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Is Clarence Thomas conflicted?  

43 members have voted

  1. 1. Is Clarence Thomas conflicted?

    • Yes
      27
    • No
      16


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Posted (edited)
2 hours ago, Doc said:

 

What about Sotomayor and Penguin Random House? 

Apparently she presided over cases that involved them as well after receiving several million dollars in advances? 
 

wonder if those book recovered this ‘advances’
 

 

Edited by Over 29 years of fanhood
Posted
1 hour ago, Doc said:

 

Again, he, a conservative judge, was having his conservative votes bought by a conservative donor?  Is that what you're going with?


I’ll help him out since your response probably flew right over.

 

I came up with buying a scoutus Justice might avail you early insight into decision before it hits the news or is even revealed.
 

For decisions with equity implications for example, that could be lucrative. 

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Posted
14 hours ago, redtail hawk said:

Clarence wreaks of dung from working the fields doing his maters bidding

Bigot says what?

Posted
19 hours ago, redtail hawk said:

Clarence wreaks of dung from working the fields doing his maters bidding


Brought to by a card carrying member of the Democratic Party.. Americas original racist faction still alive well and prejudiced 

 

oh and tibs loves it too… 

 

no surprise 

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Posted
2 hours ago, Over 29 years of fanhood said:


Brought to by a card carrying member of the Democratic Party.. Americas original racist faction still alive well and prejudiced 

 

oh and tibs loves it too… 

 

no surprise 

I don't have much respect for Uncle Tom's.  Probably similar to conservatives views of white freedom riders by southerners during the civil rights marches.

Posted (edited)
2 hours ago, redtail hawk said:

I don't have much respect for Uncle Tom's.  Probably similar to conservatives views of white freedom riders by southerners during the civil rights marches.


this is the Democratic position. PoC are a useful tool to gain power and divide, but those true latent supremacy instincts show themselves viscerally when PoC dares to have a different opinion. 

Edited by Over 29 years of fanhood
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Posted
13 minutes ago, Over 29 years of fanhood said:


could be, What was bought? Was he pro abortion before? 😂 

 

So this is ok, huh? R by his name, so corruption not bad, sad 

Posted
12 hours ago, ChiGoose said:


Probably not, but it looks bad. To the American public, it looks like the billionaire elites can buy a Supreme Court Justice.

 

Is that something not worth at least looking into?

If china can buy a president, which you seem not to care about, then I’m sure a judge could be bought as well.

Posted
8 minutes ago, Westside said:

If china can buy a president, which you seem not to care about, then I’m sure a judge could be bought as well.

 

Great talking point... where are the receipts?

 

 

Posted

 

 

Misreading the Court

 

The judiciary is the most important reasoning institution not controlled by the left. Universities are dominated by left-leaning professors, and the media by left-leaning journalists. In a superb article, Ralph Lerner recognized the political importance of the Court’s public reasoning, seeing it as a “republican schoolmaster” articulating the constitutional principles that should guide the polity. But the Court’s opinions are necessarily refracted for most citizens through journalists and academics, almost all of whom today are hostile to its views and to the justices in the majority. As a result, the current Court majority has far more difficulty than past Courts in putting its case to the American people.

 

 

Joan Biskupic’s Nine Black Robes: Inside the Supreme Court’s Drive to the Right and Its Historic Consequences exemplifies the many ways that journalists today hinder the transmission of the Roberts Court’s ideas. Despite presenting itself as an account of the Court’s development since 2016, the book rarely describes the jurisprudential wellsprings behind the Court’s decisions, and when it does describe them, it is incorrect and biased. It also flattens and caricatures the justices most frequently in the majority as political actors who are moving the law in the direction of their political patrons. It also tends to personalize the justices’ disagreements, rather than recognizing the profound and legitimate contests over the nature of law.

 

The difficulties of our partisan times are all the more reason we need Supreme Court reporters who take the time to explain the justices’ reasoning and the jurisprudence that increasingly inspires them, even if they are then critical of that work. Their job demands fair readings of decisions no less than originalism demands fair readings of the Constitution’s text.

 

https://lawliberty.org/book-review/misreading-the-court/

 

 

 

Instead we get gutter pieces designed to influence rather than report.

 

 

 

 

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Posted
17 minutes ago, Westside said:

If china can buy a president, which you seem not to care about, then I’m sure a judge could be bought as well.

 

Well, yeah. I don't worry about made up things. 

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Posted (edited)

Judicial activist directed fees to Clarence Thomas’s wife, urged ‘no mention of Ginni’

 

"In January 2012, Leo instructed the GOP pollster Kellyanne Conway to bill a nonprofit group he advises and use that money to pay Virginia “Ginni” Thomas, the documents show. The same year, the nonprofit, the Judicial Education Project, filed a brief to the Supreme Court in a landmark voting rights case.

 

Leo, a key figure in a network of nonprofits that has worked to support the nominations of conservative judges, told Conway that he wanted her to “give” Ginni Thomas “another $25K,” the documents show. He emphasized that the paperwork should have “No mention of Ginni, of course.”

 

Conway’s firm, the Polling Company, sent the Judicial Education Project a $25,000 bill that day. Per Leo’s instructions, it listed the purpose as “Supplement for Constitution Polling and Opinion Consulting,” the documents show.

 

In all, according to the documents, the Polling Company paid Thomas’s firm, Liberty Consulting, $80,000 between June 2011 and June 2012, and it expected to pay $20,000 more before the end of 2012. The documents reviewed by The Post do not indicate the precise nature of any work Thomas did for the Judicial Education Project or the Polling Company."

 

And before the usual crowd tries to spin this into something it's not: it's totally fine for the wife of a Supreme Court Justice to have a job, even one that is in the same legal realm as the Court. But their work should be aboveboard with clear disclosures on where the money comes from.

 

Having a judicial activism organization that picks the nominees for the court and tries to influence the Court's decisions also secretly bankroll the spouse of a member of the court certainly *looks* like corruption. Maybe these kinds of payments should be required to be public so the American people can know where there may be potential conflicts of interest.

 

Edited by ChiGoose
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Posted (edited)

The classic @ChiGoose playbook.

 

Everything single thing even hinting at dem malfeasance?

 

That's made up.

 

:lol:

 

And yes @ChiGoose youre still on ignore. Unfortunately the ignore function doesn't work with quoted posts. Not that you'd know since you can't even figure out how to disable those harassing notifications that you constantly whine about.

 

So people help poor 'ol chigoose out and stop quoting him please. :lol:

 

Quick, now go post another LAMP in the PPP harassment thread.

Edited by BillsFanNC
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