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For the thin-skinned Thomas race has always lurked close to the surface. And it's intimately, but falsely, intertwined with the debate over conservative ideology.

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Understanding Clarence Thomas

By Earl Ofari Hutchinson, AlterNet. Posted October 4, 2007.


For the thin-skinned Thomas race has always lurked close to the surface. And it's intimately, but falsely, intertwined with the debate over conservative ideology.
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A little more than a year after his bruising Supreme Court confirmation battle a media gun shy Clarence Thomas made his first cautious public appearance. He wanted the friendly of friendliest audiences and chose Mercer University, a conservative law school in Georgia for his speech.

In his talk, Thomas got right to what he wanted to say or more particularly whom he wanted to lambaste. He cloaked himself in the martyr's garment and said that he expected to be treated badly by blacks for daring to challenge the tenets of racial orthodoxy. "You were considered a traitor to your race, and not considered a real black person."

A decade and a half later Thomas hasn't budged one inch from his relentless public and private war against civil rights leaders and liberal Democrats. In his autobiography, My Grandfather's Son, his war of ideology and words shows no signs of abating. He wraps himself just as tightly in the martyr's garment as he did in his Mercer speech. He sledgehammers liberal Democrats and civil rights groups just as hard as before.

In trying to make sense of Thomas' doctrinaire, contrarian court votes and opinions, and his private war against civil rights groups the plain answer is that they are payback to civil rights and civil liberties groups for trying to wreck his confirmation to the high court. But there's more to it than that. For the thin-skinned Thomas race has always lurked close to the surface -- often too close. And it's intimately, but falsely, intertwined with the debate over conservative ideology.

In the Mercer speech, and anyplace else where he's gotten the chance, Thomas has repeatedly bristled at the knock that civil rights leaders don't consider him a real black person because of his ultra conservative views. He railed at that and them in his Mercer speech but for far different reasons than his black critics say.

Many blacks expect whites to espouse conservative views. That expectation is deeply colored by race. They can't separate racism from conservatism. Since many blacks view whites as racist or as having racist views, they believe that conservatism must be an expression of racial blinders. But racism and conservatism can be mutually incompatible.

There is no one-to-one correlation between a conservative's espousal of free market economics and their attack on government regulations and them being a racial bigot. Yet the notion that a conservative is by definition a racist is deeply ingrained in the belief of many blacks.

Thomas has occasionally warned Republicans about racial insensitivity. And there are many blacks whose views are just as conservative as his in opposing abortion and gay rights and affirmative action and are just as hard line on crime and punishment. It matters not. Thomas can't win.

Civil rights leaders will continue to brand him as a fake, inauthentic black man. He's the black guy who sold his soul for a few pieces of conservative and even racist silver to them. The genteel 60 Minutes profile on him so infuriated Thomas bashers that they announced that they'd take the airwaves to set the record straight about him.

The notion that Thomas is not just a Judas and traitor but unfit to be called a real black man bothered the man that Thomas replaced on the high court, Thurgood Marshall. The liberal, activist, blunt spoken, civil rights icon Marshall is everything that civil rights groups consider to be the stuff that makes up a real black man. In other words everything Thomas isn't. But in a two hour meeting after his nomination, Marshall warned Thomas that he would be held to a far harsher standard of scrutiny on and away from the bench than a white conservative in the same spot.

That's even more glaring in the way civil rights leaders link Thomas to Antonin Scalia. The ultra conservative Scalia is so organically welded to Thomas in their lock step judicial votes and opinions, civil rights groups routinely slam him as Scalia's lackey. That's another way to say that black conservatives are the puppets and Republicans are the string pullers. Yet there was not a peep of criticism that Marshall and liberal justice William Brennan were virtual bobsey twins in their votes and opinions. There was no suggestion that Marshall took orders from the liberal white justice.

Thomas's conservative, unorthodox, views and legal opinions on the death penalty, age and gender bias, first amendment, prisoner rights and affirmative action cases were well known by the time he hit the court in 1991. It could hardly be said that Thomas latched on to judicial conservatism solely to curry favor with white conservatives to snatch a seat on the high court. Yet the belief that he did guarantees that the grandfather's son will be man civil rights groups and Democrats will perennially loathe as the black that got away. Judging from his book, Thomas will return the favor.

