Posted on 07/13/2009 8:21:50 PM PDT by Congressman Billybob
Here is what Judge Sotomayor said in her opening statement to the Senate Judiciary Committee yesterday. She said, my judicial philosophy... is simple: fidelity to the law. The task of a judge is not to make the law -- it is to apply the law.
On seven occasions, one by example in an opinion, she made clear an opposite opinion, that the outcome of a case decided by a judge of her style of decision-making, can and should be varied according to the experience of the judge. She wrote and published, a wise Latina woman with the richness of her experience would more often than not reach a better conclusion that a while male who hasn't lived that life."
Although the White House has mounted the defense that the second quote is taken out of context, that is a false defense. People in the position of Judge Sotomayor of the Second Circuit Court of Appeals, do not give off the cuff speeches. Her speech was prepared, written out, and supports the quote. If that were not enough, the speech was published in a journal later another opportunity for Sotomayor to correct it, were any of its statements wrong.
These two quotes from the same person cannot be squared with one another. Has Sotomayor had a foxhole conversion, and changed her philosophy of judging at the last moment, on the verge of becoming a Justice of the Supreme Court? Her supporters on the Committee in their opening statements all supported the breadth and excellence of her judicial experience.
So, it is highly unlikely that at this precise moment that Sotomayor has honestly reversed her theory of judging to the opposite of what it was, before.
That leaves two possibilities. Either Sotomayor was lying when she made her many previous comments about a judge controlling the law, rather than merely applying it. Or, she spoke the truth then and is lying now, when she wants the Committee and the whole Senate to approve her for her final, ultimate position.
Anyone who has worked in a courtroom, lawyers and judges alike, have dealt often with witnesses who contradict themselves. Whenever a flat-out contradiction appears, the critical question is which statement is true, and which is false.
People trained in the law would apply three major understandings to the task of finding the truth. First, where are the benefits from one statement as true, rather than the other? Second, what are the circumstances of one statement than the other? And lastly, what is the demeanor of the witness in making the two statements?
Take those in reverse order. Sotomayor was most emphatic in her statement to the Judiciary Committee on Monday. But anyone who intends to sell a falsehood would know to be emphatic, and perhaps add appropriate gestures. In the two taped and televised contrary statements, she was relaxed, and casual. At Duke University, she even turned her confession of making policy as a judge, a joke that worked very well with her audience of law students.
Demeanor suggests that Sotomayor is lying now, not then.
The circumstances of the statements is that all were prepared for delivery, though the Duke statement was blurted out, the Ricci (New Haven fireman) case her appellate decision was the most prepared of all. Here, numbers matter. It is seven against one. This again suggests that Sotomayor is lying now, not then,
Finally, what are the stakes? If she was lying before, there is almost no payoff of any kind for the lie. But if the lie is now, the gain is a lifetime appointment to the Supreme Court.
Two conclusions seem to follow. First, Sotomayor is clearly lying, either then or now. Second, the logical conclusion is that she is lying now in order to gain an appointment to the US Supreme Court. The idea that anyone can lie his/her way onto the Supreme Court is reprehensible, but it needs to be faced.
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About the Author: John Armor was a member of the Bar of the Supreme Court for 33 years and participated in 18 cases. He resigned from that Bar as a result of the McConnell v. FCC, which has been partially reversed. If Sotomayor becomes a Justice, he will never again participate in that Court.
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John / Billybob
I agree
It’s simple: she wants the appointment. After she gets it she can do as she pleases.
Yes. But I imagine the Republican Senators will tell us that she was such a “compelling” liar.
You must have a cast iron stomach and nerves of steel. Listening to the rehash on Rush and some on Hannity was all I could stand.
She wants the job soooooooooooooo bad
A liar. Yes. A race pimp. Yes.
She is doing what Barry did: Say anything, even if it is an untruth and even if it is categorized as a flip-flop, etc., to get votes.
The irony here is that she is already a given...she already had the votes and the hearings are nothing more than another Barry’s and the Dems smoke and mirrors distraction.
She could say she believes in Aliens after, and nothing can be done!
She could be an Aliens herself, and nothing can be done.
She could've been a MALE PROSTITUTE and nothing can be done.
She could've had a sex change, and guess what?, nothing can be done.
After confirmation, nothing can be done.
What’s with the water in New Haven anyway?
“Judge Sonia Sotomayor: Liar?”
No Shiite!
