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Clarence Thomas Whines His Way to the Bank
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Pity Clarence Thomas. Done in by what he calls "left-wing zealots draped in flowing sanctimony" -- as he describes anyone who challenged his elevation to the court -- he still claims to have suffered as much as African-Americans once victimized by "bigots in white robes." Since kicking off his book tour on 60 Minutes last Sunday, he has been whining all the way to the bank, often abetted by a press claque as fawning as his No. 1 fan, Rush Limbaugh.
We are always at a crossroads with race in America, and so here we are again. The rollout of Justice Thomas's memoir, My Grandfather's Son, is not happening in a vacuum. It follows a Supreme Court decision (which he abetted) outlawing voluntary school desegregation plans in two American cities. It follows yet another vote by the Senate to deny true Congressional representation to the majority black District of Columbia. It follows the decision by the leading Republican presidential candidates to snub a debate at a historically black college as well as the re-emergence of a low-tech lynching noose in Jena, La.
Perhaps most significant of all, Mr. Thomas's woe-is-me tour unfolds against the backdrop of the presidential campaign of an African-American whose political lexicon does not include martyrdom or rage. My Grandfather's Son may consciously or not echo the title of Barack Obama's memoir of genealogy and race, Dreams from My Father, but it might as well be written in another tongue.
It's useful to watch Mr. Thomas at this moment, 16 years after his riveting confirmation circus. He is a barometer of what has and has not changed since then because he hasn't changed at all. He still preaches against black self-pity even as he hyperbolically tries to cast his Senate cross-examination by Joe Biden as tantamount to the Ku Klux Klan assassination of Medgar Evers. He still denies that he is the beneficiary of the very race-based preferences he deplores. He still has a dubious relationship with the whole truth and nothing but, and not merely in the matter of Anita Hill.
This could be seen most vividly on 60 Minutes, when he revisited a parable about the evils of affirmative action that is also a centerpiece of his memoir: his anger about the "tainted" degree he received from Yale Law School. In Mr. Thomas's account, he stuck a 15-cent price sticker on his diploma after potential employers refused to hire him. By his reckoning, a Yale Law graduate admitted through affirmative action, as he was, would automatically be judged inferior to whites with the same degree. The 60 Minutes correspondent, Steve Kroft, maintained that Mr. Thomas had no choice but to settle for a measly $10,000-a-year job (in 1974 dollars) in Missouri, working for the state's attorney general, John Danforth.
What 60 Minutes didn't say was that the post was substantial -- an assistant attorney general -- and that Mr. Danforth was himself a Yale Law graduate. As Mr. Danforth told the story during the 1991 confirmation hearings and in his own book last year, he traveled to New Haven to recruit Mr. Thomas when he was still a third-year law student. That would be before he even received that supposedly worthless degree. Had it not been for Yale taking a chance on him in the first place, in other words, Mr. Thomas would never have had the opportunity to work the Yalie network to jump-start his career and to ascend to the Supreme Court. Mr. Danforth, a senator in 1991, was the prime mover in shepherding the Thomas nomination to its successful conclusion.
Bill O'Reilly may have deemed the 60 Minutes piece "excellent," but others spotted the holes. Marc Morial, the former New Orleans mayor who now directs the National Urban League, told Tavis Smiley on PBS that it was "as though Justice Thomas's public relations firm edited the piece." On CNN, Jeffrey Toobin, the author of the new best-seller about the court, The Nine, said that it was "real unfair" for 60 Minutes not to include a response from Ms. Hill, who was slimed on camera by Mr. Thomas as "not the demure, religious, conservative person" she said she was.
Ms. Hill, who once taught at Oral Roberts University and is now a professor at Brandeis, told me last week that CBS News was the only one of the three broadcast news divisions that did not seek her reaction to the latest Thomas salvos. Mr. Kroft told me that there were no preconditions placed on him by either Mr. Thomas or his publisher. "Our story wasn't about Anita Hill," he said. "Our story was about Clarence Thomas."
In any event, the piece no more challenged Mr. Thomas's ideas than it did his insinuations about Ms. Hill. As Mr. Smiley and Cornel West noted on PBS, 60 Minutes showed an old clip of Al Sharpton at an anti-Thomas rally rather than give voice to any of the African-American legal critics of Justice Thomas's 300-plus case record on the court. In 2007, no less than in 1991, a clownish Sharpton clip remains the one-size-fits-all default representation of black protest favored by too many white journalists.
