Posted on 01/04/2008 7:25:41 AM PST by jdm
Over the Christmas vacation I read Clarence Thomass memoir My Grandfathers Son. I recommend it highly. The people who most need to read it are the very people who never will: the leftists who have bought off on the idea that Thomas is a conservative bogeyman who is evil and never should have become a Supreme Court Justice.
I began reading Justice Thomass book as I waited in line to meet him at Chapman University, and my overwhelming impression of the first 20-30 pages was: Man. This guy was poor.
Some of the stories in the book were already familiar to me from the reviews I had read, such as the inspiring story of his training for (and running) a marathon:
A young black Marine was handing out water to the exhausted runners. God, this is hard, I told him. Thats what you asked for, he replied without a trace of sympathy. I shook off my self-pity, picked up my pace, and crossed the finish line three hours and eleven minutes after Id started.
But many stories were new to me. For example, at Yale Law School, Thomas lost his wallet one day, and learned that it had been turned in by John Bolton. That was the beginning of a friendship with Bolton. Thomas also relates that Lani Guinier helped him get a job with a black civil-rights law firm.
Yup, Thomas wanted to work for a black civil-rights law firm. He was something of a leftist in his younger days.
That leads me to another story I hadnt heard until I read the book: Thomas applied to and was accepted at Harvard Law School. But after visiting the school, he decided to decline the invitation to attend, even before he had received his answer from Yale. You see, after visiting Harvard, he decided it was too conservative.
Thomas also voted for McGovern although he did so with misgivings, believing that McGovern was too conservative a candidate.
Thomass intellectual movement from angry black radical to conservative Republican is an important part of the book. He describes reading the words of Thomas Sowell for the first time: I felt like a thirsty man gulping down a glass of cool water.
One thing that people might not know about Thomas is how tight money was for him. While at Yale, he had no idea how he was going to repay his student loans, so he signed up for a tuition postponement option which he clearly needed, as he was living in roach- and rat-infested surroundings even during his tenure at EEOC. This led to one of the more amazing tidbits of the book. The emphasis is mine:
I didnt know what else to do, so I signed on the dotted line, and spent the next two decades paying off the money Id borrowed during my last two years at Yale. I was still making payments when I joined the Supreme Court.
Wow.
Thomas has some choice words for the media. He describes how an Atlanta reporter investigated his home life during his nomination to the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals. The reporter got a personal tour of Pinpoint from Thomass mother.
The reporter later told me that his doubts were laid to rest that day, but his editor refused to let him say anything favorable about me in the piece that finally ran.
The slanders against Thomas during his confirmation hearings are too numerous to list, but here is one good example. While working for the Attorney Generals Office in Missouri, Thomas wanted to make a point to a colleague about race. So, returning from one of his trips to Savannah, Thomas had brought back a miniature Georgia flag the same one that had been adopted in 1956, with the Confederate flag and the Georgia state seal displayed side by side and asked him to try to imagine how he would have felt growing up under a flag like that had he been black. When Thomas was nominated to the Supreme Court, this turned into a story that he had kept a Confederate flag on his desk.
The media, of course, jumped all over the story, tracking down so-called experts whod never met me and inviting them to sound off about the psychological implications of this nonevent.
The cynicism of Washington politics that Thomas describes isnt particularly surprising, but readers may be taken aback by the cheerful openness with which some politicians admitted to him the naked political calculations that governed their decisionmaking. In interviews during the Supreme Court nomination process, Thomas says:
Bob Packwood, on the other hand, was direct: he said that he liked me, agreed with many things that I had said, and thought that I would be a fine member of the Court, but that he couldnt vote for me because his political career depended on support from the same womens groups that were opposing my nomination. Al Gore was equally candid when a friend of mine approached him, saying that hed vote for me if he decided not to run for president.
You might think Thomas would be appalled by such crass political considerations, but he says he appreciated those politicians who gave such honest answers instead of making up some transparent excuse.
One man who didnt pass the honesty test was lyin Joe Biden, who promised Thomas that he would open the hearings with some softball questions to set Thomas at ease and then asked a blatantly dishonest question right out of the gate. (Biden ripped a Thomas quote out of context to suggest that he supported judicial activism, when the full quote in context showed Thomas making the exact opposite point.)
