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Under the Radar (Great editorial about Harriet Miers)
The Illinois Leader ^ | 10/6/05 | Connie Lynne Carrillo

Posted on 10/06/2005 6:25:16 PM PDT by wagglebee

“Blessed are the meek: for they shall inherit the earth.”
--Matthew 5:5

And so they have.

A quiet public servant, who has toiled for years in veritable obscurity, immediately calls her pastor and asks him to pray for her. An unassuming Texas lady, who for years went unnoticed and didn’t make anybody’s short or long list, is stepping into the biggest limelight America can offer a legal mind, the Supreme Court.

Her name is Harriet Miers and people like Rush Limbaugh are fuming. The conservative right feels let down. Betrayed!! They are suicidal, depressed, disappointed and “demoralized”. In short, they are steamed. Pat Buchanan goes postal; Bill Kristol, hysterical; Rush Limbaugh, incoherent.

Everybody needs to get a grip. By the time you finish reading this column, you will feel calm and euphoria sweeping over you. You will be shocked and awed by the brilliant leadership President Bush has shown with this selection. You will know the Court will be in the best hands possible. You will love Harriet Miers. You will wish you had put her on the top of your short list. And here’s why:

1. Note the quote beginning this column: The “meek shall inherit the earth.” This is not just some pabulum I dreamed up. This is what Christians actually should believe. This is what Christ taught. Ordinary workers, who labor in the fields of the Lord, shall inherit the kingdom of heaven. And an unpretentious laborer in the fields of the Lord, and the fields of George W. Bush, might just be the best person for the highest court in the land.

Harriet Miers does not just show up at church on Sunday morning; go downstairs for coffee and donuts; check her Christianity at the door and return to bloodbath politics as usual.

She identifies herself as a “born again” Christian. Now, this is an important distinction. People who identify themselves this way are dead serious about their faith. They live it. They love it. And they would probably die for it. Bored, comatose Protestant mainliners and robotic, zombie-like cultural Catholics need not apply for this personal distinction unless they are ready to take the big leap into being born again, or, as we Catholics say, conversion.

As a Catholic myself, of course, I miss her and wish she’d come home to us. I can certainly imagine, though, how it happened, as the Catholic Church took a nosedive into immorality, corruption, relativism and liberalism after Vatican II.

2. Harriet Miers has toiled in obscurity and she is not getting much respect in her own town. People who toil in obscurity usually don’t owe anybody anything. You don’t see them on endless talk shows schlepping their latest book, that is, in actuality, a bloated, overblown magazine article. The D.C. assembly-line cocktail party circuit probably does it without her.

3. Horror of all horrors, liberal elitism has reared its ugly head! She was not born with a silver spoon stuck in her mouth by an Ivy League alumnus with a Harvard education on the end of it. I mean, come on, Ted Kennedy graduated from Harvard. How great can it possibly be?

4. No personal baggage! No, we don’t have to worry about any frat-house, drunken party images showing up on the internet with this Texas lady. Refreshing, isn’t it?

Not much partying for her it seems, except for a few celebrations with her co-workers, who, apparently, adore her.

She spends most of her time at the office. Being single and never married, no unseemly marriage problems, bimbo alerts or embarrassing divorce papers to be splattered all over The Smoking Gun website; no illegal-alien-nanny-gate problems; no grand-children-who-need-bailing-out-of-jail problems, and, living the simple life alone, she probably doesn’t need a cadre of workers from Guatemala to keep up the estate and then not pay their taxes. She seems to have a nice gentleman friend who shows up occasionally, so, a little romance might do the staid Court some good.

5. She is a woman! I think Harry Reid has a crush on her!

Her lack of bench experience is a red herring. Dozens of Justices brought no bench time to the Court, including the late Chief Justice Rehnquist, whose road to the Court also ran the same course through the White House.

Now, let’s pull ourselves together. This great lady presents a clean slate and appears untarnished. Her main drawback being the intellectual conservative cabal didn’t think of her first.

