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The Chosen Judge

By Maria Luisa Tucker, AlterNet. Posted November 28, 2005.


Esther Kaplan, author of a book about George Bush and the Christian Right, talks about the Evangelicals' new messiah: Supreme Court nominee Samuel Alito.
with god on their side
With God on Their Side

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On October 31, George W. Bush nominated Samuel Alito to the Supreme Court. On November 1, Esther Kaplan's book, With God on Their Side: George W. Bush and the Christian Right was released* in paperback. The timing could not have been more appropriate.

In her book, the former Nation editor profiles how the Bush White House has pandered to the Christian Right in ways large and small, from painting the war in Iraq as a holy crusade, to forcing the Grand Canyon National Park bookstore to sell a "creationist," but scientifically inaccurate book about the canyon.

Kaplan also uncovers the multitude of ways Christian groups have gained significant influence over the judiciary. She warns that, "[George W. Bush's] judicial appointees, combined with like-minded judges put in place by Bush's father and Ronald Reagan, have the potential to remake the federal courts as a reactionary force for generations to come. Protections for abortion and gays, and protections against state-sponsored religion, all of these could be eroded in the years ahead."

The future she writes about may have already begun.

Immediately after his nomination, Alito was touted by the Christian Right as the man who could deliver America from evil (or at least the man who can possibly overturn Roe v. Wade). He has received high praise and petitions of support from religious groups like Concerned Women for America, Focus on the Family, the Christian Coalition of America and Family Research Council.

Kaplan talked to AlterNet this week about what Alito's nomination means for the Christian Right.

In your book, you describe how Bush has inserted religion into almost every branch of his administration, from conducting Bible studies in the White House to directly funding religious organizations through his faith-based initiatives legislation. How has the president interjected his religious beliefs into the judicial branch?

Mainly by appointing judges who have pretty creative ideas about church-state separation. Alito is a pretty good example of that. He is someone who thinks that prayer belongs in the public schools and that religious displays are acceptable at public buildings. There are a whole host of judges that Bush has appointed to federal courts that take that attitude, judges like William Pryor, who used to show up at rallies defending "Roy's Rock," the five-ton Ten Commandments monument that Judge Roy Moore placed inside an Alabama courthouse, and who claims the U.S. Constitution, which never mentions God, is "rooted in a Christian perspective."

The Christian Right feels that the Supreme Court has gone too far in segregating faith from the public square, and that this balance needs to be righted. Of course, Supreme Court decisions in the 1960s that strengthened the church-state divide, such as banning mandatory prayer in public schools, helped to launch the Christian right as a social movement. Now they feel like their generations-old dream of overturning those decisions can be realized.

There has been a lot of attention to Alito's 1991 opinion in the Planned Parenthood v. Casey case, in which Alito supported legislation requiring women to notify their husbands that they are seeking an abortion. Last week a new frenzy followed the release of a 1985 opinion in which Alito said that "the Constitution does not protect a right to an abortion." With each new discovery about Alito, the debate over his nomination has increasingly become another battleground between pro-life and pro-choice activists. Do you think that the intense focus on abortion overshadows other, perhaps equally important, issues?


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Maria Luisa Tucker is an AlterNet staff writer.

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good article
Posted by: wearesilhouettes on Nov 28, 2005 4:36 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I didn't know much about Alito before, but this article was eye opening, especially regarding his views on workers' rights. This article (or something like it) should be in every newspaper so the public could be educated about this nominee's right wing Christian bias....especially against women and minorites.

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» TIME is Limited. Posted by: qrswave
» Congratulations, kitty! Posted by: qrswave
4th amendment
Posted by: karyse on Nov 28, 2005 5:26 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Quoted from article:
"The Supreme Court decided privacy was a right that was implied by a number of other rights, and there is now a big fat stack of decisions that have built on that."

Implied? There's nothing IMPLIED about privacy by the 4th amendment of the U.S. Constitution. It is stated explicitly: "The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and efects ... shall not be violated..."

And would someone please point out to me where in the Constitution it "supports slavery"?

I hate it when no one seems to care what the hell is in the constituion.

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» RE: 4th amendment Posted by: vafireball
» RE: 4th amendment Posted by: simplisticton
» Re:4th Amendment Posted by: billschwalb
» RE: e:4th Amendment Posted by: simplisticton
agitator church and state
Posted by: eileenflmng on Nov 28, 2005 5:42 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As a Progressive Christian I shudder then confront the right wing fundamentalist spirit that passes as Christianity in the USA today.

Thomas Jefferson understood that the Christian Church in America had supplanted the Sermon on the Mount/THE BEATITUDES with the Nicene Creed to create a system of beliefs that Jesus himself wouldn't have recognized, much less laid claim to.