Thomass treatment at the hands of the Democrats turned his mom off of Democrats for life:
Never before had I seen her as angry as she was in the fall of 1991. All her life shed assumed that Democrats in Washington were sensible leaders but now she saw these men as single-issue zealots who were unwilling to treat her son fairly. I aint never votin fo another Democrat long as I can draw breath, she told me as we walked out of the Senate building on what should have been my final day of testimony. Id vote for a dog first.
Heh.
I gained new respect for a couple of people besides Thomas reading this book. Larry Thompson, whose name was batted around as a possible replacement for Alberto Gonzales as Attorney General, was one of those people. Thomas relates that Thompson attended the University of Michigan Law School, but left his race off the application. Thompson proved to be a reliable friend when Thomas needed help during the Supreme Court confirmation hearings. Thompson was working at a law firm in Atlanta when Thomas called him for help:
Larry, I need your help, I said.
Ill be there on Monday.
Itll all be over by then.
Then Ill be there in the morning. And that was that.
Now thats a stand-up guy.
I also gained a new respect for Juan Williams, whom I had always thought of as the rather soft-headed liberal on Fox News, who regularly gets beaten up by Brit Hume for being so utterly clueless.
But it turns out that, whatever his faults, Juan Williams is an honest guy who writes accurate columns with truthful quotations. The first big splash Thomas made in Washington was when Williams reported some off-the-cuff remarks Thomas had made to Williams about race. Thomas (rather naively) hadnt realized his statements to Williams would be printed in the paper but when they were, he says, he saw that Williams presented my opinions accurately and fairly. (They still created something of a firestorm. It was not popular for blacks to publicly say what Thomas had said.)
There is some anger in the book reserved for the bigots who attacked Thomas during his Supreme Court confirmation hearings. This anger makes for some of the better quotes in the book, so Ill give you a taste of a couple of them.
The mob I now faced carried no ropes or guns. Its weapons were smooth-tongued lies spoken into microphones and printed on the front pages of Americas newspapers. It no longer sought to break the bodies of its victims. Instead it devastated their reputations and drained away their hope. But it was a mob all the same. And its purpose to keep the black man in his place was unchanged.
And this:
As a child in the Deep South, Id grown up fearing the lynch mobs of the Ku Klux Klan; as an adult, I was starting to wonder if Id been afraid of the wrong white people all along. My worst fears had come to pass not in Georgia but in Washington, D.C., where I was being pursued not by bigots in white robes but by left-wing zealots draped in flowing sanctimony.
In case youre thinking that Thomas is the only one who feels this way, let me quote Juan Williams, to show you why I have such new respect for him:
To listen to or read some news reports on Thomas over the past month is to discover a monster of a man, totally unlike the human being full of sincerity, confusion, and struggles whom I saw as a reporter who watched him for some 10 years. He has been conveniently transformed into a monster about whom it is fair to say anything, to whom it is fair to do anything. President Bush may be packing the court with conservatives [a joke of an argument given what we know about Souter Patterico], but that is another argument, larger than Clarence Thomas. In pursuit of abuses by a conservative president the liberals have become the abusive monsters.
Nicely said, Juan and as true today as it was in the early 1990s.
Luckily, the public mostly saw through the Democrats smoke and mirrors. Thomas tells the moving story of finishing his Anita Hill testimony and going to a very public dinner at Mortons of Chicago in D.C., joined by Robert Bork and his wife, Ted Olson and his wife, and Orrin Hatch. Thomas says that though I briefly felt exposed and uncomfortable, he had an enjoyable dinner, capped by this:
When we rose to leave at the end of the evening, the entire restaurant erupted in a spontaneous standing ovation. We also found out later that several patrons had offered to pick up our very substantial tab, but Senator Hatch had insisted on paying.
Im sorry I wasnt there for that. But I recently got to participate in another standing ovation for Justice Thomas, at Chapman University. And that was pretty good.
I hope readers of this site will buy this book (or borrow it from the library) and read it. If you do, please let me know.
I read the book when it first came out.
I also gave Juan Williams a new consideration after reading it, but I still cannot stand the man for his irrational remarks on FNS whenever I get to see it.
I remain shocked that Justice Thomas was still paying off school loans during the nomination process.
I also read this book over the holidays. It was very good reading. Interesting how his grandfather bucked the system and was a Catholic in the South...and raised his grandsons Catholic.
