Thursday, December 26, 2019

BOOK REVIEW: The Enigma of Clarence Thomas

To get a grasp of what is at stake in the next election, both at the Presidential and Senate levels, there may be no better book to read than The Enigma of Clarence Thomas by Corey Robin.

It is not a fun read, mind you. It is certainly not entertaining. In numerous passages, the content is equal parts confusing and maddening. About fifty pages in, it is tempting to assume the author has done a horrible job presenting his case on whatever he thinks the reader should know about how Clarence Thomas thinks and how that thinking has influenced nearly thirty years of Supreme Court decisions and America's direction.

If you continue reading, a different understanding emerges…

Clarence Thomas is noted for saying very little in session at the Supreme Court and equally noted for not saying much on the record via "traditional" communication avenues like television biography segments, human interest stories, etc. Few people realize that he is actually among the more prolific opinion writers for rulings from the Supreme Court, even -- as they often are -- dissenting opinions. Even fewer realize that Thomas has actually NOT been shy about appearances where he sheds more light on his thought process. It's just that those appearances are almost exclusively at closed-door events sponsored by think tanks and conservative organizations. Those appearances occurred both before and after his elevation to the Supreme Court and left paper trails.

Robin's book makes no attempt at being a traditional biography of Thomas the individual from boyhood to present. Instead, the book is an analysis of that paper trail of commentary that represents SOLELY what Thomas wanted the world to understand about his thinking at the time. The only biographical details referenced in the book involve details Thomas himself uses in his rulings, opinions and appearances. Robin examines those stories and juxtaposes the contradictions between them against his commentaries in his Supreme Court writings and outside events. It becomes very apparent that any "biography" of Thomas the Justice is GOING to be confusing / illogical / muddled because the THINKING of Thomas is exactly those things -- confusing, illogical and muddled.

Robin organized the book around a few key themes of Thomas' thinking, namely

  1. Thomas believes racism is permanent and as long as blacks are an electoral minority within the United States, the political sphere will NEVER provide fairness to blacks so blacks should essentially ignore politics and focus on economic issues and self-sufficiency.
  2. Interpretations of Constitutional law in the United States have centered on two modes, "the White Constitution" (Robin's term...) from 1789 to the Civil War and "the Black Constitution" (again, Robin's term...) dating from the Thirteenth, Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments at Reconstruction to the present. While "Black Constitution" interpretations granted more rights and protections to blacks and that would SEEM to be a good thing, those new rights and protections have coincided with problems in the black community and have contributed to patterns of behavior that have actually HURT blacks more than they HELPED them.
  3. The "Black Constitution" phase of interpretation of the balance of power between states and the Federal government shifted power to the federal level in order to enforce the Equal Protection, Due Process and Privileges and Immunities clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment. Since Thomas associates the advent of those interpretations with a downward trajectory in social and economic outcomes for blacks, his judicial cure involves reverting AWAY from "Black Constitution" interpretations BACK to "White Constitution" interpretations which limit federal control over nearly everything influenced by what we would call modern interpretations of Due Process and Equal Protection.

While Robin covers other concepts in Thomas' thinking in the book, the three above are enough to use as a basis for explaining exactly how muddled Thomas' thinking really is. But you really have to tighten your seat belt. It's a rough, topsy-turvy ride.

Regarding the "Black Constitution" versus "White Constitution" dichotomy, Thomas makes it very clear the interpretation of the original ("White") Constitution from 1789 was, in Thomas' own words, "tainted by a deeply rooted history of prejudice." So the newer "Black Constitution" interpretations are better for blacks and the country, right? Nope. After Reconstruction failed and state governments revoked voting rights and white mobs attacked and killed blacks to remove their guns, the resulting society became more racist, violent and regressive (Robin's words…) Thomas' solution? Revert to the prior "White Constitution" mode of interpretation that assigned no role to the federal government in ensuring states did not trample the rights of their citizens -- of any color.

The belief of Thomas that the political sphere in a democracy will NEVER reflect the needs and goals of a minority so blacks shouldn't bother is a real cynical head scratcher. This conclusion obviously ignores the fact that a political minority can still act as a swing vote in a larger political plurality -- especially in a country where a forty one percent base can result in a Presidential win that puts someone in a position to put people like -- well -- CLARENCE THOMAS on the bench for 30 years. Robin highlights more damaging results from this belief in Thomas' rulings and opinions in the economic and legal spheres.