The Philosophy of Christ was that ALL PEOPLE are equal and sacred beings, so women, people with AIDS, gay people, and people of color are all equal, are all sacred and are all loved by God.

read more on Jefferson and The Philosophy of Christ on the WAWA blog 11/15/05 entry

www.wearewideawake.org

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No messiah here
Posted by: jeffrey7 on Nov 28, 2005 6:52 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This nominee has no more right to be a judge than Trent Lott has to be the Chairperson for the NAACP. If a person does'nt support Worker's rights,Women's rights or the rights of the minority,this person is'nt a judge, but a shill for the
very same system that believed Native Americans were lazy,shiftless, soul-less wretches that deserved to be exterminated in the name of Christ. The same system that believes God would create a race that was 4/5's Human. Or that believes Women are incapable of choosing their own paths in life. It's bad enough that the American People got 'corn-holed' on the Chief Justice ,are we really going to stand for a Supreme Court that will destroy what's left of the Constitution. In D.C.
that document is little better than toilet paper. We the People have the right to bounce the three branches out on their collective asses. Bush had the will to War.Do we have the will to Tar and Feather these userper's of Freedom and reclaim our Liberty? I say YES WE DO!

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» HERE, HERE...jeffrey Posted by: qrswave
» RE: No messiah here Posted by: Richie the C
» RE: No messiah here Posted by: jeffrey7
'Madame' (I think titles are ridiculous)
Posted by: truthorelse on Nov 28, 2005 7:42 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Hey you guys;
Left wing spin is just as repulsive as right wing spin.
Since you are trying to discredit Alito mainly because he opposes abortion I cannot trust anything else you dig up on him. Nearly every candidate has some bullshit in his/her past but you wouldn't go to all this trouble if he was a staunch supporter of Roe. Would you? You would readily accept him as YOUR Messiah! (Most of the 'liberal' judges voted 'yes' on the expansion of emminent domain and confiscation of private property for the sake of commercial interests, didn't THAT bother you?)
Anyhow, as long as you are vociferously supporting the 'right' to kill the unborn, and as long as you use it as your dipstick to measure potential candidate's credentials, you have no credibility in my book. You are just a part of the old and musty pseudo-liberal agenda. Agenda which is, by the way, supported by the very multi-national corporations and elites you pretend to oppose.
Cheers
Nina

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» RE: JUST because of abortion? Posted by: Asses of Evil
» RE: JUST because of abortion? Posted by: sjgarcia
» RE: JUST because of abortion? Posted by: Asses of Evil
» RE: Shehova Posted by: truthorelse
» RE: Shehova Posted by: Shehova
» RE: Shehova Posted by: truthorelse
» RE: Shehova Posted by: Shehova
» Looking at it another way ... Posted by: AdamSelene11726
A pro-choicer who is no longer defending abortion...
Posted by: ghostman on Nov 28, 2005 8:23 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
A factual correction: This book isn't new... it's been selling from my bookstore for over a year now. What's new is that it is finally in paperback.

As far as abortion: I'm one of the growing number of leftists (democrat? progressive? liberal?) who have arrived at the conclusion that we should call the right's bluff on abortion. I happen to believe their call to end it is all a charade, which they have employed for endless political gain over the last three decades. And if I'm wrong? If the Supreme Court overturns Roe v. Wade? So what? That doesn't mean it's outlawed. It simply means that states will decide. And according to the polls I've seen, the majority of voters in every state support a woman's right to abort. And the issue will only be "hot" in a handful of states, all of them "red."

The truth is, the left has been getting killed politically because we're wasting so much time defending abortion. There are far more important issues to consider: what about Alito's corporate friendliness, for example? In this age of financial empire, what kind of effort will he make to uphold the rights of citizens against corporate crime and corporate money? Advancing the rights of business is all this administration really cares about anyway. They could give a damn about abortion. It's a smokescreen.

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» Mother Theresa ... Posted by: AdamSelene11726
I'm tired
Posted by: Maryanne on Nov 28, 2005 5:25 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I consider myself a conservative. I believe in conserving the Constitution, the Bill of Rights, the environment, the survival of working and middle classes, opportunities that give people a leg up so they can have better lives for themselves, etc. I see these all as common sense views. Therefore I resent these being referred to by the extreme right and journalists on air and in print referring to my ideas as those of the "radical left". These are not radical; they are what we have learned over the years that have made America strong. I am tired of hearing all this is so "radical."

Personally I do not favor abortion, and I have seen instances where this has been abused. However, I also know of situations where the lack of availability has led to tragedy. Unless one is living in another's shoes, one cannot know what is going on in that person's life- and we have NO RIGHT to impose our views on someone else!

While the Constitution does not give women the right to an abortion, it also does not DENY them an abortion. In fact, the Constitution says NOTHING about the care and treatment that a doctor can give to his patient. Abortion shouldl never have been a legal issue. It should always have been the medical issue that it really is.

