With Clarence Thomas so much in the news these days, I was thinking about whether left-wing political activists made a terrible mistake (from their own perspective) regarding Clarence Thomas, pushing him, permanently, farther to the right then he would have ended up on his own.
If one looks at Thomas's biography, it's clear that he is a very thoughtful man, whose pre-Court ideology ranged all over the place, from young Catholic seminarian to radical student activist to non-religious libertarian (including an apparent Ayn Rand phase), to Straussian natural law follower, and, finally, to Catholic conservative with a libertarian streak. I can't remember if I saw this in an excerpt from his book or from one of his interviews, but while everyone assumes that he's always been anti-abortion, he claims to have told John Danforth in the mid-70s regarding abortion that the government has no right to tell women what to do with their bodies!
It's also clear that, despite his reputation in some circles, Thomas has always thought himself to be concerned with the fate of his fellow blacks. Thomas, for example, told his white conservative EEOC employees that being against affirmative action is not a "civil rights agenda," that one has to think about how one can create an alternative agenda that would aid blacks within a conservative/libertarian framework. One of those employees, Clint Bolick, went on to co-found the Institute for Justice, which has won renown for championing school choice, the rights of inner-city entrepreneurs, and opposing uses of eminent domain that tend to hurt the poor.
In short, Thomas did not need to become the left's enemy. His permanent ideological trajectory was likely somewhere to the right, but he could have been a bridge between the mainstream liberal civil rights community and the conservative establishment that wasn't especially concerned about the fate of the African American population.
Moreover, given that Thomas was only 42 when he reached the Court, and given the rather eclectic sources of his ideology (Thomas Sowell, Richard Wright, Rand, his grandfather, etc.), his views over time may have evolved in very interesting ways. It's unlikely, again, that he would have wound up back on the left, but his views may have been in some respects more congenial to the left than they are now.
I had occasion to get to know Thomas somewhat when he was at the EEOC and a judge on the D.C. Circuit. Even then, he was obviously somewhat bitter about how his left-wing critics treated him. From what I've seen, his new book and the interviews he's given make it clear that, not surprisingly, he's much more bitter about how his confirmation hearings progressed, and the often implicitly (and sometimes explicitly) racist attacks he has faced as a Justice. His views on affirmative action have almost certainly hardened, given that he has personally experienced what he always suspected was the fatal flaws of racial preferences--that the beneficiaries of such preferences are suspected of not being "qualified" no matter what their achievements, and that such beneficiaries are also expected to express eternal gratitude toward, and fealty to, the liberal establishment for granting them these preferences.
In short, by treating Thomas as an enemy, and not just someone with whom they had sharp and sincere disagreements, Thomas's harsh critics made him into an enemy. Thomas, who had a wild ideological ride for many years, seems to have settled into his current worldview (including his newfound religiosity) just after, and a result of, his confirmation hearings. Given that he has essentially no respect for the legal establishment (such as Yale Law School, which he refuses to visit or allow to honor him), mainstream civil rights organizations, or the mainstream media, all of whom he blames for his confirmation ordeal, he's not in much of a position to be influenced by any of them. Meanwhile, the ordeal seems to have bonded him with various friends in the DC conservative establishment who supported him through the confirmation.
Of course, it's possible that Thomas's views would have ended up in exactly the same place even if his adversaries had treated him with more respect. And, while I don't agree with Thomas on everything, I can't say that I'm unhappy overall with his performance as Justice, especially compared to his colleagues. But it's still interesting to consider what intellectual path Thomas may have taken that were essentially closed off to him (or that he closed off) because of the unsuccessful campaign against him.
UPDATE: Just to be clear, I didn't find Thomas to be a bitter person generally. In fact, when he was talking about anything other than prominent liberal activists who had it in for him when he was EEOC chair, he was about as pleasant, engaging, and fun a conversationalist as I've met, and very charismatic too (which is why the Bushies made a HUGE mistake in overcoaching him for his hearings--if you compare the Thomas of the original hearings with the unscripted Thomas of the Hill-Thomas hearings, you will see what I mean), not to mention his amazing, infectious, laugh.
