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The other Korner thread got close to its 50-comment threshhold in a few hours. And they weren't little snippets - most of the comments were essays in their own right. The moderator was giggly with delight at the tone and decorum, too. At any rate, fresh room for comments are in order. Please feel free to continue that conversation in this thread if desired.
A few thoughts on Gorsuch:
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ON THE TACTICAL SIDE
Last year, Trump the Candidate released a list of 20, 21 nominees he promised he would stick to. That decision was unprecedented, even strange. For sure it was outside the box to do so. It seemed there were soooooo many political reasons not to do that; imagine Hillary releasing such a list early in the campaign?! ... and the main reason TO do it was (I thought) to lock in the religious right, which was already forced his way.
This strange SCOTUS List decision yesterday paid off for him like the giant slot machine at a Trump casino, bells a-clangin and red lights twirling. Trump held an evening (??) announcement, Senators present, who applauded Trump and Gorsuch various times. There was the "compassionate Trump" warmly saluting Scalia's widow; the 50th percentile voter is watching this. It was great theater. Even his enemies were saying "That was the most Presidential seven minutes of Trump's presidency so far." LINK
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Importantly, Trump could then say "I'm a man of my word" and the TV news anchors, aghast I'm sure, could only let it pass in their postmortems.
More importantly, NeverTrumpers softened greatly. Ted Cruz was glowing about Trump, who he eagerly called "President Trump" about six times in two minutes. If you're on the left you probably don't realize that EVERYBODY on the right doubted Trump on this. Sean Hannity, more loyal to Trump than KellyAnne Conway is, must have asked Trump 10+ times whether he was going to follow through on the list. NOBODY on the right trusted Trump completely on it.
Most importantly, Trump could say to the Senate, "Look, I told you who I was going to nominate, and the electorate understood that, and they elected me." Agree or disagree, this framing of the debate sent Trump's enemies to bed with Excedrin Headache #9.
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SENATE
Was very surprised to hear that Trump might get the 7-8 Democrat Senators he would need for 60 votes, due to the fact that 25 of them have their lives on the line in 2018, 10 of which are in Trump states.
This would mean that McConnell (R) would not have to change Senate rules to a 51-vote threshhold -- which they certainly would do if that's what it wound up taking. It's a finger-trigger game in the Senate, look, do you want to go back to Florida with this around your neck when we're just going to push Gorsuch through anyway? Want to lose your career for NOTHING? Or why don't you just vote with us here ...
The Senate is evolving towards 51-49 party line votes with little negotiation other than yelling. This is a catastrophe in the grand scheme. It is also a metaphor for our society.
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LOBBYING
Watching the rundown on Gorsuch, you wondered "what is the case against his being qualified?" Perfect education, career, sickly-sweet guy, confirmed for the 2nd-highest court by unanimous voice vote. What do you do to argue against him, even in theory? You can't say, I disagree with him on marriage. In theory that is supposed to be irrelevant, because in theory a judge is hired to be a fair and impartial reviewer of law - it's assumed that his personal beliefs won't affect things. Mojician can correct me if I'm wrong, but I think a judge's fairness is considered a given.
Krauthammer (who I dislike watching) explained this one. You take the decisions he has made that have had bad results -- which should not matter; a judge is there to interpret laws that others have made -- and you cast those results (children dying in the streets) as being bad things that the judge believes in. Ah! Now it makes sense, Gorsuch spending 15 of 180 seconds* telling the world pre-emptively, "If you like all the outcomes of your decisions, you're doing it wrong." In essence.
Opponents of Gorsuch seemed to pivot to the idea that Merrick Garland was a stolen pick. I think this direction has value to it, than conservatives tend to imagine.
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NEXT SEAT UP
There were two powerful right-wing players on Hannity's postmortem -- Ingraham and I forget the other one -- who playfully assured us that a second seat is coming open in June. Like they meant it, inside info.
If true, can only assume they mean that Anthony Kennedy (the center-right swing vote on the court) has been talked into retiring for a younger conservative judge, the way Ruth Bader Ginsburg (a reliable liberal vote) refused to do in 2015. A long shot might be that Ginsburg is being forced out due to health. Thoughts?
Somebody pointed out that a President's second nominee is usually more extreme than his first. Thomas, Alito and a third judge were held up as examples ... was it Sotomayor?
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OH BY THE WAY
What was that thingy about immigrants in airports again? :- )
It's an odd situation when you know the play call ahead of time and can't do anything to defend it. In chess the Russians will say "... If Rd1, then ...Qa5 with an irresistible attack." They mean that even they, even HAL-9000, can't hold the position. It can't be done.
Same with the way Trump changes the subject. It occurred to me just yesterday that he will always have the ability to do this. Presidents can do dramatic things. Scary, eh?
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HARVARD AND YALE
Embarrassing that, with 41.7% of the American population working as lawyers, all nine Justices have attended these two schools. You know there are lizard-UFO theories based on less ...
Did all you amigos know about the Harvard-Yale nude photos scandal? In the 50's, 60's and 70's, you showed up as a freshman in the Ivy League, they processed you in and oh by the way, in this little medical center, strip down including your skivvies. Okay, stand here ... cameraman comes in, POP, they've got a full frontal of you in their file. You wander off dazed. Lest you think Dr. D is even more addled than usual, here is the Wiki on it. And here is Dick Cavett on the experience. George W. Bush and many celebrities are in there.
The older he gets, the more Dr. D wonders what is going on behind the curtain.
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TYLER O'NEILL
Whoooops. I messed up the new Tyler O'Neill byte sized post, and now it redirects to older posts. Will be published shortly. In the meantime, check out Lookout Landing's cool funpost on him.
Peace,
Jeff