Because Thomas believes blacks are better off focusing on their ability to be self-sustaining at the family and community level, he tends to very extreme, pro-business decisions. After Reconstruction, cases that reached the Supreme Court involving business discrimination and labor practices generated rulings that recognized a wider set of rights for and granted protections to individuals. Justices issuing those rulings relied upon the enforcement clause of the Fourteenth Amendment that gave the federal government power to enact laws and rules to achieve Equal Protection across the states. Conservatives have long viewed these protections as anti-business and signs of federal overreach. Since Thomas already believes any effort to protect individuals is futile, he has no qualms about rolling back nearly any decision in the area of labor law, discrimination, privacy, etc. whenever the opportunity arises.

Thomas has also undermined generations of jurisprudence regarding anything in the realm of Due Process. He has been extremely pro-law enforcement in any case that has reached the Supreme Court in his tenure. His thinking? You really have stop and ponder mightily to follow the logic...

He believes acting in the political sphere will never help minorities such as blacks. The best (or maybe least worst) option available for minorities is to succeed economically at the family and community level. Even if law enforcement unfairly targets minorities for arrest, unfairly charges minorities, unfairly prosecutes and convicts minorities or unfairly punishes minorities in sentencing or with inhumane prison conditions, the political realm won't solve that problem. Don't try. Just raise the bar on your own behavior and stay away from any "gray area." To the extent minorities ARE swept up into an unjust system, well, that's just more incentive for the rest of the minority to shape up, isn't it? I told you the gray area was dangerous.

Ergo, any attempt by the federal government to control state policies in policing, prosecution, sentencing and incarceration are just more federal overreach like that in the economic sphere. People going to prison for property crimes being subjected to systemic rape by gang members? Too bad. Innocent people being executed on death row? Too bad. Let that be a warning to others to stay away from anything that might attract the attention of a cop and turn your life upside down before killing you.

A final concept covered by Robin in the book explains how the above thinking swirls around and winds up convoluting Thomas' thinking on two other key issues -- free speech and gun laws. The idea that over a century of rulings enforcing the Equal Protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment has gone too far in granting rights to individuals at the expense of business leads directly to the belief that restricting corporate spending on campaigns is an unfair restriction of a corporation's right to free speech. This is the thinking that gave us Citizens United and billions in corporate money sloshing around drowning out ideas from individuals within our election process.

Thomas puts an even odder twist on this concept. A 1995, case, United States versus Lopez, involved a law banning possession of firearms within one thousand feet of schools. The Supreme Court overturned the law with Justice Renquist writing the majority opinion stating the law reflected an undue level of federal control over state gun laws. Thomas wrote a separate opinion for the majority ruling that not only argued that the law would be an undue level of federal control over state gun laws, it argued that attempting to enact such a law reflected the overreach of the existing common interpretation of the Commerce clause that has included a wide variety of activities as "commerce." Thomas wrote that the definition should be substantially curtailed to exclude manufacturing and agriculture -- a change that would roll back SIGNIFICANT legislation over the last one hundred years.

The general theme behind both of these opinions is that Thomas places no value on individual free speech because he believes it has no power for minorities in a majoritarian system so why focus on trying to protect it? Because that majoritarian system will continue yielding a racist, unequal society, those in the minority cannot trust the government and its institutions to protect their lives or livelihood so they need the right to arm themselves and look out for their family and community. As the author put it at one point in the book, that's a very Mad Max meets Do The Right Thing kind of world view.

The key point for the casual -- if not occasionally confused - reader to draw out of this profile of Thomas is that the public image of Thomas as a lone-wolf, reactionary conservative saying nothing in session and writing bitter dissents and unjoined opinions doesn't convey his true influence on the court or the country. It doesn't even accurately reflect the diversity of thought on the conservative side. Thomas' contempt for the past one hundred fifty plus years of precedent that emphasizes the rights of "We The People" of a single country versus "we of X number of separate states in a pact" is shared by every conservative appointee to the Supreme Court who has joined him on the bench. Any difference in degree of that contempt is getting smaller with each new member. The long term consequences of that change in constitutional interpretation aren't hard to predict and they aren’t pretty.

If you are interested in seeing an alternate take on this book that is exactly one hundred and eighty degrees opposite of the above, you can check out this opinion piece

https://www.city-journal.org/the-enigma-of-clarence-thomas

written by Myron Magnet, author of the book Clarence Thomas and the Lost Constitution, also published in 2019.


WTH

Thursday, November 21, 2019

I Threatened. I Delivered

In the public impeachment hearings on November 21, 2019, Val Demings (D-FL) asked Fiona Hill to describe the stakes of American policy and conduct regarding Ukraine. Hill's answer included perhaps the most concise reason why the impeachment of Donald Trump is deserved and vital to the United States.

I threatened. I delivered.