Come to think of it, perhaps a better description than "bitter" would be "contemptuous" of his adversaries, or at least the ones who treated him as an Uncle Tom/traitor-to-his-race enemy.
Further UPDATE: Commenter Jim puts it well: "Nobody's opinions, legal or otherwise, exist in a vacuum. Most people read a variety of thinkers, both ones they agree with and those with whom they disagree but hold in high esteem. Obviously by treating him contemptuously, people who might have been in that second category for Justice Thomas, prevented themselves from having a significant impact on Thomas. That's only natural, and it doesn't reflect poorly on Thomas."
Related Posts (on one page):
- The Clarence Thomas-Anita Hill Controversy and Irrational Hatred of Ideological Adversaries:
- The Left's Strategic Mistake (?) Regarding Clarence Thomas:
Hopefully he is a happy man in his personal life; maybe his anger only comes out when he thinks of his career.
Thomas has always struck me as a man who was born bitter rather than a man who achieved it or had it thrust upon him.
1. This is probably one of David's best posts in a while. Thomas is a wonderful judge, but it is interesting to think of how he might have turned out if liberals don't always unfairly attack him. In law school, countless normally thoughful people attack him as "stupid" or "Scalia clone" without really considering how great his opinions are. I think that the greatest thing about his opinion is that they don't read like he thinks he is smarter than he really is. Most judges write very long opinions that seem to be an attempt to show how smart they are. Law should not have to be that complicated and Thomas gets that.
2. Bork is not a great legal mind. Anyone who would simply disregard the 9th amendment can't be that great of a legal mind. Plus, he wasn't smart enough to get rid of his facial hair for the hearing. Bork was good for supporting originalism, but is bad at correctly applying it.
Darn it! Who stole my secret talking points?
Having lived through 2002-2006, I see the same kind of arrogance from the Republicans. Only the fact that they were moving first, and thus the seriously schizophrenic nature of the party was apparent, stopped this arrogance from showing up in the judicial nominations (had the Republicans been more united on what kind of conservatism to push, Bush might have nominated, and Congress might have shoved down the Democrats' throat, extreme conservatives in an analogous response to the Democrat attacks on Bork and Thomas--"You stopped us once, but now you can't. Eat right-wing, suckas!").
You're right that by attacking Thomas, those organizations probably made things worse for themselves. But I have no respect for the legal establishment (as currently understood by the NYT and the left-wing professorate), left wing civil "rights" organizations, and certainly not the MSM - and I was never directly attacked by them. Anyone who can see those organizations clearly for what they are would probably come to naturally despise them.
First, thanks for this info, and thanks to David Bernstein for saying the same thing. In an earlier post here at VC, people attacked me for saying that Thomas is bitter and angry 15 years after his nomination, and how could I know that? Well, I know it from articles and interviews he have given over the years, and now we have confirmation.
Second, it may be true that Thomas is bitter. As I said before, IF he lets his bitterness decide his cases, well, that's pretty bad. IF his hatred and contempt of liberals makes him want to 'get back' at them through his rulings, then he's no better than a tin horn despot.
Now, I have no evidencde that he does. But a great man would rise above the attacks made upon him so many years ago.
As for Bork, I supported him back in 1987 even though I disagreed with him, but given his conduct since that time I breath a sigh of relief that he didn't make it.
I also want Indian take-out.
Maybe Clarence Thomas would feel differently about affirmative action today if liberals had treated him differently. So what? He's not in a policymaking position.
Or is there a bit of a wink and a nod in this post to the fact that Justice Thomas decides cases in line with his personal beliefs, just like everyone else does?
