Posted on 09/13/2005 9:20:39 AM PDT by Ol' Sparky
I was wrong about Roberts
Posted: September 13, 2005
1:00 a.m. Eastern
Joseph Farah
© 2005 WorldNetDaily.com
John Roberts still has most conservatives buffaloed.
They just can't believe George W. Bush would betray them so boldly.
But he has.
Even I, the ultimate skeptic, am just beginning to fathom the extent of the shell game that has been played on conservatives most of whom are actively working on behalf of the confirmation of a new chief justice of the U.S. Supreme Court who will make Ruth Bader Ginsberg look like a moderate.
That's right.
Up until now, I've been comparing Roberts to Sandra Day O'Connor, Anthony Kennedy and David Souter. I've got news for you. He's worse.
That, according to his close friend Edward Lazarus. Here's what he has to say about the next chief justice:
"Roberts is not burdened by a Bork-like record of speaking out in his own voice ... Roberts presents a sharp contrast to [Robert] Bork in judicial philosophy. Roberts is already on record strongly disclaiming an allegiance to any particular theory of constitutional interpretation, such as original intent jurisprudence. Roberts says that he picks and chooses what interpretive tools to use (such as textual analysis, historical analysis, or reliance on precedent) depending on which tools seem best to fit a particular case ..."
But it gets worse. Lazarus says Roberts will be very influential because of this style.
"Why could Roberts be influential?" he asks rhetorically. "Because of the very collegiality that is cited as a reason to confirm him. Justice Thomas, for instance, is isolated on the court by his extreme and often unusual views; like Bork, he too is susceptible to caricature due to a strong emphasis on Framers' intent. So while Thomas is a reliable conservative vote, he is not an effective wooer of moderates. But Roberts could both be a reliable conservative vote, and also convince moderates such as Justice Kennedy to join his side. Similarly, while Thomas is too extreme to ever be a chief justice candidate, Roberts, in contrast, could easily become one."
This statement, by the way, made long before Bush nominated Roberts to the job of chief justice following the death of William Rehnquist.
Again, it gets worse much worse.
"Putting politics aside, the current court member Roberts most resembles is Stephen Breyer. Roberts is far more intellectual than Rehnquist, far more politic than Scalia, and as noted above far less extreme than Thomas."
Stephen Breyer. That's who Roberts most resembles, according to his friend.
Roberts is a Washington establishment operative who has been fooling conservatives for much of his life.
In 1981, he worked hand in glove with his good friend Kenneth Starr, another shill for the establishment, to fool President Reagan and the American people into thinking Sandra Day O'Connor was a "conservative," Reagan Republican. He was a plotter, a co-conspirator, a devious manipulator, a spinner.
In a Feb. 16, 1982, memo he wrote to Attorney General William French Smith advising him on how to handle conservative criticism of the O'Connor choice, which had been engineered by Starr, he wrote:
A related criticism focuses on the screening and appointment of federal judges, highlighted by the O'Connor debate. The assertion is that appointees are not ideologically committed to the president's policies, again with particular emphasis on the social agenda ... Here again I do not think we should respond with a "yes, they are"; rather we should shift the debate and briefly touch on our judicial restraint themes (for which this audience should give us some credit).
It really should not matter what the personal ideology of our appointees may be, so long as they recognize that their ideology should have no role in the decisional process i.e., so long as they believe in judicial restraint. This theme should be glossed somewhat, because of the platform, but we can make the point that much criticism of our appointees has been misdirected.
This is what conservatives got for all their hard work on behalf of George W. Bush a betrayal. Conservatives were told they had nowhere else to go in the presidential election if they cared about the U.S. Supreme Court.
And what did they get? Not Souter. Not Kennedy. But Breyer.
Joseph Farah is founder, editor and chief executive officer of WND and a nationally syndicated radio talk-show host. He is also the founder of WND Books, publishes the premium, online, intelligence newsletter Joseph Farah's G2 Bulletin, and is the author of the highly acclaimed book "Taking America Back." In addition to his daily column in WND, he writes a nationally syndicated weekly column available to U.S. newspapers through Creators Syndicate.
"Certifed by whom?"
By the U.S. Whacko Association......duh!
Pat Buchanan is also certified by USWA, as are countless moonbats on the left.
I'd love to see the list. If it's accurate, there will be hundreds of freepers on it.
" I guess there just weren't any "real" conservatives to choose from."
Yeah, we can't take a chance on any of them. </sarcasm>
Farah is nuts (as is anyone) because we are bushbots, the thinking here goes. Fine reasoning!
I am not a Roberts supporter...I just think Farah is over the top...Roberts is probably a moderate at best.
Joe Farah is an idiot. I don't read his stuff.
I'm taking this with about a pound of salt!
"Does anyone here like or even pay attention to Farah?"
Sorry, who is Farah? And is this the World Nut Daily?
Farah and Buchanan drink from the same Kool-Aid pitcher every morning.
Yeah that's the one.
Oh he (Farah) is definetly over the top. As to Roberts...hm I don't know, I have a good feeling about him.
Looks like Farah is out of his rubber room again. Really, if Roberts was a 'liberal' as Farah is implying, why doesn't the liberal establishment cheer his nomination, or at the very least quietly allow it to happen?
Speaking of Ms. Coulter, aren't pictures of her supposed to be posted whenever she is mentioned on FR?
Well they also opposed Souter didn't they? I mean Kerry, Kennedy, Mikulski, Lautenberg and a couple of other liberal nuts voted against him...
You got that right.
I wonder what Paul Craig Roberts has to say about it.
Farah...needs a nice, long vacation. His thinking is distorted.
Yeah. But I don't how to do it.
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