Wednesday, July 27, 2005

President Bush's blink: Bush promised to appoint justices like those he most admires. He has broken that promise.

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/opinion/chi-0507270014jul27,1,1899219.story?coll=chi-news-hed President Bush's blink Bush promised to appoint justices like those he most admires. He has broken that promise. By Geoffrey R. Stone Geoffrey R. Stone is a law professor at the University of Chicago and the author of "Perilous Times: Free Speech in Wartime from the Sedition Act of 1798 to the War on Terrorism." Published July 27, 2005 Those of us who would passionately oppose yet another "out-of-the-mainstream" right-wing nominee to the U.S. Supreme Court should sheathe our swords. What does it mean to say that a jurist is "out of the mainstream"? On the liberal side, it might mean a judge who would hold that there is a constitutional right to welfare, that affirmative action is constitutionally mandated, that the 1st Amendment forbids government ever to invoke God, and that our freedom from "unreasonable searches and seizures" may never be compromised, even in time of war. I know many judges who hold one or more of these views, but I know none who accepts them all. Such a judge, however, would surely be out of the mainstream of American constitutional thought. He would be at the far-left fringe of the bell curve. On the conservative side, a judge might be out of the mainstream if he would hold that states may constitutionally endorse religion, that affirmative action is unconstitutional, that Roe vs. Wade should be overruled, that the 1st Amendment prohibits any regulation of commercial advertising or corporate political spending and that the president has the authority to detain an American citizen indefinitely without any access to a lawyer or judicial review. Such a judge (think Clarence Thomas) would also be out of the mainstream of respectable constitutional thought. He would be at the far-right fringe of the bell curve. That brings me to John Roberts. During the 2004 presidential election, George W. Bush promised to appoint Supreme Court justices like those he most admires: Antonin Scalia and Clarence Thomas. In nominating John Roberts, Bush has broken that promise, to the great good fortune of the American people. The last thing the nation needs is for one-third of the Supreme Court to be off the deep right end of the law. Bush's fear of a disastrous Senate battle over his Supreme Court nominee, a battle that would have wreaked havoc with his prospects for a "successful" second term, led him to eschew the more ideologically rigid nominees he presumably preferred. This is an important victory for liberals and Democrats. It should not be taken for granted. Bush knew Senate Democrats would rightly filibuster a Thomas-like nominee, he knew such a filibuster would once again trigger an ugly confrontation over the "nuclear option," and so he blinked. This is not to say that John Roberts would be my choice for the Supreme Court. To the contrary, because we do not share a constitutional philosophy, he would not be anywhere in my top 100. I would prefer someone more like Ruth Bader Ginsburg or William Brennan, someone deeply committed to an interpretation of the Constitution that fulfills its promise of fairness, equality, liberty and individual dignity. And let there be no doubt about it, that is not John Roberts. Roberts has a long record as a dyed-in-the-wool conservative. When he joins the court, his votes will be noticeably more conservative than Justice Sandra Day O'Connor's when she left the court. He will move the court to the right. But it is also the case that Roberts has never embraced the vacuous ideology of "originalism" and, frankly, he seems too smart to do so. Roberts is too good a lawyer, too good a craftsman, to embrace such a disingenuous approach to constitutional interpretation. Everything about him suggests a principled, pragmatic justice who will act cautiously and with a healthy respect for precedent. This does not mean, of course, that he will not vote to eviscerate Roe vs. Wade or reject the rights of homosexuals or narrow the scope of affirmative action or expand the role of religion in public life or endorse the so-called "new federalism." He may vote to do some or even most of those things. But if he does, it will be in an open-minded, rigorous, intellectually honest manner, rather than as an ideologue whose constitutional principles derive more from fiction and faith than from legal reason. Moreover, like many conservative appointees, there is every reason to believe that a Justice Roberts will gradually drift to the left, following the footsteps of Justices Harry Blackmun, Lewis Powell, John Paul Stevens, O'Connor, Anthony Kennedy and David Souter. Appointed as conservatives by Republican presidents, each of these justices evolved over time. Because they were not tethered to an inflexible ideology, they remained open-minded and continued to learn and to grow during their time on the court. And what they learned was important. Justices are continually exposed to the injustices that exist in American society and to the effects of those injustices on real people. As they come more fully to understand these realities, and as they come to an ever-deeper appreciation of the unique role of the Supreme Court in our constitutional system, they become better, more compassionate justices. This, too, will happen to John Roberts. Of course, the Senate must fulfill its constitutional responsibility to interrogate the nominee to ensure that he is, in fact, the person I have described. But if he is, he should be warmly embraced as the best the nation could expect from this administration--a brilliant, decent individual with superb legal skills and without a rigid ideological agenda. Unless and until we learn otherwise, organizations like MoveOn.org and the Alliance for Justice should stay their hand and accept the "win" that is John Roberts. ---------- Copyright © 2005, Chicago Tribune