But if one believes Greenberg's account, Thomas came to the Supreme Court bench with some well-defined views, and isn't voting the way he does out of spite. That Thomas believes the government has no business regulating abortion doesn't mean that he believes/believed that there was a constitutional right to abortion: cf. his dissent in Lawrence v. Texas, where he makes clear his personal disapproval of the anti-sodomy law he votes to uphold. I don't buy the counterfactual that a non-Borked Thomas isn't just as principled a jurist as the Thomas of today--even aside from the fact that, even without the Anita Hill attacks, Thomas would still be called an Uncle Tom by the Sharptons of the world, and justifiably unhappy with such unfair attacks.
Good point, also I have to wonder what effect the uber-politicization of the nomination process has had on college and law students who now have to worry that anything and everything have they have written, said, or done could potentially be scrutinized decades latter to see what if anything it might say about their ideological views or used to disqualify them from an appointment.
Gee, this IS fun!
Souter's right about Bork and Kennedy, but let's blame Bush I for Souter; I think Edith Jones would have been confirmed, but Bush liked Souter better than her.
I think a better idea would be to just get cameras out of the Senate chambers entirely. Too much of the “hearings” seems to be little more than members of the World’s Most Distinguished Debating Body™ giving speeches for the camera rather than asking actual questions of the nominee.
I think a better idea is to get more cameras into the Senate chambers -- televize every damn thing anyone says there. That won't improve government, but it was never that good to begin with. It will, however, remind us perpetually what incredible asses Senators are.
So I object to David's exclamation point at the end of the second paragraph!
Senate hearings are today's Colosseum, with the same kind of blood sport.
I think Borking the next Democrat-appointee would be a good thing, no matter how qualified or reputable that person is (which, if he's appointed by a Democrat, won't be an issue). Unless it's the Pope, I don't care who it is. Borking is now our national pastime. At least when the Supreme Court issues its next promulgation of a penumbra emanating from a living and breathing document, we won't have to kid ourselves that what they're really doing has anything related to the Constitution.
If the "left" is an abstract morphotic entity that has no form, something that is not even definable like an idea or philosphy, how can it have an "intent"? How can it have goals? How then can it make a mistake to fail to achieve those goals?
Your languages reminds me of some people such as Dawkins and Hitchens that describes all religons, all mysticism as the same.
Not directed at me, but I'll answer. A great legal mind doesn't have to agree with me, but s/he does have to fill a certain number of criteria. One of those would certainly be providing a pretty good justification if one is going to assign almost no meaning to the primary clauses of the 9th and 14th amendments. Bork supports doing this with easily disproven history, lots of question begging, and a smidge of "because I said so."
If Bork were to make a normative argument for ignoring the historical meaning of the text, or a consequentialist argument for why judges shouldn't try to draw meaning out of certain types of phrases in the constitution, I would still disagree with him, but I could at least respect that he was making an honest argument.
Instead, he seems unaware that his arguments are distinct from originalism, and that they sometimes manifestly contradict it. The way he swings at straw men in the final chapters of Tempting of America makes me think that he doesn't get his opponent's arguments.
Now, I've seen video of him giving speeches, and I can believe that on some topic of the law he is a brilliant legal mind, but when applied to constitutional law I am skeptical of the claim, based on much more than my disagreement with him.
Yet to pretend it doesn't exist, is being willfully ignorant. Just watch him be completely emotionless as if he is blocking out emotion when asked about when his grandfather showed anger to him, yet the next moment it is quite evident he is very loving of the man.
It seems that everyone is partly an originalist and no one is entirely an originalist; I guess this explains why most debates over originalism quickly become debates about other things by proxy.
Second, I thought the general rap on what "the left" did to S. Ct. Justices was put pressure on them at D.C. cocktail parties to be more leftist. Guess we screwed that up with Thomas.
Finally, Orin, haven't some of Bork's writings -- say, in Slouching to Gommorah -- given you and other thoughtful non-leftists some reasons to think it's actually a good thing that he's not on the court?
Here's a question: If that is the case, what should he do? He clearly has gone through a lot of difficulties, and has been insulted in ways that have taken their toll. How should someone in his position unload his anger that's accumulated over so much time.
