The statute of Lady Justice traditionally holds a set of scales in one hand, a book of law in the other, and she is blindfolded. The sightless nature of justice has forever meant that before the law all persons are on an equal footing. The inalienable rights given by the Creator puts us all on a level playing field, so that no matter whether we are rich or poor, majority or minority status in ethnicity, political group, sex, or national origin we will all be treated justly.

Can Sonia Sotomayor, President Obama’s nominee to the Supreme Court of the United States, do this? From her own words there is a lot of doubt. In a 2001 lecture she said:

I would hope that a wise Latina woman with the richness of her experiences would more often than not reach a better conclusion than a white male who hasn’t lived that life.

What? Did you hear that? Lady Justice, supposedly blind, should generally reach the same predictable result no matter who sits on the bench. Not for Sotomayor.  She knows better.  So greater than 50% of the time, because of her sex and ethnic background, she would decide a case differently than a white male justice. Why? So out of 100 average lawsuits, her ethnic background and sex will be so important that she cannot help but reach a different verdict.

This flies in the face of the President’s introduction this week, when he said:

When Sonia Sotomayor ascends those marble steps to assume her seat on the highest court of the land, America will have taken another important step towards realizing the ideal that is etched above its entrance: Equal justice under the law.

There will be no equal justice under the law for Sotomayor, only pity for people with whom she feels her heart tug. But if pity were the rule of law, pretty soon there would be no rule of law left. Our courts would revolve around whichever client had the hardest life, the least advantage, the closest emotional pull with the judge. She will rule based on her sense of “fair,” not on justice.

Just a brief look at “fairness” and “justice” from the eyes of a parent will bring this home. My children have remarked on many occasions that it is not “fair” for them to do a certain chore or to pick up a mess they didn’t make. I reply that life isn’t supposed to be fair. They whine a bit and try to get me moved by pity and emotion. But is it fair that children really don’t contribute to the household until they can do chores, say about age 6? No. But that’s life, which does not always “seem” emotionally fair.  Only when they can do chores the justice begins to be realized.

And a poor background doesn’t necessarily mean that a judge should govern this way.  Clarence Thomas came from a more economically impoverished background than any other sitting justice.  Surely, if Sotomayor had someone who could relate, it would be him, right?  No.  Because Justice Thomas’ s legal philosophy is one of limited government and more individual rights–that the legislature, not the court, creates social policy.  Sotomayor disagrees.  At a speech at Duke University she admitted that appellate courts, in her view, create social policy.

So suppose a 20-year old Latina woman, with a very poor background, is on trial for murder, caught with the “smoking gun” in her hand. On appeal, will that background make a difference to Sotomayor, or will she apply the rule of law just as if it were a 20-year old white trust-fund male who had every opportunity in the world? What type of policy will she make?  Poor people are less guilty?  Minorities are less guilty?

Lady Justice would not even notice the ethnicity or sex of the Latina woman in the example above; she would only see the appeal as a decision of legal rules based on one person murdering the other–because she can’t break the timeless principles of equal justice based on ethnicity or poverty; she is blindfolded.  Sotomayor, on the other hand, will be peeking.

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The murder of Dr. George Tiller will likely incite a great deal of discussion in the coming week. Many will state their opinions, debate, and make judgments. As you find yourself weaving in and out of these discussions make sure that two truths are always recognized: Dr. Tiller was a despicable person, and so is his assailant.

Dr. Tiller represents the worst in American society. He was blessed with the necessary talents to become a physician.  However, instead of using those talents to enrich, protect, and heal people, he did the opposite. Unlike noble physicians who save lives, he destroyed them. He is responsible for many deaths, and he made a killing off of it. Being one of the few doctors who performed partial-birth abortions, Dr. Tiller was happy to kill anyone’s baby regardless of its viability so long as the woman was healthy enough and wealthy enough for an abortion. He, like all abortionists, was a stain on the medical profession, and his practices were more than worthy of protest and condemnation.