The free pass CBS gave Mr. Thomas wouldn't matter were he just another celebrity "get" hawking a book. Unfortunately, there's the little matter of all that public policy he can shape -- more so than ever now that John Roberts and Samuel Alito have joined him as colleagues. Indeed, Justice Thomas, elevated by Bush 41, was the crucial building block in what will probably prove the most enduring legacy of Bush 43, a radical Supreme Court. The "compassionate conservative" who turned the 2000 G.O.P. convention into a minstrel show to prove his love of diversity will exit the political stage as the man who tilted American jurisprudence against Brown v. Board of Education. He leaves no black Republican behind him in either the House or Senate.
While actuarial tables promise a long-lived Bush court, the good news is that the polarizing racial politics exemplified by the president and Mr. Thomas is on the wane elsewhere. Fittingly, the book tour for My Grandfather's Son began just as word of Harry Dent's death arrived from South Carolina last weekend. An aide to Strom Thurmond and then to Richard Nixon, Mr. Dent was the architect of the "Southern strategy" that exploited white backlash against the civil-rights movement to turn the South into a Republican stronghold.
Mr. Dent recanted years later, telling The Washington Post when he retired from politics in 1981 that he was sorry he had "stood in the way of rights of black people." His peers and successors have been less chastened. One former Nixon White House colleague, Pat Buchanan, said on "Meet the Press" last weekend that it was no big deal for Republican candidates to skip a debate before an African-American audience because blacks make up only about 10 percent of the voting public and Republicans only get about a tenth of that anyway. It didn't occur to Mr. Buchanan that in 21st-century America many white voters are also offended by politicians who snub black Americans -- whether at a campaign debate or in the rubble of Hurricane Katrina.
Republicans who play the race card may find that it has an expiration date even in the South. In 2000, Mr. Bush could speak at Bob Jones University when it still forbade interracial dating among its students, and John McCain could be tarred as the father of an illegitimate black child in the South Carolina primary. No more. Just ask the former Senator George Allen, the once invincible Republican prince of Virginia, whose career ended in 2006 after his use of a single racial slur.
Mr. Thomas seems ignorant of this changing America. He can never see past his enemies' list, which in his book expands beyond his political foes, Yale and the press to "elite white women" and "paternalistic big-city whites" and "light-skinned blacks." (He does include a warm mention of Mr. Thurmond, a supporter in 1991, without mentioning that the senator hid away a child fathered with a black maid.) Always eager to cast himself as a lynching victim, Mr. Thomas is far more trapped in the past than the 1960s civil-rights orthodoxy he relentlessly demonizes.
The only way he can live with his various hypocrisies, it seems, is to claim that he's the rare honest, politically incorrect black man who has the guts to tell African-Americans what no other black leader will. Thus he asserted to a compliant Jan Crawford Greenburg of ABC News last week that everyone except him tiptoes around talk of intraracial crime and out-of-wedlock births.
This will come as news to the millions of Americans who have heard Mr. Obama, among other African-American leaders whose words give the lie to this bogus claim. But the fact that America's highest court harbors a justice as full of unreconstructed racial bitterness as Clarence Thomas will prove more eye-opening still.
© 2007 The New York Times
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Posted by: Just The Facts on Oct 8, 2007 3:36 AM
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Posted by: russianblue1 on Oct 8, 2007 5:51 AM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Since he's still so pissed about Anita Hill and he's so big on being judged by his "accomplishments", remember that the American Bar Association ranked him as a poor to mediocre attorney the year he was nominated. His performance on the Supreme Court deserves the same rank.
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» RE: For someone who SUPPOSEDLY wants to be judged
Posted by: ALANHESTER
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Posted by: russianblue1 on Oct 8, 2007 6:00 AM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Thomas is MARRIED to a white woman!! I guess she's not "elite".
Damn, that convenient memory and selective facts shit is great - look at the logical loops one can make!
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Posted by: sausage on Oct 8, 2007 6:39 AM
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For example, why did Sharpton blurt out, “As for the one Mormon running for office, those that really believe in God will defeat him anyway, so don’t worry about that, that’s a temporary – that’s a temporary situation[,]”referring of course to Mitt Romney, during a televised debate over religion versus atheism with writer Christerpher Hitchens in May of this year?
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» RE: "...a clownish Sharpton clip..."