On Frontline a few weeks ago a program ("The Last Abortion Clinic")was carried. The point was that even though Roe v Wade is not overturned, many states are already restricting the rights to not only abortion, but also family planning services, thus forcing these girls to carry to term. These" clinics" lecture abstinence, and offer the alternative of adoption as well as practical help to the unmarried girls who do not opt for adoption for their baby. However, adoption of black children is not realistic, and the help- some diapers and a stroller- does not resolve the long term problem. The girls, already denied opportunity for bettering their lives by the increasing cuts in government services, are further reduced to a life of poverty and bringing up their children in poverty. Children with no maturity, no support system and no resources are bringing up children and are thrust into a situation from which they have no escape.

This is religious America! An absolute disgrace!

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» RE: I'm tired Posted by: truthorelse
» RE: I'm tired Posted by: kittynboi
I just spoke to God...
Posted by: TDyl on Nov 28, 2005 5:43 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...and He told me not to worry too much, they're all gonna get their comeuppance (in time, but it might depends who's in charge of the supreme court) (is a supreme court a type of creme-filled donut?).
Oh well, I guess being a colonialist englishman I should not post here.

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Comment on the Catholic Church
Posted by: Maryanne on Nov 28, 2005 5:43 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
A friend attended a Catholic grammar school, a private girl's Catholic high school and a Catholic College. She is -surpisingly- not influenced by a male run church that does not give equal rights to women.

She has an interesting take on preventing procreation: If one is sterilized (a sin) so as to not have children, one can go to confession, be forgiven (since one will not do this again) and be free from having any more children. Result: permanently sinless.

On the other hand, if one practices birth control (a sin), and one goes to Confession, and is forgiven- one cannot continue to use birth control in the future, since the forgiveness is based on not repeating the sin. Result: continuing sinfulness.

The end result of both means of birth control is the same- no children.

Such is logic.

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Thank god for the American Christian Right.
Posted by: timtufuga on Nov 29, 2005 6:14 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Australians are bombarded with American Christian television programs, from Benny Hinn Jesus is Lord Ministries etc, promulgating the Americanised evangelical message, with the razamatazz and entertaining singing from would secularised pop stars flickering on our television screens day in and day out. We understand that in America, the seperation of powers, and the clearly demarcated fine line of politically captured, and, in this case judiciary appointments, do not dissociate the state from church interests.

The overwhelming forces of neo-con Christians under the tutelege head of the Falwell cabal would ensure that in American politics we can surely say that in God you do, indeed, entrust everything from Abortion rights, same sex marriages, gay rights reforms, minority issues, and sectarian conflicts.


The American Judicial process is often considered admirable by most world's jurisprudence systems. The imperfections of such a system may be the politically captured appoinments which differs from the Westminster traditions, the English Common law, and Westminster conventions, which have underpinned most court proceedings and judicial systems in Commonwealth of Nations members in former British colonies, America had once been part of this commonwealth prior to 1776, and some remnents of english traditions are evident, which may include Judge made laws.

The impact of religion, in this equation, has caused a more pervasive religious influence which has become an unfavourable element in American justice, and the 'purported' impartiality of decisions as made by its Supreme Court Justices. The political decisionmaking process may be similar to stacking all the voting/ judicial decisionmaking by 'fine old gentlmen' as The UPHOLDERS OF THE RIGHT, from the more bleedingheart lefties, which are 'no where' to be seen, in Supreme court members.

The world acknowledge that when we sit and listen to sermon on our TV we can see into the minds eye of what an American Supreme Court Judge in the Alito mould would more likely to think. So I see it, hear it, and it makes ecclesiatical sense. Amen, your Honours!!

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Religion, law and manipulators
Posted by: Doubtom on Dec 2, 2005 9:00 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I've been saying for years that LAW is farcical and that lawyers are at best manipulators and at worst scoundrels.

No one should be surprised that we've become a theocracy with fascistic overtones. It happened with the able assistance of the lawyers who, like the religionists, have managed to intrude into every nook and cranny of our existence.

Lawyers are nothing but wordsmiths who write laws and then insist on retaining the sole right to interpret their meaning. It's a nice closed loop racket that claims to be a profession because they had the foresight to dress up their game with latin terminology which befuddles the people and insures the exclusivity of the guild.
Lawyers can facilitate anything. You want a law protecting corporations, the lawyer will find the words; you want a law defining corporations as people, get a lawyer; you want to legalize torture, get a lawyer; you want to inject religion in public schools and into our government , get a lawyer.

Lawyers can do anything and as 'public lawyers' they can even decide whether or not they will prosecute the guilty.

And remember that from the best of these scoundrels we choose our judges.

Enjoy your facist theocracy, brought to you courtesy of the lawyers.

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» RE: Jesus said Posted by: freerain
yamaha
Posted by: pjohnq on Oct 3, 2006 12:45 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]