Help China to Reshape Its International Image Letter to CPU-NC, July 27

I think President Hu JinTao has been invited to come to President Bush's ranch at Crawford, Texas in late September. China should realize that many Republican presidents are very open and friendly toward China. Didn't Republican president Nixon open China up for a change from Iron Curtain? Democrat senator Schumer from New York is the one that will impose tariff on China, should China not float the Ren Min Bi. Although 2% is a small move, Americans in general still feel that is a first step and an indication of China's willingness to negotiate. China should not continue to enjoy the billions dollars trade surplus and still angry at Bush. Since China is not a Mao bandit style anymore, then we should all live up to a new modernized China image. If we respect law, and asking to follow anti-Secession law, then the bandits and violence image of Mao should be down. The Mao image contradicts with young people's belief and they say Marxism has been forgotten, and not taught anymore. So let us all move on, and not live in the past of Mao shadow, June 4th killing, Cultural Revolution etc. Let us remove the Ming bandit, Li Zi Cheng bronze, Mao bandit bronze because China is a law abiding new country.

Advice Letter on July 25 to CPU-NC, Chinese for Peaceful Unification - Northern California

Steps for Peaceful Reconciliation One suggestion for those brave and proud communists who have no bones to stand up against the Russians: Get the Russians to pay war redemptions and damages for the Russo-Japanese war conducted on China’s soil in 1905 and in other battles. Russians must pay, as well as the Japanese. It is shameful for the Chinese communists to fight their own brothers so well in the Civil War, but to chicken out in the Sino-Japanese War. It is shameful to let the Russian boots step on the Chinese heads and not to feel anything, in the name of communism. If China doesn’t remove the Mao and Stalin portraits in the public squares and in the schools, there won’t be “Peaceful Unification, or reconciliation.” The Bush administration has allowed a huge trade surplus with China, and in turn, China uses this money to buy weapons from Russia to use against America, as General Zhu is irresponsibly challenging to provoke war by saying China can give up east of Xian and let 200 American cities be in nuclear rubble. This has pushed China’s image back to dark bandit age, and many American different racial groups are starting to get real angry at the Chinese. Please pay attention and monitor what the Americans are saying and thinking. Do not walk toward a self-generated ruin.

Tuesday, July 26, 2005

Si Ming Justice Court in Shanghai

喬治穆許 「三和弦」 Muche, Georg Dreiklang, 1920 75 x 53cm Si Ming Law Court in Shanghai, where the Chinese won the first legal case against the colonial power system 胭紗 送儂一捧芍藥花 那是揚州金枝玉葉女兒情 送君一把三弦琴 請彈東林士子國破山河恨 Give the girl a bouquet of Shao Yao Peony flowers That is the golden bough and jade leaf daughters love Give the gentleman a Three String instrument Please play The Donglin Party intellectual patriotic song about now the Ming lost to Qing At end of the Ming Dynasty, the court was controlled by the eunuchs who persecuted many people. Huang Zhong Xi was the late Ming scholar who fought against the Qing tribe invaders. He was affiliated with the DongLin Party, called the little Donglin, and took resistance in Si Ming mountain area. Dong Lin Party, East Forest Party, opposed corrupt eunuchs, and was a reform party that grouped the intellectuals together. First, they resisted against the Qing invaders. In late 1800s, they resisted against the French concession police brutality. The French tore down a wall, and the people put up a legal fight in the Si Ming Law court in Shanghai, which was the first case of Chinese against colonial power. Si Ming Public Court is an Ancestral old social establishment, with an ancestral hall, and banking. It was the first winning case against the French colonials in Shanghai or in entire China.