His assailant’s actions are equally worthy of protest and condemnation. He is just as bad as Tiller. He may claim he is saving lives, but he is no martyr. He represents the difference between simply being against abortion and pro-life. He is not a member of the pro-life movement because what he did is inherently contradicts those positions. The pro-life stance is an ethical based on a number of principles. One of those principles is that “ends never justify the means.” Even if Tiller’s death saves life in the short term, which it may not, it was procured through immoral and unjust means, which undermines the pro-life movement.

In fact, Tiller’s death is as tragic for the pro-life movement as the abortions that he profited from. First and foremost, it adds to the death count of born and unborn lives. Second, it makes the pro-life movement appear to be extreme because of improper connections between the pro-life movement and the assailant. As a result of this killing, people will unreasonably paint opponents of abortion with a broad brush and take abortion related violence out of context. Although abortion clinics and abortion providers are frequently protested, abortion related violence in America has only claimed nine lives[1]. While this is nine too many, it shows that 99.9% of the people who oppose abortion in America are not violent—like Tiller’s assailant. In truth, the pro-life movement condemns anyone who kills an innocent life. Thus, we condemn both Tiller and his assailant.

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Obama Win Causes Obsessive Supporters To Realize How Empty Their Lives Are

As a child, I remember having discussions which sometimes led to arguments over the popular topic of the moment. Without change, both sides of the discussion would be firm in their views until the decisive answer was handed down by a parent or an encyclopedia. That was pre-Google, if any of us can recall those days. It was a time when encyclopedia britannicas, not wikipedia, resolved disputes.

When no adults were available, or a vastly over-priced collection of books wasn’t handy, you had to end the dispute along a defined line of responses. ‘We agree to disagree,’ ‘whatever (thanks to Saved By The Bell),’ ‘think what you want to think but I KNOW I’m right,’ ‘Nuh-uhhhhhh,’ or the ever popular, ‘it’s science,’ would make the short list for common final arguments. All juvenile, and all were based on pride and lacking in facts. The ‘it’s science’ response was my favorite because it was an attempt to establish a certain fact out of the clear, blue sky.

When one side couldn’t successfully argue their way to the finish line, they would attempt to bludgeon the other side into submission by suggesting that the facts were on their side and any resistance was futile.

I was reminded of this argument today when reading through Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s (D-CA) comments at Tsinghua University in Beijing, China. She was speaking on the issue of “climate change,” a subtle, clever phrase shift away from “global warming” which suffers from a dwindling population of legitimate proponents in the scientific community. Speaker Pelosi began her comments to the gathered crowd by saying, “we are all in this together.” She hammered her point home by saying that goverments “should make decisions and choices based on science.”

She went on to deliver a dizzying array of comments, too scatter-shot and thoughtless for me to cover in this post. Some of the gems [read: eggs] she laid included: “The impact of climate change is a tremendous risk to the security and well-being of our countries;” “They also have to do it with openness, transparency and accountability to the people;” “everyone has to have their situation improved by it;” and “I do see this opportunity for climate change to be … a game-changer.”

As for my obviously differing view on the issue of “climate change,” they have zero argument from me that we should take ownership of our actions and be conservatives when it comes to the environment. Where Pelosi and Co. lose me and a large portion of the population is when they politicize and polarize the issue on the basis of incomplete information, all in the name of “science.” It is an intimation that we are to bow at the alter of “science” and adjust EVERY aspect of our lives on the basis thereof.

This begs a painfully obvious question: how do we account for errors, agendas, and a lack of information with regard to this science? Make no mistake, this argument isn’t, ‘we don’t have all the information, so we shouldn’t act,’ rather I am saying that we should preserve our “well-being” by avoiding costly jaunts into a green economy without any significant return on investment, and look upon the Al Gores and Nancy Pelosis of the world with a politically skeptical eye.