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Earl Ofari Hutchinson is an author and political analyst. His new book The Latino Challenge to Black America: Towards a Conversation between African-Americans and Hispanics (Middle Passage Press and Hispanic Economics New York) in English and Spanish will be out in October.

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Two Parties: Imperialists and anti-imperialists
Posted by: peacelf on Oct 4, 2007 10:47 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Justice Clarence Thomas is an imperialist and since we live in a white supremacist patriarchal society, that makes Thomas a lackey to white power represented in Justice Scalia.

Moreover, Thomas doesn't represent the majority views of African Americans, so he is only African American by skin pigmentation. I would put Condy Rice in that category, too.
They both support the nihilistic free market fundamentalist views of most politicans, Dem and Repubs, so that makes them a majority in Washington D.C.

peace

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Thomas' "lacky" status
Posted by: RobbieUMD on Oct 5, 2007 8:27 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
But I'm pretty sure Thomas isn't just considered a lacky of Scalia because he's black and votes in lock-step. I think that, unlike Marshall, Thomas has the reputation of being the "silent justice." He pretty much never authors opinions or even says anything. It gives the impression that he isn't really thinking; he's just towing the right-wing line. Maybe he should speak up some time and prove to everyone that he's not a dumb ass puppet?

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So now brilliant Beltway Hutchison defends Thomas' right to be a jerk.
Posted by: doinaheckuvajob on Oct 5, 2007 2:52 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This column makes no sense unless you're a Neocon believer.

So Thomas is the victim? Hmm...

And you're point is??

Oh, black civil rights leader are mad at Thomas for being a traitor and Thomas is mad at them for branding him one and not respecting him. For this you wasted 12 paragraphs?

Another Beltway horse race column.

Thomas is rightly reviled for being a thoughtless reactionary and a 3d rate judicial mind. He'd be perfect in Bush's Justice Dept. using the law illegally to punish his opponents. He deserves no one's respect.

Phoeey on Hutchison's worthless columns. Alternet, get Leonard Pitts or Jesus' General. Spare us this garbage, thanks.

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Supremes need a backbone too....
Posted by: picket on Oct 5, 2007 4:31 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"Me thinks he doth protest too much."

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No double standards
Posted by: lamar on Oct 6, 2007 9:10 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I think Earl is trying to say that it's OK to oppose Clarence Thomas for his political views, but to say that his race makes him even worse than a similar white justice, or that he is some kind of race traitor, is a misguided way to think.

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A traitor to his own people
Posted by: BobS on Oct 6, 2007 5:34 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Like Antonin Scala, Clarence Thomas is a traitor to his own people---- the American people.

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Seriously
Posted by: argyle on Oct 7, 2007 6:17 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Conservatism's link to racism is that it doesn't have anything to do with free market ideology, rather it has to do with the keeping of the status quo. I look around and see a world far from where we can relax into the luxury of believing that things as they are now are worth conserving. There are 6 billion people on this planet and fully a third of them literally don't have a pot to piss in. Having been taught manners by wise and genteel women, I don't have anything to say about Mr. Clarence Thomas.

"Conservatism discards prescription, shrinks from principle, disavows progress: having rejected all respect for antiquity, it offers no redress for the present, and makes no preparation for the future." Disraeli

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"They"
Posted by: stagolee on Oct 9, 2007 5:56 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Many blacks expect whites to espouse conservative views. That expectation is deeply colored by race. They can't separate racism from conservatism... they believe that conservatism must be an expression of racial blinders... Yet the notion that a conservative is by definition a racist is deeply ingrained in the belief of many blacks.

I'm really glad that E. O. Hutchinson is here to show the rest of us silly negroes how wrong we are.

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cookingood
Posted by: hay12 on Oct 16, 2007 2:13 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Understanding Clarence Thomas...That is easy. The man suffers from self-hatred. He hates the color of his skin. AND, if he benefited in any small way from affirmative action he is also a hypocrite.

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