Harriet Miers came creeping in under the radar like a Stealth bomber; a modest, unassuming, hard-working, experienced lawyer with strong moral, religious and constitutional convictions. Just what the boss was looking for.

Let's give her a chance. Bombs away!


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Editorial; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: bush; harrietmiers; miers; rationalization; scotus; snakeoil
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To: Do not dub me shapka broham
"The fact of the matter is that you are not going to change the minds of someone who's spent the better part of his or her life constructing an elaborate perspective-with regard to interpretation of Constitutional, common and case law-to reflect your opinion more closely, no matter what polemical skills you possess."

Uh huh, like the ever-leftward-drifting David Souter or the wobbly Anthony Kennedy? They weren't closet liberals; they started out as conservatives. Kennedy in particular as a "swing" justice is potentially vulnerable to a little friendly persuasion; once upon a time they both persuaded themselves that they were conservatives. Stevens and Ginsburg might be immune, but they are also the two most likely future vacancies. Thus it is a little silly to dismiss the possibility that trying a technique OTHER THAN insulting them with big words they cannot understand might be more effective.
121 posted on 10/06/2005 9:59:22 PM PDT by FredTownWard
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To: Betaille

I'll take your word for it.....not!


122 posted on 10/06/2005 9:59:23 PM PDT by RasterMaster (Proud Member of the Water Bucket Brigade - MOOSEMUSS!)
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To: shempy

Meek does not not mean weak. A member of the lobby board pictures someone who was controlling and even meddlesome. Think Mother Superior, the school principal who wields a strong ruler


123 posted on 10/06/2005 9:59:56 PM PDT by RobbyS ( CHIRHO)
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To: Politicalities

Oh, yes, I do. I noticed you did that to me one time before; when I saw the second one, I decided to just ignore it.

And I'm telling you if you've got something to say to me, post it to me.

And you're the only one on FR that does that; it appears it is YOU who is too lazy to reply to the individual posts posted to you.


124 posted on 10/06/2005 10:01:52 PM PDT by Howlin
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To: RasterMaster

"I'll take your word for it.....not!"


Here's the story and thread:
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1498157/posts

Well... try to rationalize it. I'm still waiting.


125 posted on 10/06/2005 10:02:06 PM PDT by Betaille ("And if the stars burn out there's only fire to blame" -Duran Duran)
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To: wagglebee
Puchannon is not a Republican and ran against GW and Chrystal may as well. Rush was spoiling for a fight, but will at least hear what she has to say. Fallwell, Robertson and Dobson are all for her so am I.

We have much bigger fish to fry than wasting 2 years getting a SC Justice.

Pray for W and Our Freedom Fighters

126 posted on 10/06/2005 10:05:27 PM PDT by bray (Pray for the Freedom of the Iraqis from Islam)
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To: Betaille

"Well... try to rationalize it. I'm still waiting."

OK, how about: Democrats who would oppose anyone the President nominated are anonymously lying about it, and panicked conservatives are taking the word of said anonymous Democrats for ANYTHING.


127 posted on 10/06/2005 10:07:00 PM PDT by FredTownWard
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To: Betaille
The counter is that according to the article, Bush should nominate an activist rather than someone who strictly interprets the law.

The thread (Posted by a noobie) replies squash that little fish-wrap article pretty well.

128 posted on 10/06/2005 10:07:46 PM PDT by RasterMaster (Proud Member of the Water Bucket Brigade - MOOSEMUSS!)
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To: RasterMaster

"The thread (Posted by a noobie)"

When you've lost... revert to ad-hominem attacks. The "noobie" didn't make up the article, it is on Drudge and the Washington Post website. Would you like to verify that before coming to an actual opinion?


129 posted on 10/06/2005 10:10:50 PM PDT by Betaille ("And if the stars burn out there's only fire to blame" -Duran Duran)
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To: RasterMaster
For commentary from a law perspective, you may want to consult a law journal:

http://writ.news.findlaw.com/commentary/20051005_gerber.html

130 posted on 10/06/2005 10:11:08 PM PDT by RasterMaster (Proud Member of the Water Bucket Brigade - MOOSEMUSS!)
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To: Betaille

Where did I attack a noobie?