Tuesday, July 19, 2005

Bush Nominated John Roberts as Supreme Court Justice

Praise on one side; questions on the other http://www.usatoday.com/news/washington/2005-07-19-roberts-reax_x.htm News analysis by Susan Page and Kathy Kiely, USA TODAY Posted 7/19/2005 9:32 PM Updated 7/20/2005 9:57 AM WASHINGTON — President Bush demonstrated Tuesday night, when he announced his choice for the Supreme Court, that he knows how to keep a secret. And that he's not afraid of a fight. John Roberts — a brainy, soft-spoken judge on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit — brings with him solid conservative credentials and a paper trail on abortion and civil liberties that will give opponents ammunition in a confirmation battle. Among his supporters, he is hailed as a brilliant jurist who will be a more reliable conservative vote than the retiring Sandra Day O'Connor. If he is confirmed, such controversial Supreme Court decisions as those upholding affirmative action and permitting some late-term abortions — both decided by 5-4 majorities that included O'Connor — could face more skeptical hearings and different outcomes. Bush chose Roberts despite national polls that showed most Americans favored a female nominee; even Laura Bush publicly urged that. The president tapped Roberts despite the prospect that the confirmation battle to follow will delay and perhaps overwhelm the administration's legislative agenda. Bush put aside the opportunity to make history by choosing the first Hispanic for the high court. Instead, he named a white, male judge from inside the Beltway who Bush says has a probing mind and judicious temperament. He is young enough — at age 50 — to serve on the court for decades. "The president promised us a judge along the lines of (Antonin) Scalia and (Clarence) Thomas, and he kept his promise," Tony Perkins, president of the conservative Family Research Council, said after the announcement. With Roberts, he said, "there will be a philosophical shift in the court back to where it operates within its proper boundaries and respects the proper role of legislatures." Roberts is "obviously well-respected on both sides of the aisle," Sen. Rick Santorum, R-Pa., said on Capitol Hill. He noted Democrats' willingness to confirm Roberts for the appellate court two years ago. "At a time when Circuit Court nominees were being filibustered left and right, he just really sailed through his confirmation." But Vermont Sen. Patrick Leahy, the top-ranking Democrat on the Judiciary Committee, said Roberts would not get "a free pass for a lifetime appointment on the Supreme Court." He said the standards were different for the high court than for lower ones. Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., said Roberts was "one of those nominees you have a lot of questions about." Roberts has a boyish mien, a handsome family and an Indiana upbringing. He has been at the top rank of conservative legal circles: a Supreme Court clerk for William Rehnquist, who was then an associate justice. An assistant to a Reagan administration attorney general and White House counsel. A member of the influential Federalist Society. As a lawyer arguing before the Supreme Court for the elder President Bush's Justice Department in 1991, Roberts wrote a brief that said, "We continue to believe that Roe v. Wade was wrongly decided and should be overruled." He will surely be pressed during confirmation hearings on whether that is his own view of the 1973 decision recognizing abortion rights, or if he was simply representing the views of the administration. In a decision last year, Roberts was the only appellate judge who sided with the Bush administration in a case testing the rights of American veterans of the 1991 Gulf War to sue the Iraqi government for damages. Roberts said the federal courts didn't even have jurisdiction to consider their claims. That case has been appealed to the Supreme Court. Bush could have been more confrontational by selecting the combative J. Michael Luttig of the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals or Edith Jones, an outspoken conservative on the 5th Circuit Court. With Roberts by his side Tuesday, the president noted that he had consulted with more than 70 senators before making his choice. The Senate Judiciary Committee approved Roberts for the appellate court by a vote of 16-3 two years ago. But his opponents then were Democratic heavyweights Schumer, Dick Durbin of Illinois and Edward Kennedy of