In the New Testament there's a verse about not letting a "root of bitterness" grow in your heart. But what should someone do (especially of Thomas's stature and visability) once that root of bitterness is already there? If his anger has been repressed over time, and it's difficult for him to handle, is therapy the answer?
(I have a feeling if he did visit a therapist, or God forbid take medication, it would be leaked by someone and become a major political news story.)
(And the effort to go after Bill Clinton was ruthless as well. Let's see, if the standard for Senator Vitter's activities -- activities before being in the Senate don't count -- applied, then there was no basis for investigating Whitewater for activities unrelated to his serving as president).
What was interesting to me about Thomas is that he is so bitter about his Yale law degree when his connection to Yale must have helped get him the job with Yale alum Danforth and thus ultimately to the Supreme Court. If he had the chance to do it all over again, would he have preferred the University of Georgia or Fordham or Notre Dame? What type of job did he want when he graduated?
(Perhaps a major law firm would be willing to offer him a job that is much more lucrative than his current job . . .)
Here's a question: If that is the case, what should he do? He clearly has gone through a lot of difficulties, and has been insulted in ways that have taken their toll. How should someone in his position unload his anger that's accumulated over so much time.
</blockquote>
I don't know what he should do, <i>sometimes </i>repressing his anger is the best outcome. Each circumstance is different, that is why he should decide his fate, it is the only moral thing to do.
<blockquote>But what should someone do (especially of Thomas's stature and visability) once that root of bitterness is already there? If his anger has been repressed over time, and it's difficult for him to handle, is therapy the answer? </blockquote>
For some people yes
<blockquote>(I have a feeling if he did visit a therapist, or God forbid take medication, it would be leaked by someone and become a major political news story.)</blockquote>
Which is one of many reasons he is an atypical case and thus you have to examine all the information before you can give good advice.
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I don't know what to do, but people pretending we shouldn't talk about it for by talking about it, that person is automatic anti-thomas, or anti-republicn, or anti-orginialist, just is PC groupthink baloney...at least to me it is.
Actually, an awful lot of people think the Constitution spells out the necessary qualifications. Who cares what the ABA's propaganda organ says? The ABA should STFU ASAP, IMHO. FIFY.
I would think all the Senators would have to do is to watch themselves in the Roberts, Alto, and Patreus hearings. They were no match for intelligent, informed, and well prepared people.
Bork on the other hand, whatever his brilliance as a scholar, clearly was and is possessed of sufficient bitterness, animus, crankiness, whatever you want to call it, to make his "judicial temperment" a serious question. Call the process of blocking him "Borking" if you want, but he didn't belong on the Court, and still doesn't.
r gould-saltman
I think Ted Frank is on point, though: The Court is likely more to the left than it would have been sans Bork's and Thomas' mistreatment. So they lost the battle for Thomas, they kept Roe v. Wade.
The second point is in reading his opinions - it is clear that he can actually "read a statute" unlike some of the other justices. He is also the very consistent, unlike one justice who actually took opposing positions on "standing" on two separate opinions issued on the same day. (Two opinions were issued on the same day with nearly identical facts regarding standing, she dissented in the second case on standing grounds - apparantly solely because second case had 5 votes for the "conservitive holding" where as the first case had 5 votes for the "liberal holding")
It also is a refreshing change form the talk only a year ago about how dunb Thomas is. Hary Reid said so bluntly. Often heard on NPR is the idea that Thomas never leads on a decision but only follows and never comments. No questions.
I think the mistake the left and leftists make is that they think there will never be repercussions.
If he does have a chip on his shoulder, he has a long time to work on it.
It was the Supreme Court itself that politicized the nominating process, by venturing, step by step (over two centuries, mind you), further and further into policymaking decisions that are rightly the preserve of the political branches. The Warren Court's massive policymaking power grab, sustained and extended by its successors, virtually guaranteed that subsequent nominations would be shot through with political intent. And once nominations became flagrantly political, it was inevitable that confirmations would, as well.