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"Until the people have, by some solemn and authoritative act, annulled or changed the established form, it is binding upon them collectively, as well as individually; and no presumption or even knowledge of their sentiments, can warrant their representatives [the executive, judiciary, or legislature]; in a departure from it prior to such an act." - Alexander Hamilton In the first of the eighty-five "Federalist Papers," Alexander Hamilton emphasized that:
The Framers knew that the passage of time would surely disclose imperfections or inadequacies in the Constitution, but these were to be repaired or remedied by formal amendment, not by legislative action or judicial construction (or reconstruction). Hamilton (in The Federalist No. 78) was emphatic about this:
The Congress, unlike the British Parliament, was not given final authority over the Constitution, which partly explains why the judicial authority was lodged in a separate and independent branch of government. In Britain the supreme judicial authority is exercised by a committee of the House of Lords, which is appropriate in a system of parliamentary supremacy, but, although it was suggested they do so, the Framers refused to follow the British example. The American system is one of constitutional supremacy, which means that sovereignty resides in the people, not in the King-in-Parliament; and the idea that the Constitution may be changed by an act of the legislature--even an act subsequently authorized by the judiciary--is simply incompatible with the natural right of the people to determine how (and even whether) they shall be governed. Unlike in Britain where, formally at least, the queen rules by the grace of God (Dei gratia regina), American government rests on the consent of the people; and, according to natural right, the consent must be given formally. In fact, it must be given in a written compact entered into by the people. Here is Madison on the compacts underlying American government:
Neither civil society (or as Madison puts it, "the people in their social state') nor government exists by nature. By nature everyone is sovereign with respect to himself, free to do whatever in his judgment is necessary to preserve his own life - or, in the words of the Declaration of Independence, everyone is endowed by nature with the rights of life, liberty, and the pursuit of a happiness that he defines for himself. Civil society is an artificial person (constituted by the first of the compacts), and it is civil society that institutes and empowers government. So it was that they became "the People of the United States" in 1776 and, in 1787-88, WE, THE PEOPLE ordained and established "this Constitution for the United States of America." In this formal compact THE PEOPLE specified the terms and conditions under which "ourselves and posterity," would be governed: granting some powers and withholding others, and organizing the powers granted with a view to preventing their misuse by the legislative, the executive, and the judicial branches alike. WE THE PEOPLE were authorized by natural right to do this, and were authorized to act on behalf of posterity only insofar as the rights of posterity to change those terms and conditions were respected. This was accomplished in Article V of the Constitution, the amending article, which prescribed the forms to be followed when exercising that power in the future.
The Framers had designed a constitutional structure for a government which would be limited by that structure - by the distribution of power into distinct departments, a system of legislative balances and checks, an independent judiciary, a system of representation, and an enlargement of the orbit "within which such systems are to revolve" And to the judges they assigned the duty, as "faithful guardians of the Constitution," to preserve the integrity of the structure, for it is by the structure (more than by "parchment barriers") that the government is limited. It would he only a slight exaggeration to say that, in the judgment of the Founders, the Constitution would "live" as long as that structure was preserved. The Enduring American ConstitutionNow, almost 200 years later, one can read Hamilton's words in Federalist No. 1 and conclude that, under some conditions, some "societies of men" are capable of "establishing good government," but that most are not. This is not for lack of trying; on the contrary, constitutions are being written all the time - of some 164 countries in the world, all but a small handful (seven by the latest count) have written constitutions - but most of them are not long-lived. In September 1983, the American Enterprise Institute sponsored an international conference on constitution writing at the Supreme Court of the United States; some twenty-odd countries were represented. With the exception of the Americans, the persons present had themselves played a role - in some cases a major role - in the writing of their countries' constitutions, most of them written since 1970. Only the constitution of the French Fifth Republic predated 1970; and the Nigerian, so ably discussed and defended at the 1983 conference by one of its own Framers, had subsequently been subverted, much as the four previous French republican constitutions had been subverted. It would seem that many peoples are experienced in the writing of constitutions, but only a few of them - conspicuous among these the people of America - have an experience of stable constitutional government. In that sense, we surely have "a living Constitution." That is not, however, the sense in which the term is ordinarily used in the literature of constitutional law as shall be explored herein. Treating The Constitution As
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What you read is only half of the unfortunate truth of New Haven. Much like Newark NJ, Compton, or Columbus Ohio. Words simply don’t describe those places.
All fairly minor compared to her belonging to La Raza, an organization more racist than the KKK.
Their slogan: for thr race everything, for everyone else nothing!
John / Nillybob
Silly question. She’s a liberal isn’t she?
Have you ever met an honest one? I haven’t.
No on Sotomataor
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