Posted by: VZEQICVA
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Posted by: VZEQICVA on Oct 8, 2007 7:46 AM
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» HE DOSEN'T HAVE TO DO ANYTHING EXCEPT WHAT HE IS TOLD. hE HAS CLERKS TO
Posted by: mdruss42
» RE: ALAS, POOR CLARENCE
Posted by: ALANHESTER
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Posted by: peacelf on Oct 8, 2007 8:09 AM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There's no such thing as self-made people. There's people who conform by playing by the white man's rules and get admitted to the club, and then there's the rest of us who live principled lives.
But, Clarence Thomas is no Uncle Tom; that would be a disservice to the Uncle Tom character in Uncle Tom's Cabin whose Christ-like compassion and sense of justice made him an abolitionist of the best kind. Thomas is more like Simon LeGree. Now that he has power, he abuses it.
peace
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» RE: liberalphobia!
Posted by: ALANHESTER
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Posted by: mgloraine on Oct 8, 2007 12:40 PM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We still believe you, Anita!
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» RE: Hill was every bit the lackey implementing Reagan's 'morning in the Reich' as was Thomas...
Posted by: ekipnrut
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Posted by: CES on Oct 8, 2007 2:05 PM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
i only have one slight disagreement. Clarence Thomas, to me, is SAMBO.
f.y.i., I am one of those who went to jail in the sixties to fight for his right to dirty his lips on his master's rear. Sorry he chose to go for hair on the coke can.
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Posted by: ALANHESTER
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Posted by: Missing Piece on Oct 8, 2007 4:50 PM
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» RE: I saw clearance on 60 minutes and
Posted by: Lajaw
» RE: I saw clearance on 60 minutes and
Posted by: crossword
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Posted by: ekipnrut on Oct 8, 2007 5:49 PM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I am listening to Brent Budowski on AA and he remarks that the stream of vindictive spiteful vitriol from Thomas about said lawyers and their colleagues -who constituted the core of those who fought his nomination- SHOULD serve as grounds for him to recuse himself from any case where they appear as counsel for the (civil rights seeking) Plaintiff. In other words , venting so much 'payback/vendetta/score to settle' seething rancor at the lawyers in that part of the political spectrum
ipso facto disqualifies him as having the requisite basic even handedneass in the exercise of fundamental fairness in judicial temperment. Recusal is PLAINLY appropriate....
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Posted by: SatanicJamboree on Oct 8, 2007 9:28 PM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I find it interesting that ANY criticism of Clarence "Uncle" Thomas is held up as the ultimate in political incorrectness for the right...it's really a sore spot for these folks. Any thoughts as to why this is?
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Posted by: ALANHESTER
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Posted by: cshideler on Oct 10, 2007 11:42 AM
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» Has Desert Bayou been removed ?
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Posted by: gfatjax on Oct 10, 2007 3:03 PM
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Posted by: wleming on Oct 12, 2007 4:42 PM
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witnesses other than Hill, all of whom had tales
of Thomas sexual coercion. Perjury in defense of racism?
You bet.
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Posted by: ccluelessfl60 on Oct 12, 2007 11:19 PM
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Posted by: itzamirakul on Oct 14, 2007 11:05 AM
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Evidently the "Black is Beautiful" era did nothing to help him gain pride in his own beingness as it did for so many others.
I am surprised that he did not follow Michael Jackson's example and have the skin-lightening technique performed.
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Posted by: Ms Cellaneous on Oct 17, 2007 7:39 AM
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Whitey cleared all his sins in court and have covered up his sins but damn them all anyway.
He is a Saint in his own mind. Mind?
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Posted by: Just The Facts on Oct 8, 2007 3:36 AM
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» RE: Sore Loser!
Posted by: 1gma
Comments are closed-
Posted by: russianblue1 on Oct 8, 2007 5:51 AM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Since he's still so pissed about Anita Hill and he's so big on being judged by his "accomplishments", remember that the American Bar Association ranked him as a poor to mediocre attorney the year he was nominated. His performance on the Supreme Court deserves the same rank.
[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]
» RE: For someone who SUPPOSEDLY wants to be judged
Posted by: ALANHESTER
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Posted by: russianblue1 on Oct 8, 2007 6:00 AM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Thomas is MARRIED to a white woman!! I guess she's not "elite".
Damn, that convenient memory and selective facts shit is great - look at the logical loops one can make!