The executive and legislative branches are elected to express the collective political will of their constituents. If the Supreme Court arranges things so that that job can only be done via Supreme Court nominations and confirmations, then that is how the job will be done.
The irony being that if he were more liberal, he might be in a policymaking position.
I disagree slightly. I think many people are fully committed to originalism, it's just that the story doesn't end there. Only if you have perfect knowledge and are answering questions only for the abstract does originalism answer everything. In the real world, a committment to originalism doesn't solve questions about which interpretation is correct, it doesn't solve questions about which constructions will be most effective, it doesn't solve normative questions about how minimize the impact of one's own errors in interpretation, and it doesn't solve practical questions of what to do when a result would upset current social arrangements.
But though it doesn't solve these questions, on many occassions originalism may hint at the answers, and which hints it gives will obviously rest on which interpretation of the text is correct. So it isn't surprising that disagreements between originalists over matters of interpretation will play themselves out over issues that are not strictly within the domain of originalism.
Southwick -- unquestionably a very conservative judge who is smart enough to be resourceful in finding for the civil defendant -- was tarred as a racist homophobe, on the strength of truly miserable arguments from a couple of Mississippi state court opinions, neither even *by* him.
As a liberal Democrat from Mississippi, I spent a fair amount of time on some liberal blogs, arguing for a fairer treatment; and the chances seem good that, if Southwick wasn't a cultural conservative before, he is now.
(Cf. Charles Pickering, whose recess appointment was of short duration, and who had been perhaps the most plaintiff-friendly federal judge in the state; after his own experience, he wrote a silly book about the liberal threat to America, etc., etc. Evidently the process can unhinge some people.)
Democrats and Republicans alike need to exercise candor in rejecting extreme nominees, tempered by good sense as to who's really *extreme* and who's just somebody one disagrees with. The "Borking" risks having a terrible effect on the judiciary.
Yes, you are onto my strategerific mistake in not supporting Thomas. Yes, I do not want "want great legal minds on the bench." But Ted Frank is right that the "borking strategy got [me] Kennedy and Souter instead of Bork."
Bwahhaaaaa, I am all up in your law schools and your academies and your professions controlling everyone and everything. Bwahhahaaaa, this explains why the federal judiciary is dominated by people I control and why all Presidential and Congressional elections go my way. I am the all powerful, all knowing, monolothic LEFT. Bow before me as I convert you all to Islam, destroy private property and make you all get gay married.
Gee, who would have guessed that from reading his opinions? (And I am a fan of a lot of his jurisprudence especially in the exciting world of Article III by the way.)
will you also force us to get gay divorced?
This is a long running joke on liberal blogs. That's why I felt no shame in blatantly ripping it off.
Thanks for the link. I had figured on the stereotype of the mythical black beast and sexual predator. The other stereotypes are interesting concepts I hadn't thought about.
Had he in fact shifted to the left, we would probably be reading Bernstein prattle about how he was cowed by his left-wing critics.
Pray tell, Prof. Bernstein, was it the woman at your college who wouldn't date Republicans who turned you into somebody who agrees with Justice Thomas on most issues?
Ironically, liberals only help to cement this view every time they attack Thomas for not really being the "most qualified" (as Bush described him), and for instead being a affirmative action nominee.
absolutely hilarious!!
What struck me the most over the past few days were the old clips of his hearings, not him in them though, but the whole cadre of activists and elected officials that looked much younger then, but acted then as they do now -- they're older now, still in their same places, but certainly not wiser.
We really need to start considering voting against the incumbents (every time for a dozen years or so) regardless of party lines. Keeping this crew in power for this long a time is dangerous to our republic.
This morning I was listening to Diane Rehm show on NPR with Jeffrey Toobin and Jeffrey Rosen flogging their recent books in the court.
Of course the inevitable subject of Anita Hill came up. One of the Jeffrey's [Toobin, I think] made the statement that several "panels" had looked at her charges later and had come to the conclusion that they were likely true.
Anybody have any information on any panels or groups that waded into that mess post hearings? It seemed to me that subject was dropped by all involved after the hearings. I don't remember anybody that wasn't on one side or the other looking at the actual charges.
