

Sorry folks I got caught up writing an 11th Circuit response brief, and missed all the fun yesterday.
As I was working on the brief, I was reminded again of V.S. Naipaul's advice for young writers:
"I didn't know how you seduced a woman, how you excited her and thought of her pleasure. I hadn't got that from my upbringing. There was no one telling me about it or talking about it. I realised all this later, much later....A young taxi driver was driving me back from the [railway] station one day. He said his father had told him 'Always please the woman first.' A marvellous thing to tell the son, don't you think? I wish someone had told me that. But we grew up with this furtive incestuous idea."Oops! Wrong passage.
I meant this:
Wow, imagine if we all wrote briefs like this (and judges wrote opinions that way!).1. Do not write long sentences. A sentence should not have more than ten or twelve words.
2. Each sentence should make a clear statement. It should add to the statement that went before. A good paragraph is a series of clear, linked statements.
3. Do not use big words. If your computer tells you that your average word is more than five letters long, there is something wrong. The use of small words compels you to think about what you are writing. Even difficult ideas can be broken down into small words.
4. Never use words whose meaning you are not sure of. If you break this rule you should look for other work.
5. The beginner should avoid using adjectives, except those of colour, size and number. Use as few adverbs as possible.
6. Avoid the abstract. Always go for the concrete.
7. Every day, for six months at least, practice writing in this way. Small words; short, clear, concrete sentences. It may be awkward, but it’s training you in the use of language. It may even be getting rid of the bad language habits you picked up at the university. You may go beyond these rules after you have thoroughly understood and mastered them.
But Naipaul's comments about his relations with women merely highlight the obvious -- we are all the sum of our experiences. If Naipaul had not grown up as an Indian immigrant in colonial Trinidad, would he have produced the great post-colonial works that emerged from that background?
Same, sorry to say, with Glenn Garvin -- he is a product of having watched too many Simpsons episodes, and always rooting for Montgomery Burns.
Personally I'm sick to death of the confirmation process already, but here is the offending quote from Judge Sotomayor that Garvin is all lathered up about:
''Whether born from experience or inherent physiological or cultural differences, a possibility I abhor less or discount less than my colleague Judge Cedarbaum,'' Sotomayor says, ``our gender and national origins may and will make a difference in our judging.''She should be asked about this, obviously.
But anyone who went to UM Law School (founded on "legal realism" principles) or who practices in the 3d DCA know that judges decide things based on a variety of factors, including the law, precedent, and sometimes what they had for breakfast.
In Judge Sotomayor's case, we have a few decades of opinions to digest, which Scotusblog has been kind enough to summarize (Glenn, you might want to cite to at least one opinion from her long judicial career that supports this "racial essentialism" charge).
Read the Pappas opinion and dissent (summarized here with links by Greenwald) before you throw around this kind of "identity politics" charge.
Although her comments about her ethnicity and background are clearly fair game and deserve some inquiry, you also have to examine in her case several decades of judging before simply pronouncing her biased and racist.
Unless you're the TV writer for the Herald, of course.
37 comments:
Glenn needs to read SFL and then watch this-
http://www.colbertnation.com/the-colbert-report-videos/229348/june-01-2009/supreme-court-press
I knew I could count on you SFL!
"The poorer a man's intellectual equipment, the more does he revel in technicalities. A man with a wealth of valuable ideas is anxious to communicate those ideas, and will naturally tend to choose for that purpose the simplest language he can find. But a man whose intellectuality is a sham, and who has in truth nothing to communicate, endeavors to conceal his emptiness by an outward show of learning. . . . He fails to see that the love of long words and technical terms is in fact nothing but a symptom of his mental infirmity. It is a kind of intellectual disease."
W.T. Stace, "The Snobbishness of the Learned," in Atlantic Essays 94, 99-100 (Samuel N. Bogorad & Cary B. Graham eds., 1958).
I have seen no evidence that these "latina" comments have compromised her judgment or led to rulings that are outside the mainstream of appellate jurisprudence.
Sotomayor says, "our gender and national origins may and will make a difference in our judging."
From a person who is not in the legal profession, I have to agree with her. To a certain extent who you are and the life experiences you have had play a part in your interpretation of the law. It certainly should not dictate a persons judging obviously, but I think that saying it won't affect your thought process is simply not true.
Another good post. You have to love how he uses a legal theory as though it were a fact, not one of many epistolary paths.
I think Sotomayor's remarks on her background and ethnicity making her a better judge are right on the money. Shame on Obama for triangulating away from them. As a gay man, I can walk in and out of my minority identity, and the journey is always an education. I can't count the number of times I've had a person walk up to me and say something homophobic, never realizing they were talking to 'one of them'. Analyzing the world from different perspectives is an essential part of being a good judge. Those perspectives are easier to achieve when your natural identity is outside of the traditional white/male power structure.
And yes, always make your lover happy. That just takes practice ~ hours and hours of practice.
Montgomery Burns: So, you want some of my electricity, do you? Well, for once, the rich, white man is in control. I have two buttons behind my desk. One will provide your town with electricity, the other releases the hounds. Reach me. Make me your brother.
Dr. Hibbert: The generator on the hospital is about to give out. Lives will be lost.
Montgomery Burns: [writing down] Lives... lost. Go on.
Chief Wiggum: We have a convict we're gonna fry tomorrow, but now we can't.
Montgomery Burns: Tempting, tempting...
Apu: Look, all of our reasons mean nothing. Just look inside your heart and you will find the answer.
[Smithers waves frantically and shakes his head no; cut to outside of mansion as screaming and barking is heard inside]
Apu: Aaah!
Montgomery Burns: First door on the right.
Apu: Thank you.
