the time. The idea, in short, is to have the best of both worlds - a general presumption of judicial restraint, but the authority and, indeed, responsibility to override that presumption in order to carry out the specific intentions and understandings of those who drafted and ratified any particular provision of the Constitution.

When Justice Scalia was appointed to the Supreme Court by President Reagan in 1986, he no doubt thought that he would be able to make originalism the dominant approach to constitutional interpretation. It was, after all, so clearly the "right" approach that it would surely win the day, especially with him as its champion.

But it was not to be. Indeed, of the seventeen justices with whom Justice Scalia served, only one - Clarence Thomas - has taken seriously this approach to constitutional interpretation, and among the lower courts the approach is rarely invoked. Why did this happen?

There are at least three reasons. First, originalism is internally incoherent. Originalism asserts that those who crafted and ratified our Constitution intended the meaning and effect of their handiwork to be limited to the specific understandings of their own time. But this view erroneously attributes to the Framers a narrow-mindedness and short-sightedness that belies their true spirit. The Framers believed that just as reason and experience enable us to gain greater insight over time into questions of biology, economics, and human nature, so too would they enable us to learn more over time about the essential meaning of the fundamental principles that they enshrined in our Constitution. In short, the notion that the meaning of these provisions should be locked into place based on their own understandings would have seemed completely wrong-headed to the Framers.

Second, originalism is fundamentally flawed because in most instances those who adopted the broad foundational provisions of our Constitution did not themselves have any precise and agreed-upon understanding of the specific meaning of "the freedom of speech," "the freedom of religion," "the equal protection of the laws," or "due process of law." As historians can attest, it is often exceedingly difficult to know with any confidence what the Framers did or did not think about concrete constitutional issues. Although there are some issues about which a strict originalist approach might give a clear answer, for the vast majority of all constitutional issues that come before the Court originalism offers only a muddle of confusion.

Third, in part because of the inherent ambiguity of the originalist inquiry, justices and judges who purport to engage in originalist analysis often simply project onto the Framers their own personal values and preferences. "The Framers were reasonable people. I'm a reasonable people. Therefore the Framers must have intended what I would have intended." The result is an unprincipled and often patently disingenuous jurisprudence. This was perfectly evident, for example, in the pattern of Justice Scalia's own votes on the Court.

In an analysis of Justice Scalia's votes in twenty of the Court's most important constitutional decisions between 2000 and 2013, which dealt with such diverse issues as the 2000 presidential election, gun control, voter disenfranchisement, affirmative action, search and seizure, abortion, due process for persons suspected of terrorism, takings of private property, the death penalty, campaign finance regulations, the freedom of religion, and the rights of gays and lesbians, every one of Justice Scalia's votes in these cases tracked perfectly the conservative political position. Despite all the talk of originalism as a principled mode of constitutional interpretation, Justice Scalia's votes make clear that originalism had little, if anything, to do with his actual decision-making.

In a few of these cases, such as those involving laws restricting abortion or denying the freedom of gays and lesbians to marry, which Justice Scalia invariably upheld, his votes could be explained by a strict originalist philosophy. But in the vast majority of these decisions, Justice Scalia's votes cannot fairly be explained by, or even reconciled with, any meaningful theory of originalism.

These would include, for example, his judicially activist votes to hold unconstitutional laws restricting the amounts that corporations can spend in the electoral process, laws authorizing affirmative action in higher education, laws regulating guns, laws protecting the right of African-Americans to vote, laws promoting racial integration in public schools, and the laws of the State of Florida in the 2000 presidential election.

Thus, as an advocate for originalism, Justice Scalia was his own worst enemy because he could not bring himself to abide by the very tenets of constitutional interpretation that he so vigorously championed. In so doing, he helped bring about the failure of originalism. This, for him, was no doubt a bitter disappointment. (It worked out rather well, though, for the future of American constitutional law.)



Reader Supported News is the Publication of Origin for this work. Permission to republish is freely granted with credit and a link back to Reader Supported News.

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Police: Trump Ordered Us to Remove Peaceful Black Students From His Rally Print
Sunday, 06 March 2016 15:00

"We cannot ignore the stark reality that a man seeking to be president of the United States foments hatred and violence toward black Americans at rallies held across the country."

Donald Trump's rally at Valdosta State. (photo: Andrew Harnik/AP)
Donald Trump's rally at Valdosta State. (photo: Andrew Harnik/AP)


Police: Trump Ordered Us to Remove Peaceful Black Students From His Rally

By Omar Rivero, Occupy Democrats

06 March 16

 

onald Trump rallies have lost their mystique. We have come to know what to expect – audience-baiting hatred, xenophobia, racism, and violence toward any minority, especially those of color who choose to attend his rallies. We cannot ignore the stark reality that a man seeking to be president of the United States foments hatred and violence toward black Americans at rallies held across the country. True to form, this week Trump had a group of black college students, who say they were standing silently at the top of the bleachers planning a silent protest, removed from his campaign rally in Georgia.

Talking Points Memo reports that “about 30 students had planned to sit in silent protest during the rally on the Valdosta State University campus, but police said they were directed to remove them at the specific request of a Trump staffer.” There was initially some confusion as to who initiated the students’ removal, as they claimed federal agents led them out of the building. However, the Secret Service denies being involved. Captain Stryde Jones of the Lowndes County Sheriff’s Office told MSNBC that “a member of the [Trump] event staff approached a member of our agency and requested that the group be asked to leave.” Jones’s statement was confirmed by Valdosta Police Chief Brian Childress, who says he personally spoke with Trump staff members and law enforcement officers helping with security, and it was Trump’s staff who initiated the action. “I spoke to a Trump staffer, whose name I do not have, she told us that they needed to leave. Not only did I talk to a Trump staffer, so did the University police, and we were told over the radio by the Sheriff’s office that Trump staff wanted them out.”

Cue the spin doctors. Trump campaign spokeswoman Hope Hicks said: “the campaign had no knowledge of the incident until after reading these false reports.” Trump himself, took a slightly different tack – he did not deny the incident. “I had nothing to do with it!” he said. So it appears these students were removed at the behest of the Trump campaign – for allegedly “shouting profanity” – which the campaign denies any knowledge of, and for which Donald Trump denies any involvement.

In any case, Trump staff said “the F-bomb is one word that was used. You can’t be in there using profanity. That violates Georgia law.” This coming from a presidential candidate who builds his campaign rallies upon the belief systems of white supremacist groups. And who, during a recent CNN interview, refused to disavow former Ku Klux Klan grand wizard David Duke. He pinned his reluctance to disavow Duke on CNN on “a bad earpiece…I could hardly hear what he's saying.” Trump’s display of concern for alleged profanity stands in stark contrast to his own comments last night, witnessed during a nationally televised presidential debate, in which he defended his penis size. This is the same man who bragged about his coveted endorsement from Vladimir Putin, the world’s worst strongman, and a fascist.

The Republican front-runner for president enjoys the support of a broad coalition of racists, from Duke to Paul LePage, Maine governor. Trump cares nothing about the First Amendment to the Constitution, which gives people the right to attend his rallies even if they don’t agree with him. His views are inexorably entwined with a fascist authoritarian view of the world. This is the man who would be our next president.


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