131 posted on 10/06/2005 10:13:06 PM PDT by RasterMaster (Proud Member of the Water Bucket Brigade - MOOSEMUSS!)
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To: wagglebee; GatorGirl; maryz; afraidfortherepublic; Antoninus; Aquinasfan; livius; ...

"As a Catholic myself, of course, I miss her and wish she’d come home to us. I can certainly imagine, though, how it happened, as the Catholic Church took a nosedive into immorality, corruption, relativism and liberalism after Vatican II."

Wow, hard hitting.


132 posted on 10/06/2005 10:15:57 PM PDT by narses (St Thomas says “lex injusta non obligat”)
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To: wagglebee
Just ask her how she would rule on Campaign finance reform?
133 posted on 10/06/2005 10:17:08 PM PDT by Brimack34
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To: Do not dub me shapka broham
"I think that the notion of a "stealth" nomination-any nomination, at any time-should be rejected as a matter of principle, but to ask conservatives-or any other segment of the American public, for that matter-to accept a "stealth" nominee who has no assets to speak of-other than than the fact that she has left no tangible evidence of her political or judicial philosophy-is simply unacceptable."

Wonderful and pure your thoughts they are.

However, you left out one thing: The weasles in the United States Senate who don't have the gonads to confirm a conservative with a paper trail.

134 posted on 10/06/2005 10:19:37 PM PDT by Reactionary
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To: Howlin; Politicalities
I'm sorry; I don't read "group replies." I've got better things to do than scan through your posts to see if you replied to me.

I was thinking the same thing as I waded through Politicalities responses. I'm tired of explaining my opinion anyhow. What sort of person can argue against waiting and learning more before jumping to conclusions? In my opinion, it is Commonsense 101, but apparently some haven't taken that class.

135 posted on 10/06/2005 10:28:50 PM PDT by Chena (I'm not young enough to know everything)
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To: Politicalities

Please try to understand. These threads can get long and winded. I would prefer when someone has something to say to me that they would take the time to post to me, and not include me in a potpourri of responses. No offense, it's just that time dictates a certain amount of common courtesy. :)


136 posted on 10/06/2005 10:30:35 PM PDT by Chena (I'm not young enough to know everything)
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To: RasterMaster
I do get it....the hearings are the vetting process.

No, the hearings are an excuse for Judiciary Committee members to make speeches and for nominees to say as little as possible. They're a charade, a stage play. Can you tell me something substantive that came out of the Roberts hearings, other than the fact that he's composed, charismatic, and can think on his feet? Is there anything about Roberts's positions that you learned during the hearings?

No one tells why she isn't the best and brightest

That's because, once again, the burden of proof isn't on those who question whether she is the best and the brightest. She has to prove herself worthy. Roberts proved it to me with his record... and even now I'm not sure he was the best possible pick. We'll see. His conduct during the one case he's heard has not made me optimistic; the federal Congress clearly has no Constitutional authority to decree state law regarding assisted suicide, but Roberts has seemed very skeptical of this position.

If you were asked to make a positive case for Miers being one of the best of the best, what would you say? What could you say beyond "the President picked her and I trust his judgment?"

I have posted many posts on this thread why I support Miers

Let's see...

You've asserted that a "stealth" nominee is called for. I disagree, for stated reasons. Picking a fight with Senate Democrats would be politically wise for many reasons, not the least of which is to knock out Conrad and Nelson in 2006. There's plenty of upside to such a fight, and little downside... if the Democrats refused to allow an up-or-down votes, Red State Dems would pay a fearsome price for it, and then you could nominate Miers.

You've cited MOOSEMUSS... and yes, I am familiar with it. I disagree with Major Mike's argument that it applies. A few specifics:

Let's see... what other reasons did you give for supporting her? Well, you said we needed to get more GOPers in the Senate next cycle. I'm sorry to break the news, but that's unlikely to happen. Serious recruiting failures in Nebraska, North Dakota, and West Virginia have made it likely that at best the GOP will hold its own. On the other hand, if we could've forced Conrad or Nelson to either buck their party or vote to filibuster a conservative nominee, we might've had a fighting shot at picking up those seats, even without Hoeven or Osborne.