Chief Wiggum, Apu, Dr. Hibbert: [as they run out chased by dogs] Aaah!
Sound advice for writers but according to master horror writer Stephen King there are only three rules every writer needs to know,
1) Write what you know.
2) Write from the heart.
3) Ignore the critics.
SFL has a crush on Glenn.
SFL is my biggest fan 2:21.
I like Glenn. He is a true talent.
2:21- I disagree. SFL enjoys keeping his readers entertained.
Glen ever hear of this saying--
"When the pupil is ready the master will appear"
Glenn's master never came.
3:18, Glenn can on occasion crack wise but his efforts at straight-on opinion essays are just not cutting it.
He should stick to his usual adoring profiles of randomly selected guys like Brit Hume, Bill O'Reilly, Glenn Beck, and Rupert Murdoch, of course balanced with his highly negative profiles of other randomly selected guys like Dan Rather, Bill Moyers, and John Lennon.
3:50, Are you in agreement with 3:18 then?
Balderdash. A justice decides based strictly on only one thing, the law, as read by the blankest of minds. Besides, I doubt that Latina is even a citizen.
5:13, let's just have a computer apply the law.
If the Republican party believes they can win the minority vote "regardless of their qualifications and suitability for the position is downright foolish"
The Latina should not be supported because she is racist and because she cannot be - by her own words and the words of Obama, "be objective, impartial, and impersonal."
Rush Limbaugh is a crumudgeon like Mr. Burns but hit the nail on the head by comparing Sotomayors' nomination to David Duke.
I do no support the Latina.
BTW whassup with your Latina?
BTW Glenn, keep up the good work!
"Glenn can on occasion crack wise"
You give him too much credit SFL.
Rich White Man, you've channeled me perfectly!
My only concern with he Latina, "she is so open about her Judicial activism. She almost wears it as a badge of honor, rather than something that shouldn't be talked about in public. Any Justice who openly says that the Federal Court system is where policy is made should be impeached for violating her duty as a Judge."
Obama on her comments "I would hope that a wise Latina woman with the richness of her experience would more often than not reach a better conclusion than a white male who hasn't lived that life", were taken out of context.
They were delivered as written in a 2001 speech at the University of California's Berkeley School of Law. Sotomayor made it quite clear what she meant.
Her membership in La Raza is a cause for concern.
"La Raza has promoted driver's licenses for illegal aliens, amnesty programs and no immigration law enforcement by state and local police. La Raza as an organization may not reach the level of the KKK, but it certainly promotes rewarding those who have broken the law to enter this country."
She is an activist judge who believes in legislating from the bench. She said the "Court of Appeals is where policy is made."
Wrong. "It is the job of the judiciary to apply the Constitution to the law."
"It is political suicide for the GOP to go after this woman when Republicans are trying to court the Hispanic voter base."
BTW The "other" Latina I hear is exhausted from Bolero on replay.
Aw c'mon quit bitching! At least it is tasteful.
I do not support the latina however comparing her to David Duke is a little much.
I hear the "other" latina is exhausted from Bolero AND a crumudgeon singer named Bob.
10:10, That's MISTER Bob!!!
She has paricipated in hundreds of decisions. Which ones support anything you claim? And you know nothing of the role of an appellate court.
My buddy Cheech belongs to La Raza.
10:10- The comparison to David Duke is accurate.
no way you are a lawyer, 9:24
Actually, she authored or joined over 3000 opinions as a federal district and appellate judge.
Ruth Marcus today--
"The amazing thing about the case against Sotomayor is how thin it is. The now-famous 32 words about a wise Latina judge. Her vote -- part of a unanimous three-judge panel -- against white firefighters denied promotions. The YouTube comment about judges making policy. And not much else.
This is a woman with more years on the bench than any Supreme Court nominee in the past 100 years. During that time, you'd think even the most middle-of-the-road judge would have provided some unintentional ammunition for critics -- maybe freeing an especially unsavory criminal on a supposed technicality. If Sotomayor is the judicial radical of conservative imaginings, certainly there ought to be something more in her paper trail.
Except there isn't -- at least from what's known so far. An examination of Sotomayor's decisions shows a careful judge who tends to rule for the government over criminal defendants; who has been skeptical of most civil rights claims that have come before her; and who, to the extent that she has ruled on cases that touch on abortion, has come down against the abortion-rights side."
10:10 Sotomayor is a member of La Raza. The groups' motto, "ALL FOR THE RACE. NOTHING FOR THE REST.”
What does that tell you?!
La Raza--
Latino KKK without the noose.
10:52, La Ra·za (lä räsä)
n.
Mexicans or Mexican Americans considered as a group, sometimes extending to all Spanish-speaking people of the Americas.
[American Spanish, the people.]
The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition copyright ©2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2003. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.
Their true slogan is “Strengthening America by promoting the advancement of Latino families.”
Admit it you secretly wanna do the latina.
"Ms. Sotomayor has an Hispanic chip on her shoulder, like it or not. She is a bright lady who has overcome adversity. That alone does not qualify her to sit as a Federal Judge or a Supreme Court Justice."
OK, so she's a "secret" radical crazy lefty. Where have I heard this before?
F-Nutbag @ 10:52-
"Is the NAACP the black KKK? The Jewish League the Jewish KKK? The numerous organizations formed by the many different races and nationalities that have come to the US throughout successive waves of immigration, organizations that were created to obtain and promote the rights, protections and opportunities that were the very promise of this nation, do all of these associations exist for the terrorizing and persecution of the others' members?"
BTW I secretly wanna do the "other" latina.
10:52,When La Raza begins burning crosses we will talk you paranoid weirdo.
Nice take down, SFL.
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