[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]
Comments are closed-
Posted by: sausage on Oct 8, 2007 6:39 AM
Current rating: 1 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
For example, why did Sharpton blurt out, “As for the one Mormon running for office, those that really believe in God will defeat him anyway, so don’t worry about that, that’s a temporary – that’s a temporary situation[,]”referring of course to Mitt Romney, during a televised debate over religion versus atheism with writer Christerpher Hitchens in May of this year?
[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]
» RE: "...a clownish Sharpton clip..."
Posted by: VZEQICVA
Comments are closed-
Posted by: VZEQICVA on Oct 8, 2007 7:46 AM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» HE DOSEN'T HAVE TO DO ANYTHING EXCEPT WHAT HE IS TOLD. hE HAS CLERKS TO
Posted by: mdruss42
» RE: ALAS, POOR CLARENCE
Posted by: ALANHESTER
Comments are closed-
Posted by: peacelf on Oct 8, 2007 8:09 AM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There's no such thing as self-made people. There's people who conform by playing by the white man's rules and get admitted to the club, and then there's the rest of us who live principled lives.
But, Clarence Thomas is no Uncle Tom; that would be a disservice to the Uncle Tom character in Uncle Tom's Cabin whose Christ-like compassion and sense of justice made him an abolitionist of the best kind. Thomas is more like Simon LeGree. Now that he has power, he abuses it.
peace
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» RE: liberalphobia!
Posted by: ALANHESTER
Comments are closed-
Posted by: mgloraine on Oct 8, 2007 12:40 PM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We still believe you, Anita!
[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]
» RE: Hill was every bit the lackey implementing Reagan's 'morning in the Reich' as was Thomas...
Posted by: ekipnrut
Comments are closed-
Posted by: CES on Oct 8, 2007 2:05 PM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
i only have one slight disagreement. Clarence Thomas, to me, is SAMBO.
f.y.i., I am one of those who went to jail in the sixties to fight for his right to dirty his lips on his master's rear. Sorry he chose to go for hair on the coke can.
[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]
» RE: esponse to Liberalphobia
Posted by: ALANHESTER
Comments are closed-
Posted by: Missing Piece on Oct 8, 2007 4:50 PM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» RE: I saw clearance on 60 minutes and
Posted by: Lajaw
» RE: I saw clearance on 60 minutes and
Posted by: crossword
Comments are closed-
Posted by: ekipnrut on Oct 8, 2007 5:49 PM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I am listening to Brent Budowski on AA and he remarks that the stream of vindictive spiteful vitriol from Thomas about said lawyers and their colleagues -who constituted the core of those who fought his nomination- SHOULD serve as grounds for him to recuse himself from any case where they appear as counsel for the (civil rights seeking) Plaintiff. In other words , venting so much 'payback/vendetta/score to settle' seething rancor at the lawyers in that part of the political spectrum
ipso facto disqualifies him as having the requisite basic even handedneass in the exercise of fundamental fairness in judicial temperment. Recusal is PLAINLY appropriate....
[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]
Comments are closed-
Posted by: SatanicJamboree on Oct 8, 2007 9:28 PM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I find it interesting that ANY criticism of Clarence "Uncle" Thomas is held up as the ultimate in political incorrectness for the right...it's really a sore spot for these folks. Any thoughts as to why this is?
[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]
» RE: Pushing Wingnut Buttons
Posted by: ALANHESTER
Comments are closed-
Posted by: cshideler on Oct 10, 2007 11:42 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» Has Desert Bayou been removed ?
Posted by: itzamirakul
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Posted by: gfatjax on Oct 10, 2007 3:03 PM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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Posted by: wleming on Oct 12, 2007 4:42 PM
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witnesses other than Hill, all of whom had tales
of Thomas sexual coercion. Perjury in defense of racism?
You bet.
[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]
Comments are closed-
Posted by: ccluelessfl60 on Oct 12, 2007 11:19 PM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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Comments are closed-
Posted by: itzamirakul on Oct 14, 2007 11:05 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Evidently the "Black is Beautiful" era did nothing to help him gain pride in his own beingness as it did for so many others.
I am surprised that he did not follow Michael Jackson's example and have the skin-lightening technique performed.
[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]
Comments are closed-
Posted by: Ms Cellaneous on Oct 17, 2007 7:39 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Whitey cleared all his sins in court and have covered up his sins but damn them all anyway.
He is a Saint in his own mind. Mind?
[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]
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