06-07-2009, 12:21 AM | #11 |
Tenacious C
Join Date: Oct 2005
Posts: 991
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Wait, don't we disqualify people from serving on juries for trials of certain crimes if they themselves have been victims of that crime? Like, for example, not letting rape victims sit on a jury for a rape trial. If that is the case, how would it be different for a judge than for a juror?
Edit: Also, I kind of disagree with her quote. I don't think people need to have been on the receiving end of something to know it's bad. To the best of my memory Lincoln was never a slave. Common sense and empathy (one of Obama's major requirements for appointees) are pretty much all that's needed.
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Dangerous, mute lunatic. Last edited by Mannix; 06-07-2009 at 12:26 AM. |
06-07-2009, 01:27 AM | #12 |
Lakitu
Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: Northwest Arkansas
Posts: 2,139
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I'm surprised Rush's head hasn't imploded due to his sheer hypocrisy.
Top Ten Rush Limbaugh Racist Quotes. Hell, there may be websites devoted to listing all of Limbaugh's racist, idiotic quotes - but I can't find 'em right now.
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Slightly off-kilter |
06-07-2009, 05:19 AM | #13 | |
for all seasons
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To part 2: You would hope they wouldn't need those things, but then, over a hundred years after Lincoln we still have our nearly all white, nearly all male Supreme Court handing down rulings about how it's okay to limit women's medical options because they're just not capable of making decisions for themselves. So maybe they need a little more help with these things than they're getting.
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06-07-2009, 05:46 AM | #14 | |
Tenacious C
Join Date: Oct 2005
Posts: 991
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Quote:
to part 2: and appointing a woman or a black or whatever doesn't guarantee that it will fix the problem. appointing people with an opposite bias in order to create some sort of pseudo balance creates problems in the other direction (i mean in a general sense, not directly in rebut to your example). what we need are decent, level-headed folks, not just "a woman" or "an hispanic."
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Dangerous, mute lunatic. |
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06-07-2009, 11:18 AM | #15 |
That Guy
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In an abstract sense, as a lower-upper-middle-class Americanized (more colloquially, whitewashed) Latino, I find that whenever someone says that because my skin's a little browner and my hair thicker and curlier I can't perform at the same level as a white person, I feel offended. Having grown up elsewhere, I find American's focus on race rather than social circumstance appalling, both when racism comes along and when people come along to 'undo' racism. Of course, the solution isn't to stop everything from both ends; people won't stop being racist overnight, the shift in focus won't happen overnight, but it'd be nice if we could remember that just being black or hispanic, on its own, without any other circumstance, can be quite meaningless. Saying things like that we need "a hispanic" or "a black person" on the Supreme Court (or any other body) just because is, to me, in the same vein of offensive as saying that I deserve an award for performing as well as a white person.
In the concrete, in part due to the race thinking I mentioned above, as well as due to historical economic factors, blacks and hispanics more often than not DO have different biographies. Sotomayor certainly does. Her experience as a hispanic has actually been one that ought to matter, and while she may seem keenly aware of this, she IS a judge, she IS meant to be a thinker and interpreter. I'd have more of a problem if she weren't introspective enough to realize that, and apparently she brought it up without hubris, as a fact like any other. This is good, acceptable, and fine. As for her record of being overturned, we ought to look into both what the average record of overturns is and whether she was overturned for good reasons or foul reasons. If an abolitionist judge got overturned a lot by the Taney Court (of the famous Dred Scott v. Sanford) we wouldn't hold it against him (though understandably there may be choices which would represent more of a compromise).
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The world of truth has no certainty. The world of fact has no hope. "Environmental laws were not passed to protect our air and water... they were passed to get votes. Seasonal anti-smut campaigns are not conducted to rid our communities of moral rot... they are conducted to give an aura of saintliness to the office-seekers who demand them." - Frank Zappa, prelude to Joe's Garage Ever wonder THE TRUTH ABOUT BLACK HELICOPTERS? |
06-07-2009, 11:56 AM | #16 | |
pretty cool guy
Join Date: Dec 2008
Posts: 814
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06-07-2009, 11:33 PM | #17 |
Archer and Armstrong vs. the World
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In my mind this is basically a non-issue, because the GOP and Rush Limbaugh would have attacked anyone that Obama wishes to appoint. And pulling the "reverse racism" card is just the thing for the GOP to attempt to get white America jerking their knees every which way. It is an absurd attack but is anyone actually surprised by it? After all, its coming from Jeff Sessions and Rush Limbaugh, and usually the first people to scream "reverse racism" are, you guessed it, racists.
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06-07-2009, 11:43 PM | #18 |
Tenacious C
Join Date: Oct 2005
Posts: 991
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This is a bit of an aside, but can we (as a society) stop calling non-white racists reverse racists? They're just plain old regular racists.
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06-08-2009, 12:27 AM | #19 | |
for all seasons
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Quote:
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06-08-2009, 12:29 AM | #20 |
Archer and Armstrong vs. the World
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Mannix:My point was more often than not those called "reverse racists" or just "racists" who are members of a minority are quite often not racist at all but are simply the target of actual racists. I'm fine with calling racists racists, but not with calling people who aren't actually racist racist simply to propagate a person's own racist agenda.
Coincidentally, here's a link to an article on Jeff Sessions. Not quite the equal of good old Rush, of course, but an elected official should worry people more than a shock jock.
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