Thursday, June 28, 2007

A history lesson for those who will not listen and thus be condemed to repeat the mistakes of the past

There was a time in this country when people put the good of the country before their political beliefs. These people knew that their short term political gain was not good for the country in the long run. One of these people was former Chief Justice of the Supreme Court Earl Warren.

He was appointed Chief Justice by President Eisenhower. Eisenhower appointed him to that position thinking that he would be a reliable conservative jurist that would uphold all the old white power structure laws that the old white power structure had spent years enacting. But thankfully ol' Earl saw the bigger picture and when he was Chief Justice the Supreme Court handed down some of it's most progressive decisions ever. Those decisions include Brown v. Board of Education (which forced the public schools to integrate), Hernandez v. Texas (which allowed Hispanic Americans to serve on juries), Miranda v. Arizona (which forces police to inform people of their rights immediately after arrest), and many others.

Now of course these types of decisions pissed off the right wing in this country and they regretted ever supporting Warren's nomination. Even Eisenhower, who didn't do much beyond play golf and not boink his wife Mamie for eight years, said he wished he'd never put ol' Earl on the Supreme Court. People like Phyllis Schlafly and the John Birch Society openly called for Warren to be impeached because he helped craft the decisions that helped so many blacks, Jews, women, and other minorities.

I shudder to think what our country would be like if Earl Warren, a life long conservative Republican before his appointment to the Supreme Court, had not looked at the bigger picture and put his country ahead of his petty political beliefs.


It's too bad that some of these people don't follow his lead.

The decisions that are coming down from this Bush packed court are over turning years of established legal precedents for no good reason. They are chipping away at our freedoms and at the very thing that most all Americans hold dear, the Bill of Rights. The 'Bong hits 4 Jesus' case should send a chill down your spine if you care about free speech for every one, especially if you have school age children or are planning to have children in the future. They also continue to rule that money donated to political campaigns is a form of speech, so that means that once again the rich will get their views heard and acted upon while you and me get shut out in the cold.

But the five member Reich wing majority's biggest outrage is today's ruling that strikes down a law designed to desegregate public schools further. Chief Justice John Roberts, a Bush appointee, said in his opinion that in over turning this law that the way to end discrimination based on race was stop discriminating on the basis of race. Fine theory John but in practice the white male majority in this country will never stop discriminating on the basis of race. In the over two hundred years that this country has been in existence the only way blacks, women, Hispanics, and others have been granted anything even remotely resembling equal rights has been through the courts. To imagine that we will end discrimination if we just stop race based quotas in our public schools is ludicrous. You are dragging us away from Brown v. Board of Education and back to Plessy v. Ferguson.

You've shown yourself to be an intellectual pipsqueak John Roberts. And just like Scalia, Thomas, and your new pal Alito, you've also shown that you're on the side of the multi-national corporations that are run by your Reich wing pals. We have no reason to expect you and the other 4 traitors to the Constitution will ever be like Earl Warren and put the good of all people ahead of your political party. Shame on all of you for being so short sighted and unpatriotic.

I hope you sleep well when you go back home at night to your house in

6 comments:

Dr. Zaius said...

Ike wasn't so bad, for a Republican. Wikipedia differs with your version to a degree on Eisenhowers feelings towards civil rights and the Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka decision:

"Eisenhower supported the 1954 Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka U.S. Supreme Court decision, in which segregated ("separate but equal") schools were ruled to be unconstitutional. The very next day he told District of Columbia officials to make Washington a model for the rest of the country in integrating black and white public school children. Liberal critics complained Eisenhower was never enthusiastic about civil rights, but he did propose to Congress the Civil Rights Acts of 1957 and 1960 and signed those acts into law, although both Acts were very weak and added little to the total electorate. Nonetheless, they constituted the first significant civil rights Acts since the 1870s." Wikipedia

And I will always love Eisenhow for saying this as he left office:

"...and warned about what he saw as unjustified government spending proposals and continued with a warning that 'we must guard against the acquisition of unwarranted influence, whether sought or unsought, by the military-industrial complex... Only an alert and knowledgeable citizenry can compel the proper meshing of the huge industrial and military machinery of defense with our peaceful methods and goals, so that security and liberty may prosper together.'" Wikipedia

He also served his country well in WWII. I don't hate Republican presidents per se, I just haven't seen a real Republican president since Nixon. It's all Reaganomics and Neoconservatism now. The party has been overtaken by Lektroids from Planet 10.

Dr. Monkey Von Monkerstein said...

He did disagree with most of the decisions handed down by the Earl Warren court. And while I also love his warning about the dangers of the millitary industrial complex, he did say he regretted naming Warren to the court.

Pam said...

Great post. The longest-lasting legacy of the Bu$h stolen presidency will be the damage caused by these 5 Reich wingers.

Jay Allbritton said...

Tremendous Monkey. So lightning rounded.

Dr. Monkey Von Monkerstein said...

Thanks for the praise Pam and Station Agent. Honestly though, I wish I didn't have to write such things.

Anonymous said...

What Pam said. And it's a not so subtle reminger that elections have consequences far and away beyond tax cuts and gay marriage.

According to all the recent survey and poll results I've seen, this hyper-conservative court is now moving away from the People.