Instead of heavy-handed suggestions that we let climatologists determine what is best for our countries, economies, and personal lives, all under the basic argument that ‘it’s science,’ shouldn’t we be having a rational, non-political discussion about the environment? I suppose that is too much to ask for with the stellar leadership of House Speaker Pelosi. What do you think?

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YouTube Preview ImageCheck out just one of his great videos here.

Watch for this guy

The University of Notre Dame’s honor of Barack Obama was a historic event, a rite of passage. Television images of gowned academics in self congratulatory bliss eager to honor their symbolic president, against a background of useful graduates completed the scenes.

A day later it is hard to recollect a meaningful sentence either from the hopeful wish list Father Jenkins imposed on “the Obama” or from the self serving call to service from the self indulgent honoree.

Prideful stares from the platform committee affirmed their perceived handiwork, a President in their images, the panoply replete with an octogenarian priest memorialized in a fifty year old photograph as proof of their artistry. A caricature of the presumed America to come occupies the historic stage at Notre Dame. Gone is the America which shed blood to end colonial slavery, aging veterans who rescued Europe from Nazism and communism, the farmers who fed the world and the shopkeepers who scraped for profits to educated their children.

Instead, striped robed academics revel in an obstinate pragmatic relativism which has presided over a half century of cultural destruction. A prideful relativism whose empowerment would discard those individuals discourteous enough to presume existence.

But beyond the tedious rhetoric were true signs of hope; mortarboards of discontent scattered through the crowd, silent hands among synchophantic applause and a Laetare medal in thoughtful repose.

Outside the arena another story unfolded, a few thousand people and 40-50 graduates gathered at the Grotto; prayers, silence, and a shared alma mater witnessed a new hope for change, an antidote to the despair.

While the University may be mired in the past, the students at the Grotto have moved on, their graduation already a memory, and their protest the real hope to believe in. Life vs. Death? They have already chosen Life.

These are the true Graduates of “Notre Dame” class of 2009.

Don’t you just love it when a person is hell-bent on attacking another and they end up under a mountain of criticism? Well, that philosophy may not appear in the Bible, but it has been entertaining to watch Speaker of the House, Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) taking it on the chin over what she did or did not know regarding enhanced interrogation techniques at Gitmo. As an observer, one has to wonder how she could take the largest cannon in the liberal arsenal and turn it on herself in less than a week. It is doubtful whether Pelosi will be effective in her current roll going forward, and that is to say nothing of her fumbling the last best chance to demoralize Repubs over waterboarding.

Maybe U.S. Rep. Mike Rogers (R-AL) was correct when he called Pelosi, “Tom Delay in a skirt.” Though such a comparison was meant to demonstrate how heavy-handed and politically isolated both have been, the latest comparison is that both are obvious liabilities to their respective parties. I recall hearing Tom Delay’s desperate attempts to salvage his position as House Speaker and thinking, ‘this guy has lost it.’ Well, after watching Pelosi’s PR nightmare that has become a circus side-show, I thought to myself, ‘this lady has lost it.’

What was most surprising was to see Leon Panetta, the CIA Director, who is a former U.S. Congressman from California, and former White House Chief of Staff for President Clinton, push back against Pelosi’s suggestions that the CIA lied to her. Yesterday, he stated, “If they start to use these issues as political clubs to beat each other up with, that’s when we not only pay a price but this country pays a price.” In short, Pelosi has walked the political plank and has run out of options for backing out of the situation. This will not end up in a resignation, because, well, liberals don’t do that. At least, she won’t be jumping off the plank until Obama gives the green light, something that is unlikely to happen anytime soon.

Now, that dirty word “waterboarding” has been defanged and it leaves the retributive ultra-lib electorate feeling disappointment over Pelosi’s behavior. They will surely continue to push for “truth-commissions,” a concept that sounds like a grand inquisition.

With Pelosi down but not out, I wouldn’t expect her to be so attacking in the foreseeable future. Perhaps, I’m wrong, in which case she would continue to draw parallels between herself and Tom Delay. That is something that likely makes Dems everywhere cringe.