Any pointer to a resonably balanced reference on the matter would be appreciated. Or is a balanced look at this subject like asking for evidence of the Easter Bunny?
No repercussions? My friend, you will be one of the first up against the wall when the revolution comes. You and Christopher Hitchens -- boy is he in for it.
Off my corner, ho.
Not that that's quite synonymous with ontological status ... yet.
If someone believed Anita Hill -- I don't know if what she says was true or not, but back
when I ate bullshit for a livingwas a republican, I skimmed this book called the Real Anita Hill which turned out to be written by an admitted liar -- then don't you think that maybe they didn't give a shit about this strateegery that David and Ted Frank are hypothesizing about, i.e. that they didn't want a sexual harasser on the Court regardless of his views. (Insert knee jerk right wing response with long references to trumped up rape and sex harassment allegations against the Clenis (Bill Clinton) -- Monica was consensual so that don't count.)Furthermore, re Justice Thomas, don't you think he can actually think for himself? Also, your post implies that since CT is open minded, he would be more open to moving to the left -- again, what does that assume about people with views like CT, that they aren't open-minded. Very odd post, very odd.
I find DB's post especially good, because it seems like this is a common problem. I might actually read more than two of the NYTimes's columnists if it wasn't so commonly the case that other needlessly insult me. And the loss is theirs because now their ideas aren't even part of my picture of the world.
The right really is obsessed with the Clenis's sex life -- I didn't even know there were four and I couldn't name one of them.
Further Ted, you missed the point completely and show yourself for the intellectual lightweight with partisan blinders that we all knew and loved. I don't give a shit if Anita HIll was right or not -- point is that a lot of people genuinely believed her at the time, if it was a minority or not. It touched a huge nerve with some women -- see the political problems Arlen Specter had in 1992 (not 15 years later) for accusing her of perjury. So, all I was saying was that your, and DB's, oversimplistic and stupid talk of "teh eeevil LEFT" is absurd. Plenty of people were against CT because they believed Anita Hill regardless of his poilitics. But this will all be over your head I am sure.
As for the commenter above who mentioned that several members of the ABA rated him as unqualified, I say, so what? The ABA has been an arm of the Democrat party and the liberal leftist establishment for years. Everyitme they send me some membership thing, I trash it without even reading it.
Do tell; I also hear the Titanic sunk. It's the narrative that counts, no?
David Bernstein, as quoted by Stuart Taylor: "Ahmadinejad is the head of state of an enemy state, whose armed forces are killing American soldiers with equipment they provide to Iraqi insurgents.... American universities should [not give] a respectful forum to our enemies."
I'm sure David would oppose the US government arming Mexicans fighting against a Soviet occupying force that had come to "help them throw off the yolk of an oppressive government" while never missing an opportunity to denounce the evil USA. And if the US President in such circumstances offered to speak at the University of Mexico City, I'm sure David would urge the request be denied.
Motes and beams, David...motes and beams.
David Bernstein, as quoted by Stuart Taylor: "Ahmadinejad is the head of state of an enemy state, whose armed forces are killing American soldiers with equipment they provide to Iraqi insurgents.... American universities should [not give] a respectful forum to our enemies."
I'm sure David would oppose the US government arming Mexicans fighting against a Soviet occupying force that had come to "help them throw off the yolk of an oppressive government" while never missing an opportunity to denounce the evil USA. And if the US President in such circumstances offered to speak at the University of Mexico City, I'm sure David would urge the request be denied.
Motes and beams, David...motes and beams.
Goddamn, son.
Fish in a barrel, fish in a barrel - stooge-like fish in a gift-wrapped barrel.
I disagree with the view that his ideas hardened in response to the enemy left.
