What was Bush thinking? |
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Social conservatives have been dreaming of this moment since the Warren court. With swing-voter Sandra Day O’Connor retiring, President Bush had a rare opportunity to steer the United States Supreme Court back toward its constitutionally defined role of ruling on the law, not legislating it. Given the courts role in setting the moral tone of our government, deciding who sits in each of those nine seats is of utmost importance. |
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| Dear Concerned Citizen, | October 12, 2005 |
Within seconds after the words "Harriet Miers" left the President's lips, conservative blogs and websites and pundits went apoplectic. Harriet Miers? Why Miers? Here's the logic behind the howls of protest. There are hundreds of qualified legal scholars out there. They've been in the trenches of the culture war for years, fighting the good fight. Miers' legal career, by contrast, has been solid on process but pedestrian on substance. Is Miers really the best Bush could find? And doesn't the President know that by rewarding a non-participant in the legal discourse he hurts the cause? Bush's answer was emphatic. She is the most qualified person that he could find to fill the seat. No one, conservative or liberal, believes this. President Bush doesn't believe this. What the President does believe, but dares not say, is that Harriet Miers is the most qualified conservative, deeply loyal, evangelical woman without a paper trail of disqualifying legal opinion to fill the Sandra Day O'Connor seat. It's the evangelical qualifier that would get him into the most trouble. So is Bush looking for an evangelical? Obviously. Why else pick Miers? There are currently no evangelicals on the Supreme Court. Modern evangelicals often consider themselves evangelicals or born-again, first, and members of a particular denomination, second. In fact, many call themselves non-denominational. By this definition Clarence Thomas would be considered an evangelical Catholic or a devout Catholic. It would be wrong to describe Thomas's religious affiliation as primarily evangelical. We're not quibbling here. This distinction is important to tens of millions of Americans. Would Bush actually use a seat on the Supreme Court as a payoff to a key constituency who gave him his re-election? It wouldn't be the first time a President did this. In fact, this is often the case. Would it work? Just ask Jay Sekulow of the American Center for Law and Justice, a religious legal advocacy group:
Focus on the Family's James Dobson went on Fox News. His views reflect the perceived social status of one of America's most influential constituencies:
You might find such political payoffs reprehensible. America is supposed to be a meritocracy, where your skills are more important than your demographics. Doesn't the promotion of a person because of their religion or race or sex fly in the face of this principle? Why, yes it does! Politicians, however, often juggle more than one principle at a time. Identity politics has become another powerful force in American politics. It's often referred to as the politics of recognition, and a thoughtful (but ultimately weak) ethic has emerged to support it. It asserts that we can not say that immigrants or illegal immigrants or African-Americans or women or gays or the disabled or Hispanics or Jews or Catholics or the poor or the middle class (the list goes on and on) are being treated justly if they do not have a seat at the decision making table. Here's the meat of the argument. Unless we believe some demographics are genetically inferior to others, a just society would produce individuals across races and sexes who are capable of participating in every level of government and business. What's more, because our Constitution does not allow us to establish a sectarian religion, participants from popular religions would also be represented. So this same ethic of egalitarianism that promotes equality without regard to race and religion can be used to promote equality that does regard race and religion. It's why politics gets very messy when it comes to nominating Supreme Court Justices. Legal analysts spoke like it was a matter-of-fact that a woman should fill O'Connor's seat. A nominee's sex, therefore, has become a relevant demographic. It always has been. O'Connor was the first woman Supreme Court Justice. So one's sex was essential for nomination. Before O'Connor, you had to be male. Justice Thomas shut down the opposition against his nomination with one comment, that it reminded him of an "old fashioned lynching of an uppity negro". The race card was played over and over again during the Thomas hearings. The now deceased Thurgood Marshall was the first African-American on the court. So one's race has always been essential for nomination. Before Marshall, you had to be white. The nominations of Justices Ginsburg and Breyer were both lauded because they are Jewish, even though 6.4% of all Supreme Court Justices have been Jewish, compared with 1.8% of the U.S. population. 78% of the Justices have been Protestant, the same percentage as in the U.S. population. Four of the current Justices are Catholic. But evangelicals are largely underrepresented on the Court. The New York Times asserted that Miers, if confirmed, "would be the first evangelical Protestant on the court since the 1930s." tothesource has spent hours researching the religious affiliations of Justices and we can not find a Justice within the last 100 years that would be considered an evangelical as the word is currently used. So why not put an evangelical woman on the Court? It's a great idea as long as she's qualified. tothesource is concerned that competence has been sacrificed with the Miers nomination, though we are speculating based on her lack of judicial writings and curiosity. We hope we are pleasantly surprised during her confirmation hearings, but concern does seem justified. Her judicial philosophy, at the age of 60, remains an unknown quantity except to her closest friends. We are hoping she has made them clear to the President. tothesource has a suggestion for the President. In the future, to resolve this clash between identity politics and meritocracy, start with competence. We are, after all, talking about the United States Supreme Court! If the field of qualified applicants is large enough and there is an opportunity to also empower the unrepresented then, by all means, do so. But let's stir the pot even more. Instead of speculating on Miers' qualifications to be a Supreme Court Justice, tothesource would rather ask a more difficult and troubling question regarding her nomination. Why aren't there more obviously qualified evangelicals out there who can sit on the Supreme Court? What's the reason for this? It's true that if there is evidence that a nominee is pro-life or has a hard time finding a right to