For those in or out of the law, one of the best and most funny courtroom cross-examination scenes is in the movie My Cousin Vinny.  Linked here (the section begins at about 8:00 minutes), Vinny, played by Joe Pesci, is defending two young guys mistaken for suspects in an armed robbery at a convenience store.  He cross-examines a guy who identified the two boys as suspects based on the time it took him to cook grits on his stove.

Cross-examination is great, because it tests out a story and helps to uncover the truth.  When someone speaks, it can sound great; but it may be full of holes when another comes forward to question him. (Prov. 18:17).

In this cross-examination, Vinny suggests that maybe two other boys did the robbery, ones who came in the store afterward.  The witness, Mr. Tipton, says that Vinny’s idea is wrong.  Mr. Tipton says that he saw them enter when he began cooking his grits and heard the shots when he sat down to eat, a time of about 5 minutes.

Vinny then reminds Mr. Tipton that cooking grits from scratch, which follows the laws of physics, takes the rest of the world 20 minutes.  How could it only take 5 minutes for Mr. Tipton?  Vinny then goes into a series of questions.  “Can water can soak into a grit [a piece of ground corn] faster” in his kitchen “than in any other place on the face of the earth?”  Tipton responds very flustered, ‘I don’t know….I’m a fast cook, I guess.”  Vinny continues, asking whether the “laws of physics cease to exist on your stove?”  “Where these magic grits?”  “Did you buy them from the same guy that sold Jack his beanstalk beans?”, a reference to the Jack and the Beanstalk fairy tale.

In thinking of this it reminded me of one of my earlier posts and the need to emphasize the craziness of our President’s economic plans.  Our President really should be cross-examined on how he expects increasing debt to make us economically prosperous.  Here’s my cross-examination script, which because of the lunacy of our economic plan, ends up looking pretty close to the lines from My Cousin Vinny.

William (calmly):  Is it possible that there is another way to get us out of this recession other than by spending money we don’t have and redistributing money from businesses and people who have it to those who don’t?

President Obama (confidently):  No. I believe that buy printing money and giving people money, our economy will improve.

William: (calmly)  So you mean to tell me that not having money to spend affects you differently when the entire money spending world can’t spend what it doesn’t have? How can you make debt go away by spending more money?

President Obama (flustered):  I don’t know; I’m a great leader, I guess.

William (a bit more intense and louder) :  I’m sorry, I was all the way over here and I couldn’t hear you; did you say that you’re a great leader?  That’s it?!

Obama (nods sheepishly): <silent>

William (incredulously): Are we to believe that the money in your national checkbook multiplies to pay debts in a way different from any other place on the face of the earth?!

President Obama (flustered):  I don’t know.

William (incredulously):  Well perhaps the laws of economics cease to exist in your administration?!

President Obama: <silent>

William (incredulously): Are these magic dollars?! Did you get these bailout dollars from the same person who sold Jack his beanstalk beans?!

President Obama: <silent>

And as the judge attempts to protect Mr. Tipton, the media in reality swoop in and protect the President from any further criticism. But the answer he eventually must give is “I’m not sure.”

We can go beyond that, and give a resounding “No.”  The entire depository of world history can testify that money doesn’t spring from debt.  Debt must be paid away; it cannot be spent away.  And that’s the final analysis on the upside-down economic plan that this country has had pressed upon it.  The basics of economics are that you can’t spend yourself out of debt; printing money causes inflation because it devalues the dollar.   Rewarding companies for poor performance by bailing them out does not force them to change their ways.  Debt must be reconciled with the people who made it, not pushed off to another generation.  And when government interferes in the economy rather than being a referee, bad things result.

The laws of physics didn’t fail on Mr. Tipton’s stove; he was simply wrong.  And the laws of economics don’t change because Barack Obama is at the helm of our ship of state; he is simply wrong.  Let’s call it for what it is and begin to operate on truth.

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Friday Fun: Yum!