Here's the entire question and answer from the CSPAN video (starts at 6:37:40)

https://www.c-span.org/video/?466380-1/impeachment-inquiry-hearing-fiona-hill-david-holmes

DEMINGS: Dr. Hill, why do you believe that the ENTIRE Ukraine policy community were unanimously in agreement? (with providing aid to Ukraine)

HILL: Well, we had this experience before, and I just want you to indulge me for a moment. in 2008, Russia also attacked the country of Georgia. I was the national intelligence officer at that particular juncture and we had warned In multiple documents to the highest levels of government that we believed there was a real risk of a conflict between Georgia and Russia and in fact we also believed at that point that Russian might attack Ukraine. This was in 2008 when both Georgia and Ukraine sought a membership action plan in NATO and Russia threatened them openly that if they proceeded with their request for NATO membership that there would be consequences. In the wake of the attack on Georgia, President Putin made it clear to the President of Georgia, Mikheil Saakashvili at the time -- and this was made clear to me at the highest levels of the Georgian government -- that Putin had said directly to Saakashvili,

Your western allies - your western partners - promised a great deal. They didn't deliver. I threatened. I delivered.

We had made all kinds of promises to Georgia and Ukraine in that time frame and we didn't come through. So Putin is always looking out to see if there is ANY hint that we will not follow through on promises that we have made because he will always follow through on a threat. As indeed he ultimately did. He threatened Ukraine in 2008 and it wasn't until 2014 when Ukraine tried to conclude an association agreement with the EU that he struck but he had been threatening this for the whole period since 2008.

Do chills go down your spine as you read those words? Do you think there is any illusion on the part of our national security and diplomatic professionals about who we are dealing with in the person of Vladmir Putin?

THAT is why the ENTIRE foreign policy establishment felt delivery of aid to Ukraine was not only in the vital interest of UKRAIN but the UNITED STATES. Providing the aid bolstered a key budding ally at risk of being crushed by Russia and would help underline America's commitments to help European allies counteract Russian bullying throughout the region.

And THAT is why this response in Hill's testimony is the most salient justification for the impeachment and conviction and removal of Donald Trump.

It's not just the fact that Trump made a tactical foreign policy decision that many disagree with.

It's not just the fact that Trump added chaos to confusion by involving a personal attorney in public policy setting and execution without accountability.

It's not just the fact that Trump publicly undermined a US ambassador who should have been simply instructed to return to the United States if it was no longer the President's pleasure for her to continue.

It's not just the fact that Trump froze the disbursement of funds duly authorized by Congress.

It's not just the fact that Trump ignored TWO certifications from the Department of Defense that Ukraine HAD made satisfactory progress in combating corruption when freezing the aid.

It's not just the fact that Trump's actions served to distract the US Ambassador to the European Union from focusing on critical issues in that portfolio, like, ohhhh, I don't know…. Syrian refugee crises in multiple countries, BREXIT!

It's not just the fact that Trump ignored TWO certifications from the Department of Defense that Ukraine HAD made satisfactory progress in combatting corruption when freezing the aid.

It's not just the fact that Trump did all this in pursuit of something that would have benefited him personally. At this point, self-dealing is as much of an every day thing in the Trump Administration as a cheeseburger and fries for breakfast.

It's the fact that that any personal benefit to Trump in this fiasco involved HIS upcoming 2020 election which involves OUR vote and OUR democracy. And the fact that foreign election meddling is a clear crime which has already sent a multitude of Trump associates to prison.

It's the fact that Trump's self-deal applied ENORMOUS economic, military and political pressure on a country that WANTS to stand up to Putin and protect its sovereignty.

And it is the fact that the ONLY player who BENEFITS from EVERY single ricochet of this scandal throughout the entire world is Vladmir Putin. Putin benefits if America sweats Ukraine on the timing of the aid and weapons and Ukraine feels compromised while negotiating with Russia on the fate of Crimea. Putin benefits if Ukraine proceeds with publicizing a corruption investigation of a bogus crime because it makes Ukraine look weak and subservient and sows confusion about Russia's hacking role. Putin benefits if the public investigation turns up enough smoke to implode Biden's campaign and helps re-elect Trump to do four more years of Putin's bidding. Putin benefits if the entire public investigation implodes into a nothing-burger making both Ukraine and America look like banana republics.

Now how did we wind up here?

Isn't that the damndest thing about this President? All roads lead to Putin.


WTH

Wednesday, October 09, 2019

New Theory: Impeachment is PURELY Political

A talking head guest appearing 10/9/2019 on The PBS NewsHour outlined a truly chilling concept that might come into play in the Trump impeachment effort. And remember, if one legal consultant is SAYING this on television, there have to be others actually CONSIDERING this concept.

https://www.pbs.org/newshour/show/why-the-white-house-argues-it-can-reject-the-houses-impeachment-requests

The concept was referenced while answering a question about remedies available to House Democrats if Trump himself continues to refuse any cooperation with subpoenas from House committees and if his Administration subordinates followed his direction to do the same.