I don't buy this because Justice Thomas and other black conservative lawyers have long felt shunned by the more liberal black legal community. As Clarence Thomas rose up the ladder, first at the EEOC and then the federal bench, he drew more fire that came with his increased power and position. The fact that he believes or believed in the goal to create a fair playing field for minorities does not make him a candidate to bridge the gap. Bernstein does not make a persuasive case that he held any middle ground that would allow him to engage in this dialogue. Indeed, other black conservatives have played that role. It may not be a correct comparison, but one could compare Colin Powell or JC Watts with Justice Thomas, Thomas Sowell or Judge Janice Rogers. Sharing a goal that to improve the lives of black Americans might have been enough before Clarence Thomas joined the EEOC. Blame for the failure to bridge the gap is not simply on the response of his enemies but on the actions of the person operating the EEOC.
I disagree with the notion that he might have reached a different ideological place except for his enemies. I think his views, like many who share them, were formed because the black left existed and in direct response to perceived and real failures of that community to make meaningful change or alter the racism that Clarence Thomas believe existed.
Instead, it is my view that the wandering ideology of Clarence Thomas to Justice Thomas was always a response to external forces; e.g. the racism of the Catholic church, his black power phase in rejection of the milder civil rights efforts of the day, his knee-jerk libertarianism to maximize his view of himself as an individual apart from his racial classification and his history, his denigration of his Yale law degree because others (read: whites) perceived him to not deserve his status. With the respect to the latter, could you imagine George Bush denigrating his Yale or Harvard degrees or Al Gore hiding his Harvard degree because they were legacy admits or well connected? His reaction to external views of himself has driven him to a strong individualistic and, in his world view, an objective view of the rules and laws.
It is curious to me that a man that spent so much time reacting and being shaped by the perceptions of others would dismiss them when he interprets and applies the law.
If so, I'm sad that Justice Thomas wasn't a better man to overcome such bitterness in such an important post.
Did it ever occur to you that absolutely no one in the whole wide world cares if you are sad? If not think about it for a while.
Like I said, no one absolutely no one is interested in your unhinged emotional state.
As for O'Connor and Kennedy, the parallel doesn't work, because neither O'Connor nor Kennedy moved that far to the left. So I don't think The Right did screw up with them -- but I do think The Right has the potential to do so with Kennedy.
In this way, Thomas finds himself in a positiion that is similar to the position that Professor Bernstein states is that held by a conservative academic---a distinct minority voice in a field dominated by people more to the left, who is frequently treated poorly because of his conservative political views. After reading Jan Crawford Greenburg's book on the Supreme Court, I have more respect for Thomas' intellect, even if I don't share many of his views on constitutional law. It is a pity that many in the US can't treat their political opposites with respect when expressing their disagreement, but you need only watch cable TV news shows to see that polarizing and demonizing your opponents has become a popular shtick.
Who's mistake is this again?
JosephSlater - I can think of several areas where Bork opinions would scare me, based on his recent writings. Free speech cases head the list.
CrazyTrain - Anita Hill and 3 Clinton accusers were referred to. I'm surprised that you couldn't at least name Paula Jones.
Nick
Bring up Juanita Broaddrick, a very viable charge concerning a violent rape, and suddenly the same liberal/left becomes caustically knee jerk dismissive.
If someone has been through a difficult experience and has actually healed, he won't sound every bit as hurt and angry when he talks about the experience twenty years later. What viewers of the 60 Minutes interview and readers of Thomas's book are responding to is that although he obviously functions well in daily life and has many sources of satisfaction, as soon as That Subject comes up, all the old anger comes gushing out. It appears that he hasn't really gotten past any of it, despite the passage of time and the many good things in his life.
Again, to the contrary, Thomas's articulations are apt, are commensurate and condign, to the subject matter, much as his feelings and articulations are apt when addressing other, different subject matter as well. Thomas reflects a conspicuously healthy attitude and resolve; it is the Left and Left/Dems who reflect the malign qualities, the obsessed bitterness, etc., they should be indicting themselves and directing their reforms inwardly; instead they are obsessed and possessed of an impregnable self-righteousness that always and ever deflects very much of a self-critique, much of a steady gaze into the mirror.