New Wearable Feedbags Let Americans Eat More, Move Less

A little food for thought…

Now that the afterglow is fading, we’re left wondering what to do now that we have a nascent movement of sorts.  We must remind ourselves of what we’re up against.  I bring you MSNBC’s “coverage” of the tea parties, guaranteed to deeply insult and anger every conservative and libertarian within earshot.  Be sure to watch the whole thing, if you can stand it:

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Neurologically deficient racist teabagging rednecks.  Wow.  Just…  wow.  I don’t even know where to start with that one. But I guess picking my jaw up off the floor would be good.  It’s shameful to think that the National Broadcasting Company would countenance such blatant hatemongering, but that’s the world we live in now.

The sentiment expressed there is not as uncommon as you’d like to think.  But in contrast with that outrage, the best summary of the tea party’s ideological significance I’ve seen has come from–get this–a Democratic strategy blog, appropriately named The Democratic Strategist.  Here’s the gist of it:

The on-the-scene reports by citizen journalists from Huffington Post and other web publications suggest that probably the largest single group within the tea parties were neither corporate Republicans, single-issue protestors nor conspiracy theorists… [The viewpoint of the protesters] is an authentically “grass roots” perspective rooted in a “common sense” understanding of economic affairs that arises from practical experience in the world of small business. The Americans who embrace this view have never read Milton Friedman or attended any formal lectures in their lives. Their philosophy is sustained by the informal exchange of ideas with friends, neighbors and co-workers and is derived from daily life in “the real world” as it appears to many average Americans.

At the core of this view are a cluster of ideas that can best be summed up as “pre-Keynesian.” It is an approach that is unified by the idea that that government should be run according to the same principles that apply to running a small business. 

The main ideas are:

1. Government spending to create jobs simply does not work. It can only create phony “make work” or “leaf raking” jobs and not “real” jobs that need to be done…2. Government simply should not go into debt; it should maintain a permanently balanced budget. This idea, which in previous generations was called fiscal responsibility or “sound finance,” is based on making an analogy between an individual household and the government…

3. Banks are visualized as essentially profit-seeking businesses like any other and not as an abstract “credit system” that provides “finance” or “liquidity” to the economy. In this view, the fact that banks’ particular business happens to be taking deposits and lending money does not entitle them to any special treatment…

4. Government regulation is seen from the perspective of a small businessman. As such it appears as a maze of annoying paperwork, licenses, permits, inspections, and so on. Since the 1970’s when the demands on small businesses – and particularly the paperwork required of them - increased exponentially, the view grew that many of these regulations were really created by government bureaucrats to keep themselves employed rather than as a sincere attempt to solve genuinely pressing social problems…

5. Taxes are seen from a very limited point of view — as money that is simply taken away from individuals by the government — and not visualized as part of a larger circular flow that returns in exchange services and a healthier society in which to live. The “common sense” notion simply is that “Taxes are my money, not the government’s money”.

I’ll give this guy credit–he’s much more perceptive than your average Democrat.  He clearly made a genuine attempt to understand the tea parties at their base level, rather than pick a few weirdos out of the crowd and extrapolate some kind of evil agenda based on mental deficiencies.  Granted, the focus of the piece is how the Democrats can win over the tea partiers, and as is typical of liberals, gives short shrift to the idea of common sense.  But I can say fairly confidently that if the Democratic Party were to affirmatively stand for the general principles of the tea partiers, well, I’d probably be making the switch right now.  I think there’s a snowball’s chance in hell of that happening, and a lot of the damage is already done, but that’s beside the point.

What interests me is what comes next.  It’s a long time until the 2012 election, and Obama played it smart by screwing us early–it gives everybody plenty of time to calm down and forget about it.  It’s up to the tea partiers to make sure we keep at it, taking to task both Republicans and Democrats for further abuses.  So how do we do that?  Let’s hear your thoughts.  If you attended SquareWon’s tea party in Tuscaloosa, tell us what you think should be next in the comments.

Just to keep myself motivated, I’ll be watching that video from time to time.

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