Tuesday, June 20, 2006

 
EVERYONE IN THE ROOM KNEW THEY WERE LYING

Molly Ivins' most enduring statement might turn out to be her observation that everyone in Washington DC ends up saying the same things. One of the same things today is that the Senate Judiciary hearings for Supreme Court Justices have become a Kabuki dance. What do you think the chances are that even three of the parrots of the DC press corps knows anything about the high art of Kabuki? Given that within the past year we have been witness to two of these shows and what those were like I'd like to suggest we pass up the obvious "theater of the absurd" designation and go straight to "charades".

But charades isn't the right word either. In charades while the player says nothing they make gestures that are designed to get the audience to say what the player is thinking. In these hearings there were a flood of words and few gestures, give or take a staged bout of tears, and the exercise was to make the audience NOT say what everyone in the room and beyond knew was the subject of the play.

Roberts and Alito lied every single time they verbally mimed the pose of not having made up their minds before hearing a case. These kobe cattle were bred and hand raised to provide the most predictable results. They were nominated into the entirely predictable and safe Republican hands to be put on the court to join Scalia and Thomas to gut the Bill of Rights and Civil Rights amendments and to continue the Republican handover of the country to the oligarches and their corporate properties.

Everyone in the room knew they were lying. Such press as had any knowledge of the Court and things judicial knew they were lying though I'm prepared to conceed that the cabloid clack might not have even known what the Court was. The large majority of us who listened to the entire farce knew they were lying. And now the lies will continue as they do exactly what everyone knew they would do. The very rare times that one of them has a bit of a woozy stomach and does something slightly unpredictable will be held onto like a life raft to prove the myth of judicial independence but that won't happen very often.

The lesson for the left is that Earl Warren is dead. He's been dead a good long while now. We can stop pretending that the Supreme Court is going to be anything but the hand maiden of the corporate oligarchy. If we are going to fight this its going to be through the ballot and if not there God save us.

Comments:
greens instead of the more challenging Weve uncovered about 1,000 patients month. risk of debilitating fractures. Almihdhar, believing the two men would
 
The really frustrating thing is, *even if* everyone took Alito's bullshit at face value, his dodgy ethics should have been more than enough to torpedo his nomination. But no-one seemed to care.

And this was with Bush's approval rating already well below 50%, and waaay below that with independents (you know, those swing voters the Dems claim to be courting). I think this vote was when I truly realized that the fix was in, and the Dems are hardly any better than the Republicans. My expectations have been depressingly low ever since, and I haven't been pleasantly surprised very often.

I'm aware of the numbers. I don't expect them to win every battle, but they should at least put up a fight every once in a while. I mean, even that craven gutless weasel Specter has the excuse of party loyalty.
 
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