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bobbyw24
07-01-2009, 04:52 AM
http://www.takimag.com/site/article/americas_wise_latina_lady/


America’s Wise Latina Lady
Posted by Richard Spencer on May 26, 2009

Once upon a time, there were The Founders. Though tragically trapped in their slave holding and lack of gender and ethnic diversity, these wise fellows envisioned that on the American continent might arise a new nation that would evolve into exactly what we have today. And in order to make this dream a reality, they emitted a pool of timeless and amorphous “values”—values that have now been actualized as a poor Latina girl from the South Bronx who has been appointed to the Supreme Court.

I’ve often thought that most every journalist in Washington has this kind of PBS version of history swirling around in his head. And this morning, it must have been quite exciting for them all as they heard their fantasy recounted to them in detail by that proverbial Poor-Latina-Girl-From-The-South-Bronx-Who-Made-It-All-The-Way-To-The-Supreme Court—and she even did it with one of those bland, PBS voices you’d expect to hear narrating the latest installment of The American Experience.

To be fair, I was rather surprised to read a hit piece on Sotomayor, in The New Republic no less (!?!), in which she’s described by a former colleague as “not that smart and kind of a bully.” This about someone who graduated Summa Cum Laude! Affirmative Action Admissions can get you into Princeton (just ask the First Lady), but it doesn’t guarantee that you make it to the top of the grading scale (just ask the First Lady). So, I suspect that Sotomayor is at the very least very clever and tenacious.

In the American Left/Right paradigm, conservatives talk about “strict constructionist” vs. “judicial activists” when it comes to SCOTUS nominees. But their overriding concern is Roe, Roe, Roe (with perhaps terrorists detainee decisions now playing a minor role.) And this time ‘round, the abortion issue might be all the more contentious since, as Obama mentioned in his introduction of his nominee, Sotomayor went to Catholic school and, according to her Wiki page, is a practicing Roman Catholic (?).

But the nomination is, for me at least, even more in-ter-esting in terms of race issues. Not only did Sotomayor make it clear that she’d be representin’ the South Bronx (you go, girl!), she also seems to have internalized many of the PC memes of academic Critical Race Theory:

I would hope that a wise Latina woman with the richness of her experiences would more often than not reach a better conclusion than a white male who hasn’t lived that life.

Though we might want to ponder just what “better” might entail, it’s clear that ol’ Sonia plans to be the “Social Justice Justice,” and if confirmed, she’d be constantly yammering about how she’s the dog-gone only one who could possibly understand the real “context” of this or that case that comes before the court.

Furthermore, I don’t think it’s any coincidence that though Sotomayor hasn’t offered any major opinions on abortion in her career, she was actually one of the seven justices who this past month opined against Frank Ricci et al. in the recent “reverse discrimination” case, in which Ricci and 16 other firefighters sued the city of New Haven after it discarded some standardized test scores that didn’t adhere to America’s a priori notion of the proper racial distribution of academic outcomes. Obama has given us a glimpse of his “post-racial America.”

(Sotomayor’s decision on Ricci also reveals one of those funny things about most Ivy League, Perfect Résumé-type people (which Steven Pinker talked about in The Blank Slate and which Steve Sailer has discussed numerous times): The Great Test Takers are all obsessed with “getting in” to the Big Universities, mostly for what it reveals to the world about their SAT and LSAT scores. But when it comes to other people, especially non-White and non-Asian other people, they take it as a matter of doctrine that scores on intelligence tests are completely irrelevant and should be discarded at judicial or legislative whim, and if you talk about them at all, that probably means you’re racist.)

Will the Religious Right, and other groups who insist that we must always rally behind Republicans because “it’s about the judges,” go after Sotomayor on these “race” issues? My sense is that they will not. But I’d love to be pleasantly surprised.

Objectivist
07-01-2009, 04:55 AM
You spent all this time posting in regards to the racist Sotomayor?

bobbyw24
07-01-2009, 05:00 AM
The Quota Queen
Posted by Patrick J. Buchanan on June 02, 2009

If the U.S. Senate rejects race-based justice, Sonia Sotomayor will never sit on the Supreme Court.

Because that is what Sonia is all about. As the New York Times reported Saturday, the salient cause of her career has been advancing persons of color, over whites, based on race and national origin.

“Judge Sotomayor, whose parents moved to New York from Puerto Rico,” writes reporter David Kirkpatrick, “has championed the importance of considering race and ethnicity in admissions, hiring and even judicial selection at almost every stage of her career.”

At Princeton, she headed up Accion Puertorriquena, which filed a complaint with the Department of Health, Education and Welfare demanding that her school hire Hispanic teachers. At Yale, she co-chaired a coalition of non-black minorities of color that demanded more Latino professors and administrators.

At Yale, she “shared the alarm of others in the group when the Supreme Court prohibited the use of quotas in university admissions in the 1978 decision Regents of the University of California v. Bakke.”

Alan Bakke was an applicant to the UC medical school at Davis who was rejected, though his test scores were higher than almost all of the minority students who were admitted. Bakke was white.

After Yale, Sotomayor joined the National Council of La Raza and the board of the Puerto Rican Legal Defense Fund. Both promote race and ethnic preferences, affirmative action and quotas for Hispanics.

But why should Puerto Ricans like Sotomayor, who were never subjected to slavery or Jim Crow—their island was liberated from Spain in 1898 by the United States—get racial or ethnic preferences over Polish- or Portuguese-Americans?

What is the justification for this kind of discrimination?