privacy in the Constitution or does not find in the Constitution endless rights for the citizenry that are borne by the state, he or she will have a tough confirmation fight. But not all evangelicals are this socially conservative. Remember Jimmy Carter? Besides, this hasn't kept Catholics off of the court, most of whom are known to be pro-life. So what's the deal with evangelicals? Have they become so heaven-centric they're no longer any earthly good? Perhaps evangelicals think the law is of no ultimate importance so not worth the effort or the fight or the... This world, after all, is not my home. I'm just a passing through. Maybe evangelicals no longer think substance matters, caring more that the trains run on time than where they are headed. No, these answers miss by a mile. Evangelicals across America are deeply involved in social issues. And when it comes to acts of kindness in our country, what demographic outperforms evangelicals? Here's a horrible thought. Maybe evangelicals have gotten downright lazy, living off of the diminishing shared goods of several generations without concern for their rebuilding and strengthening. Lazy Puritans? No way! That's an oxymoron. Another answer is beginning to emerge, a more positive answer and a more accurate answer. Christian Smith (Professor of Sociology at the University of North Carolina) describes in Secular Revolution how the mainline Protestant elite, up to the 1870s, controlled most of America's social institutions including corporations, universities, our courts, and the press. As mainline Protestants grew complacent, squabbling with Catholics and Mormons and Adventists and each other, a secular revolution formed in America's colleges and corporations. This revolution espoused "materialism, naturalism, positivism, and privatization or extinction of religion." Now here's Smith's key point:
Mainline Protestants have now lost control of America's intellectual and corporate institutions, including our legal system. Smith thinks this is not necessarily a bad thing. It allows for wider participation and a more healthy exchange of ideas. But he also suggests that mainline Protestants and non-denominational Protestants, such as evangelicals and fundamentalists and charismatics, should join in the free exchange of ideas. There is emerging a new vibrancy in the evangelical world today. It recognizes that culture is built with words (logos) and deeds (ergon). Thankfully, evangelicals believe more and more that if they do not participate in culture building, the culture will build itself away from them. Service-centered ministries, like those we highlighted in our email on the local American church (America's True First Responders), show a vibrant evangelical church that is both compassionate and quick-footed when it comes to good deeds. Important as they are, let's not stop at good deeds. Let's also encourage evangelicals to join other Christians in the hard work of good words. If it's important to get the deeds right, it's equally important to get the words right. Certainly tothesource doesn't have to justify the essential importance of words to the people of the Book. Let's work for the day when there are hundreds of evangelicals eminently qualified to serve on our nation's highest courts. |
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A "Representative" Supreme Court?: The Impact of Race, Religion, and Gender on Appointments Perry offers a detailed look at the impact of religion, race, and gender on appointments to the U.S. Supreme Court, Perry, Barbara A. |
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The Evangelical
Mind Today Ten years after the publication of The Scandal of the Evangelical Mind, I remain largely unrepentant about the book’s historical arguments, its assessment of evangelical strengths and weaknesses, and its indictment of evangelical intellectual efforts, though I have changed my mind on a few matters. Some readers have rightly pointed out that what I described as a singularly evangelical problem is certainly related to the general intellectual difficulties of an advertisement-driven, image-preoccupied, television-saturated, frenetically hustling consumer society, and that the reason evangelicals suffer from intellectual weakness is that American culture as a whole suffers from intellectual weakness. Another helpful criticism is that the book lumps together fundamentalists, Pentecostals, and holiness advocates as culprits in the stagnation of evangelical thinking and that it ignores certain mitigating circumstances and worthy exceptions that one could cite from each of these sub-traditions. Yet on the whole, The Scandal of the Evangelical Mind still seems to me correct in its descriptions and evaluations. What is true throughout the Christian world is true for American Christians: we who are in pietistic, generically evangelical, Baptist, fundamentalist, Restorationist, holiness, "Bible church," megachurch, or Pentecostal traditions face special difficulties when putting the mind to use. Taken together, American evangelicals display many virtues and do many things well, but built-in barriers to careful and constructive thinking remain substantial. These barriers include an immediatism that insists on action, decision, and even perfection right now, a populism that confuses winning supporters with mastering actually existing situations, an anti-traditionalism that privileges one’s own current judgments on biblical, theological, and ethical issues (however hastily formed) over insight from the past (however hard won and carefully stated), and a nearly gnostic dualism that rushes to spiritualize all manner of bodily, terrestrial, physical, and material realities (despite the origin and providential maintenance of these realities in God). In addition, we evangelicals as a rule still prefer to put our money into programs offering immediate results, whether evangelistic or humanitarian, instead of into institutions promoting intellectual development over the long term. |
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Quake Aid Increasing, Much More Needed Heavy rains forced Pakistani authorities to temporarily suspend helicopter relief operations to areas north of Islamabad that were hit hard by the recent earthquake. Helicopters are ferrying supplies to towns and villages that are inaccessible by roads because of landslides triggered by the 7.6 magnitude quake. Pakistan's interior minister said at least 33,000 people have died. Officials in the Indian-controlled section of divided Kashmir say the death toll there has surpassed 1300. VOA News |
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Oregon's Supreme Court defies the will of the people. Two public indecency laws were struck down by the Oregon Supreme Court last month, making possible live sex acts in adult establishments throughout the state. The ACLU lauds the decision. |
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