The Waves Minority Judges Always Make
By ADAM LIPTAKWASHINGTON — Justice Thurgood Marshall, the first black member of the Supreme Court, ended his 24 years there bitter and frustrated. He had been unable, he said, to persuade his colleagues in many cases concerning racial equality, the cause to which he had devoted his life.
“What do they know about Negroes?” Justice Marshall asked an interviewer. “You can’t name one member of this court who knows anything about Negroes before he came to this court.”
But the other justices did get to know Justice Marshall, and even the more conservative ones acknowledged that his very presence exerted a gravitational pull more powerful than his single vote.
“Marshall could be a persuasive force just by sitting there,” Justice Antonin Scalia told Juan Williams in an interview for a biography of Justice Marshall, recalling the justices’ private conferences about cases. “He wouldn’t have to open his mouth to affect the nature of the conference and how seriously the conference would take matters of race.”
So filled his chair wth Clarence Thomas so that shit would never happen again.
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I think he means the old Marshall bio
Williams wrote a Thurgood Marshall biography a few years ago. I didn't read it, so no opinion. If he wrote one now, yeah, I'd be worried, as he's more entrenched as a Foxie now. No telling what kind of revisionist history would appear.
As to the "waves" made by minority judges... The day such a nomination doesn't make any waves, when there is no press about the nominee's racial or ethnic background, then come back and talk to us about post-racial. Meanwhile, just acknowledge that all these things matter and deal with it. (OK, I'm a bit grumpy today.)
Yeah, I'd give the side eye to ANYTHING Williams
would write, including a grocery list.
would write, including a