Like Lani Guinier, the Clinton appointee rejected for reverse racism, Sonia Sotomayor is a quota queen. She believes in, preaches and practices race-based justice. Her burying the appeal of the white New Haven firefighters, who were denied promotions they had won in competitive exams, was a no-brainer for her.

In her world, equal justice takes a back seat to tribal justice.

Now, people often come out to vote for one of their own. Catholics for JFK, evangelicals for Mike Huckabee, women for Hillary Clinton, Mormons for Mitt Romney, Jews for Joe Lieberman and African-Americans for Barack Obama. That is political reality and an exercise of political freedom.

But tribal justice is un-American.

In the 1950s and 1960s, this country reached consensus that denying black men and women the equal opportunity to advance and succeed must come to an end. Discrimination based on race, color or ethnicity, we agreed, was wrong.

Sotomayor, however, has an exception to the no-discrimination rule. She believes in no discrimination, unless done to white males and to benefit people like her.

How can any Republican senator vote to elevate to the Supreme Court a judge who, all her life, has believed in, preached and practiced race discrimination against white males, without endorsing the Obama-Sotomayor view that diversity trumps equal justice, and race-based justice should have its own seat on the high court?

Down the path Sotomayor would take us lies an America where Hispanic justices rule for Hispanics, black judges rule for blacks and white judges rule for white folks.

It is an America where who gets admitted to the best colleges and universities is not decided on grades and academic excellence, but on race and ethnicity, where advancement in jobs and careers depends not on aptitude and ability, but on where your grandparents came from.

On principle, Republicans cannot support Sonia Sotomayor.

And politically, if they do, why should the white working man and woman ever vote Republican again, as it is they who are the designated victims of the race-based justice of Sonia Sotomayor?

It was Richard Nixon who brought the white working class, North and South, into his New Majority, when he increased the Republican presidential vote from 43 percent in 1968 to 61 percent in 1972. Ronald Reagan solidified this base.

But why should the white working and middle class stay with the GOP? Its presidents exported their jobs to Mexico, China and Asia, and threw open America’s doors to tens of millions, legal and illegal, from the Third World, who have swamped their cities and towns. If the GOP will not end race-based affirmative action, which threatens the futures of their children, why vote for the GOP?

Why should white folks vote for anyone who says, “We are against race discrimination, unless it is discrimination against you”?

Obama would not have selected Sotomayor if he did not share her convictions. And there is nothing in his writings or career to hint at disagreement. Thus it comes down to the senators, especially the Republicans. A vote for Sonia Sotomayor is a vote to affirm that race-based justice deserves its own seat on the U.S. Supreme Court.

But if that happens, it will not only be the race consciousness of Hispanics that will be on the rise in the good old U.S.A.
Article URL: http://www.takimag.com/site/article/the_quota_queen/

Objectivist
07-01-2009, 05:03 AM
La Raza= THE RACE.

pretty much explains her position.

bobbyw24
07-01-2009, 05:14 AM
but the media and academe has set the standards of the day: People of Color canot be "racist" since they have no power. I would say that a person sitting on a federal appeals court like Sotomayor has plenty of power and can be a racist.

Pepsi
07-01-2009, 05:19 AM
Links for fax messages you can send or edit together, or use to help make your own.

Tell the Senate: REJECT Radical Supreme Court Nominee Judge Sonia Sotomayor!

https://secure.conservativedonations.com/usjf_sotomayor_he/?a=2480


Tell Congress: REJECT Judge Sotomayor as UNQUALIFIED!

https://secure.conservativedonations.com/rm_sotomayor_he/?a=2508

Judge Sotomayor Is Unfit To Sit On the High Court

http://www.cfiflistmanager.org/stopsotomayorhe.html


Stop Dem Sotomayor Railroad Through Senate

https://fs6.formsite.com/exposeobama/form645897617/secure_index.html


here is a message I put together

* Sotomayor ruled in United States v. Sanchez-Villar (2004) that "the
right to possess a gun is clearly not a fundamental right."

* Sotomayor was part of a three-judge panel earlier this year which ruled in Maloney v. Cuomo that the Second Amendment does not apply to the states. They are expected to appeal the case to the Supreme Court in June. She might not recuse herself from the case if the Senate approves her.

This ruling is in direct conflict with a Ninth Circuit Court ruling in the Nordyke v. King case in California, which said that the Second Amendment IS incorporated through the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.

* Sotomayor has held very anti-gun views, even as far back as the 1970s. Fox Cable News reported on May 28 that in her senior thesis at Princeton University, she wrote that America has a "deadly obsession" with guns and that the Second Amendment does not guarantee an individual right to firearms ownership.

If you remember last year the Supreme Court ruled in D.C. v Heller that the Second Amendment protects an individual's right to possess a firearm for private use.

Republican Senators have the power to prevent the confirmation of Judge Sonia Sotomayor to the United States Supreme Court from being rammed through the Senate. That means this confirmation does not, by any stretch of the imagination, have to go forward. Stop it now!

TGGRV
07-01-2009, 05:32 AM
People of color are more racist than whites. When is this affirmative action bullshit gonna end?

It is sad that there's no campaign against her, considering she doesn't care about the Constitution - think in judicial activism.

the other problem is judicial deference, which nobody talks about aka letting the government win over the individual. But all the current judges have it or most of them anyway.

andrewh817
07-21-2009, 04:46 PM
In a way I hope she didn't really mean that statement and was just attempting to pander to the growing Latino population..........