The guest went beyond the current discussion about whether Trump was just refusing cooperation because the House had not taken a formal vote to BEGIN formal impeachment hearings. He reminded viewers that impeachment is a POLITICAL process. Specific steps in the process are SIMILAR to steps in a traditional civil or criminal case and have similar names but impeachment at its core is a purely POLITICAL process.

From that, the guest mentioned that one possibility is that the President could refuse to comply with subpoenas issued by the House entirely and --- as a POLITICAL process -- the House's only recourse would be to vote on articles of impeachment. Essentially, this would negate the normal power of a subpoena, the ability to compel witnesses to testify and the ability to punish those who fail to comply. The process would shift to the Senate to conduct a "trial", but again, THIS ISN'T A CRIMINAL PROCESS. It's purely political. The Senate can do whatever it wants to do because it ultimately comes down to a vote to convict or acquit. If they decide to acquit, that's it. The framers intended this to be a purely political process and it's up to the LEGISLATIVE branch to settle the issue politically. The courts would stay on the sideline.

Of course, that is utter nonsense.

But think about the consequences of that concept if people actually believe it and act upon it.

And there's only 101 people whose opinions matter on this -- 100 people in the Senate and 1 person in the White House. Technically, one could argue there's only 35 people whose opinion matters -- 34 in the Senate who could deny a two thirds vote for conviction and 1 in the White House. And so far, despite everything already public about this President's appalling conduct in office, there appears to be at least 50 Republican Senators out of 53 who haven't batted an eye and would vote for acquittal.

So imagine for a moment

  • you occupy the White House
  • you face numerous open legal issues stemming from your time in office and before
  • you face impeachment from the House
  • you have a lifelong track record of contempt for the law
  • your legal team is theorizing that impeachment holds zero legal thread unless it results in conviction
  • you face virtually zero real threat of conviction with Republican support in the Senate

What would you do?

Would it be that much different than shooting a man in broad daylight on Fifth Avenue?

Would it be that different than the actions Trump has taken over the last week?

While thinking about that, it's worth thinking about the quality of Trump's decision making and who might be left in power with a reinforced sense of ZERO ACCOUNTABILITY. We're not talking about someone setting policies with logical errors in them that turn out to have secondary and tertiary effects that compound over the course of 5-10 years into some big financial or military problem. When Trump does WRONG, he does WRONG in a big way with IMMEDIATE consequences.

Just Sunday, he had a conversation with the President of Turkey and stated the US would remove troops from Syria and would allow Turkey to inject its own forces into Syria to suit its own perceived security needs. People on all sides IMMEDIATELY recoiled in horror at the impacts to Kurdish forces who helped multiple nations defeat ISIS forces who don't get along with Turkey and would immediately come under fire from Turkey. People on all sides IMMEDIATELY recoiled in horror with the recognition that there are over TEN THOUSAND ISIS fighters being held by Kurdish forces who would be released if the Kurds had to begin defending themselves from Turkish fire.

This parlor game of speculation about what the Turks would do, what the Kurds would do, what Trump said and what Trump meant only lasted three days. Three days later, we know what is happening.

Turkey announced movement of troops into Syria today, almost exactly three days to the hour from their leader's call with Trump on Sunday. In other words, in about as much time as it took to gas up the trucks and tanks, Syria took a Trump decision and turned it into additional death and turmoil. And Trump's reaction to concerns about the release of ISIS fighters from Kurdish detention camps?

TRUMP: "Well they are going to be escaping to Europe, that's where they want to go. They want to go back to their homes. But Europe didn't want them for months. They could have had trials, they could have done whatever they wanted, but as usual, it's not reciprocal. ... When President Obama took the PKK, that's a tough deal because that's been a mortal enemy of Turkey. And so when you bring them into a partnership, it's a tough situation. ... They've hated each other for many, many years."

And if you haven't been keeping score, also consider that Trump has 119 different business interests in Turkey, the most of any foreign country.

If Republican supporters of Trump buy into this "purely political" theory of impeachment and act accordingly, that's game, set and match for the rule of law and America. Forty years of seething Nixonian / Republican contempt for the law, the Constitution and anyone that could even potentially keep those who "deserved" to be in power from ever LOSING power will have infected the Republican Party to such an extent that they will have accomplished what bin Laden and one hundred years of Communism only fantasized about... The destruction of America.


WTH