I understand that Justice Thomas has since returned to the faith of his childhood.
Loved the book as well.
I was unaware that he went far left while in college.
Many brave black men fought under the Confederate flag. Not taking away from Thomas’ experience in Georgia, but other men and women do not feel the same as him.
But you are taking away from Thomas and you are missing the point, johnny one note.
I do have to get this book.
Might be a good read - thanks for your post.
When we rose to leave at the end of the evening, the entire restaurant erupted in a spontaneous standing ovation. We also found out later that several patrons had offered to pick up our very substantial tab, but Senator Hatch had insisted on paying.
Tears came to my eyes when I read that in Justice Thomas' book, My Grandfather's Son, and tears came to my eyes again just now, as I read your recounting of it here.
I watched the Thomas hearings, and I know what that spontaneous show of support must have meant to him, and to those with him.
Every Conservative who watched those confirmation hearings had to have become emotionally invested in them,if they weren't from the beginning, as I was. They were worse than the Bork hearings. Everything I've ever suspected, believed, or thought I knew about the vicious, slimy, unconscionable, lengths, and depths, to which the left will go to advance and protect their political control and power was played out before my eyes, and confirmed in spades, during the Thomas hearings...and that's saying a LOT.
ping
I was very surprised -- and pleased -- to hear him say that he hasn't read a newspaper in almost 15 years.
I couldn’t put it down. Passing it around to all in my family. What a role model for all young men.
That last paragraph echoed my thoughts exactly.
Your tagline echoes mine. : )
It is an excellent read. I think you will be glad to have read it.
I gave copies as Christmas gifts.
I want to get the audio version of this book to listen to on my commute, but it is unavailable on audible.com and iTunes. Any idea why?
My 21-yr.old son asked for this book for Christmas. He started it Christmas night and said it was one of the best books he’d read. I thank God he has the intellegence to understand and accept the conservative principles he was raised with. My 19 yr. old daughter is a bit more of a project for me. She is more easily swayed by popular opinion, and less of a critical thinker. Perhaps my son will lend her Justice Thomas’s book.
I read the book over the holidays. Clarence Thomas should be an inspiration to everybody especially blacks.
i read it and also was amazed at what i didn’t know about Justice Thomas. Great book. i am going to lend it to a black friend of mine, for her to read as well as her grandsons. i told her it was an amazingly inspirational story. i had her read Juan Williams book, Enough, and she was impressed with it. She is not a republican, but she is reasonable.
Everyone--get a copy of this book and read it. It is full of the unexpected! The ironies of Thomas's prose--and of his life--would make Jane Austin herself sit up and take notice--and take notes! Many times I found myself laughing at the sheer irony of it all!
Clarence Thomas is a great man.
He was propelled to greatness, almost in spite of himself (and his wishes), by his own inherent intelligence, benevolence, and love of truth, justice, and humanity.
Anyone who, like Clarence Thomas, seeks truth for its own sake, will find himself in strange and unexpected places and among strange and unexpected people. This is one thing that makes his book so fascinating--but only one thing of many.
He reveres his grandfather and considers him the greatest man he has ever known. Thomas does not speak casually in superlatives.
Real love, Thomas says (and I paraphrase), values discipline over affection. Those of us who have contended with staggering difficulties and formidable demons will find ourselves envying Thomas the magnificent guidance of his grandfather--and his step-grandmother--and his wife, whom he adores (and we can well understand)--and Clarence Thomas himself!
Thomas's triumph over staggering difficulties, in retrospect, seems as inevitable as fate, considering the inherent personal qualities that made it possible, but his life is a blueprint for the triumph of anyone over anything. He seems to be wanting to share the secret of triumph with all people; the wise will take his advice and example to heart and run with them to their own triumphs.
His triumphs are triumphs of the human spirit. He offers his lessons to everyone.
I too came away with a renewed respect for Juan Williams--and also for Jack Danforth and Orin Hatch.
I came away with a renewed contempt for those who thwarted Justice Thomas--notably the politicians et al. who attempted to block his appointment to the Supreme Court.
Clarence Thomas is a man of brilliant intelligence and a love of truth and justice and of humanity that is utterly magnificent.
Of all the famous people paraded before us in this Information Age, Clarence Thomas is one of whom I would like to know personally.
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