Oh, and you've argued that she's not actually unqualified. Well, technically speaking, Lawrence Tribe is pretty qualified, but I sure wouldn't want him on the bench, either. Prove she's qualified, don't try to claim it's up to me to prove she's unqualified.

And you've cited a speech she gave that's on C-Span. I haven't watched it. I will, and I hope it does something to convince me that she really is one of the best of the best.

Well, it wasn't your choice to make or mine. A clear majority elected Bush to make that decision.

Yup, just like a clear majority elected Clinton to make the decision to appoint Breyer and Ginsburg, and it wasn't your choice or mine. Doesn't change the fact that both Breyer and Ginsburg SUCK!

The nominee is clearly qualified

Prove it!

and it's the naysayers who are filibustering the nominee because their "superstar" wasn't picked.

I ain't filibustering crap. I'm just saying that this appears to be a bad decision. Even if Miers is "qualified", why eat a pork chop when there are five filets mignon right in front of you?

O'Connor was a turn-coat regarding her record, but if it all looks good on paper, right?

I dunno. Exactly what was it in O'Connor's record that approaches that of Luttig, Kozinski, Brown, McConnell, or Alioto?

We can do better than a 55-45 split once the RINOs are purged from the ranks and the DUmocrat sponsored voting fraud is eliminated.

Yeah, good luck with that. Got some bad news for you... those RINOs live in blue states, and if you "purge" them, you're likely to get Democrats in their place. Say what you will about the RINOs, they did not vote to make Harry Reid majority leader or Patrick Leahy chairman of the Judiciary committee.

The has-been media will be more than willng to go to bat for any filibustering senators.

And the good and true people in the heartland of North Dakota and Nebraska wouldn't swallow it. The ever-redder West Virginians might consider a filibuster the last straw that breaks their ex-Klansman's back. The blue-collar workers in Michigan might decide that they're not being truly represented by their liberal Senator. And the blue-collar workers in Ohio and Pennsylvania might decide that it's important to keep their GOP Senators after all -- both of whom are seriously endangered in 2006.

Where did you stand on Roberts when many on FR were griping about him too?

I supported him, because he had a judicial record for me to read. I still think we could've done better.

What about any of your choices for a O'Connor replacement that is not currently on the bench?

Not currently on the bench? Hmmm. Let's see.. I'd support William Dyer, Bill Whittle, myself, Tom Coburn, John Hinderaker... eh, too many to list. But my favorite pick remains the Honorable Alex Kozinski.

It took 40 years for the conservatives to get here

Yup. Be a shame to give up all that hard-won ground because we shied away from a confrontation with our enemies.

and it will take longer to undo the 60+ years worth of damage done to our country by LIEberalism.

It will take longer still if we do not use the power when we get it.

137 posted on 10/06/2005 10:30:47 PM PDT by Politicalities (http://www.politicalities.com)
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To: Chena

All I see are bitter little McCains.


138 posted on 10/06/2005 10:31:07 PM PDT by RasterMaster (Proud Member of the Water Bucket Brigade - MOOSEMUSS!)
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To: RasterMaster

LOL


139 posted on 10/06/2005 10:33:11 PM PDT by Chena (I'm not young enough to know everything)
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To: quidnunc
What does SCOTUS have to do with immigration and border security?

That's the point...these guys are the first to b!tch about judges legislating from the bench but it appears they don't find that problematic as long as the end result is acceptable to them. They don't want 'strict constructionists', they want yes-men to the conservative cause. Sadly, they're more in agreement conceptually with liberals than they'd care to--or are able to--acknowledge.

I for one don't have a problem "trusting Bush". Hell, that's why I voted for him. Imagine that. Too bad they can't. Perhaps this behavior explains the "reactionary conservative" stereotype we live with.

140 posted on 10/06/2005 10:35:07 PM PDT by blake6900 (YOUR AD HERE)
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