Posted on 08/12/2005 12:18:19 AM PDT by goldstategop
(Denny Crane: "Sometimes you can only look for answers from God and failing that... and Fox News".)
You've heard it before, and you're going to hear it again: Joseph Farah is a buffoon, the Washington Post is only good for fish-wrapping, and you're going to look awfully foolish for doubting Judge Roberts' bona fides.
Ummmm .. it wasn't his case
Look .. I'm all for keeping an open mind about this nomination and hearing the arguments
But could ya give me an argument that has a leg to stand on?
I can't figure out if what he says is his real opinion or something to get his readership up but he's a nut job and doesn't deal in reality.
Go back 5 years ago and read what he said about Bush and 99% turned out to be bunk !
(Denny Crane: "Sometimes you can only look for answers from God and failing that... and Fox News".)
Please send me the winning lotto numbers for this next Saturday, OK?
Yes, I trust President Bush's judgment.
Can anyone name a single Bush appointee, to any court, who is not a conservative? So far the man has delivered. I think he deserves the benefit of the doubt until he does otherwise.
Do you remember David Souter's "bona fides"?
__________________________________________________________
As New Hampshire attorney general in 1977, Souter opposed the repeal of an 1848 state law that made abortion a crime even though Roe v. Wade had made it irrelevant, predicting that if the law were repealed, New Hampshire "would become the abortion mill of the United States."
At this point the only people more opposed to abortion than Souter were still in vitro.
He filed a brief arguing that the state should not have to pay for poor women to have abortions or, as the brief called it, "the killing of unborn children" and the "destruction of fetuses."
Also as state attorney general, Souter defended the governor's practice of lowering the flag to half-staff on Good Friday, arguing that "lowering of the flag to commemorate the death of Christ no more establishes a religious position on the part of the state or promotes a religion than the lowering of the flag for the death of Hubert Humphrey promotes the cause of the Democratic Party in New Hampshire."
Souter vowed in a newspaper interview to "do everything we can to uphold the law" allowing public school children to recite the Lord's Prayer every day.
As a justice on the New Hampshire Supreme Court, Souter dismissively referred to abortion as something "necessarily permitted under Roe v. Wade" not exactly the "fundamental right" he seems to think it is now.
In a private speech not a brief on behalf of a client Souter attacked affirmative action, calling it "affirmative discrimination."
Souter openly proclaimed his support for the "original intent" in interpreting the Constitution.
_______________________________________________________
(The above was excerpted from Ann's column.)
Another cute reminder that "bigotry" and "tolerance" have very selective meanings for liberals.
(Denny Crane: "Sometimes you can only look for answers from God and failing that... and Fox News".)
Oh brother. If he doesn't agree with Pat Robertson, that's all the more reason to like the guy.
I like Ann Coulter's take on it, and pretty much agree with her conclusions. We don't know John Roberts. He could, theoretically, be a decent candidate. Recent history, however, tells us to be very wary because there has never been a stealth nominee who was good for conservatives.
Personally, the more I hear about Roberts, the less I like him. So NARAL and Planned Parenthood don't like him. What does that prove? Nothing, except that he isn't a filthy communist, which really isn't our number one concern with him.
I trusted Bush's judgment way back in 2000 when I voted for the guy. I trusted him when he said his favorite justices on the Supreme Court were Scalia and Thomas. Obviously, my own judgment was lacking when I chose to trust Bush. The Scalia-Thomas line was just that - a line. It was Karl Rove whispering in his ear, "Get that conservative base locked up, so you can dive to the middle with enthusiasm and "compassionate" conservatism, Dubya." I won't be fooled again.
Kudos to yourself, goldstategop, for not being afraid to ask the hard questions. Yes, Farah may be an alarmist. He tends to get overwrought. Like you, I hope this really bad feeling I have about Roberts is just excessive worrying. Richard Cohen's remarks bother me a lot more than Farah's hand-wringing does, though. The facts speak for themselves.. Roberts voluntarily assisted a notorious, well-heeled leftist organization, the Lambda Legal Defense Fund (hardly a candidate for pro-bono work on the basis of indigence) in overturning a referendum granting special rights for sodomites. He was under no obligation to do so, and he deceived Senators in his resume by omitting mention of his work for them.
I, for one, will not be surpised in the least if Roberts authors the decision that establishes gay marriage as a constitutional right. Even worse, when it's a fait accompli, the self-styled conservatives here will praise it as a great advance in family values: homosexuals will have their promiscuity constrained by "marriage." Far too many "conservatives" have become nothing more than groveling, subservient dhimmis to the leftist Caliphs who apparently own the country.
I hope the left tears Roberts up. I hope they go after his adoption records, his wife, the way she dresses them, maybe accuse him of being a closet queereye too.
And when he is sitting on the Supreme Court, I hope every single day, he remembers what the left put him through.
ping
Well, the only absolute guarantees in life are death and taxes. However, there are some virtual guarantees in naming SCOTUS Justices. Bork was definitely a conservative when he was railroaded by the Democrats. Ted Olson, although much older than Roberts, would've been a slam-dunk conservative on the Supreme Court. There wouldn't be much mystery to him like there is with Roberts. An Olson nomination would've been worth it just to see the steam come out of Chillary's ears. And with Republicans controlling the Senate, it would've forced Democrats to explain what about Olson is "extraordinary" to prompt a filibuster.
It looks to me like Bush was thinking about the confirmation hearings when he nominated Roberts more than he was thinking about the impact he'll have on the Supreme Court. If Bush really wanted to move the court to the right, he would've nominated a known conservative who is on record repeatedly stating his own opinions on issues of the day, not just the opinions of his clients.
Senator Inhofe said exactly the same thing here in Norman last week. Said when everything comes out you have a rock-ribbed conservative in Judge Roberts. Told us not to believe everything we are hearing. I trust Senator Inhofe's judgement as much as anyone's.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.