Hypocrites and Hucksters and History

In his opinion piece at The Washington Post, Dana Milbank lays bare the hypocrisy and dangerous ‘new precedent’ of the radical right-wing majority at the US Supreme Court.

Yes, Americans should be nervous.

The Supreme Court radicals’ new precedent: Maximum chaos

In their opinion Thursday morning forcing New York and other densely populated states to allow more handguns in public, the conservative majority, led by Justice Clarence Thomas, argued that medieval law imposing arms restrictions — specifically, the 1328 Statute of Northampton — “has little bearing on the Second Amendment” because it was “enacted … more than 450 years before the ratification of the Constitution.”

Yet in their ruling Friday morning in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health, setting women’s rights back half a century (and cracking the door to banning same-sex marriage and contraception), the conservative justices, led by Samuel Alito (who was also in the guns majority) and joined by Thomas, argued precisely the opposite. They justified abortion bans by citing, among others, “Henry de Bracton’s 13th-century treatise.” That was written circa 1250 and referred to monsters, duels, burning at the stake — and to women as property, “inferior” to men.

The right-wing majority’s selective application of history reveals the larger fraud in this pair of landmark rulings: Their reasoning is not legal but political, not principled but partisan.

The radicals have cast off any pretense of judicial restraint. Now the chaos begins.

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NOTE: The inserted images of quotes, obviously, are not from the Milbank piece.


 

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