Massachusetts. What's more, Democrats will be under pressure from some of their most loyal supporters, among them feminists and civil rights activists, to take a tough stance. Several liberal groups, including the Alliance for Justice, expressed concern about Roberts' record. The announcement of the nomination capped a day of intense and sometimes off-target speculation. Rumors first had the job going to Edith Brown Clement, a New Orleans-based judge on the 5th Circuit Court. By late afternoon, the betting had switched to Luttig, after a TV crew spotted him and his family at an airport looking especially well-dressed. With Roberts' nomination announced, the confirmation process will begin to unfold. Committee hearings won't begin for more than a month, in late August or early September. That will give the FBI, the American Bar Association, senators and interest groups the opportunity to comb Roberts' record and examine his background. By making the decision this week, Bush gives former Tennessee senator Fred Thompson, who is leading the administration's confirmation team, time to escort Roberts around for courtesy calls before the Senate leaves town next week for its August recess. Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., said senators in the so-called Gang of 14 — the bipartisan group that has tried to avoid a showdown over judicial filibusters — plan to meet in the next day or so to discuss the nominee and their options. Bush called on the Senate to confirm Roberts before the court reconvenes Oct. 3. But that isn't ensured, and Leahy said there was "no magic about that date." In their initial reactions, leaders of both parties avoided looking eager for a fight, even while interest groups were poised for a multimillion-dollar political war. One veteran of past Supreme Court nomination fights, Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, suggested the public could react negatively to another all-out court battle. "The American people are sick of it," he said. Contributing: Oren Dorell, Mark Memmott ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Reactions to President Bush's nomination of John G. Roberts to the Supreme Court: 'The president has chosen someone with suitable legal credentials, but that is not the end of our inquiry. The Senate must review Judge Roberts' record to determine if he has a demonstrated commitment to the core American values of freedom, equality and fairness.' — Senate minority leader Harry Reid, D-Nev. "Judge Roberts is an exceptional judge, brilliant legal mind, and a man of outstanding character who understands his profound duty to follow the law." — Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas. "I look forward to a full process, a direct vote up or down of a majority, not a supermajority, and also really a healthy debate about the role of the courts." — Sen. Sam Brownback, R-Kan. "Who knows about this guy?" — Sen. Tom Harkin, D-Iowa. "I can't help but think that he will continue to impress as a person of fairness, thoughtfulness and just the kind of judge who will bring a nonpolitical approach to judging. ... I think he's going to be well received." — Sen. Jeff Sessions, R-Ala. "He's brilliant. ... He's someone who is I think obviously well respected on both sides of the aisle. At a time when circuit court nominees were being filibustered left and right, he just really sailed through his confirmation. Given that, I think the president did what he promised during the campaign. He looked for the best and the brightest and he chose someone who would meet the test, the high test, that Supreme Court justices would be required to meet." — Sen. Rick Santorum, R-Pa.

Wednesday, July 06, 2005

Senators Urge Calm Before Bush Makes Court Choice

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=10000087&sid=aKw5t8bXOzig&refer=top_world_news Senators Urge Calm Before Bush Makes Court Choice (Update1) July 3 (Bloomberg) -- Republican and Democratic senators urged people and interest groups to resist partisan rhetoric while waiting for U.S. President George W. Bush to select a replacement for retiring Justice Sandra Day O'Connor. ``It would be very useful for the country if the rhetoric were to be toned down,'' Arlen Specter, a Pennsylvania Republican and chairman of the Judiciary Committee, said on NBC's ``Meet the Press.'' Since the announcement July 1 that O'Connor will retire, conservative and liberal groups have been preparing for a contentious fight over a replacement for the justice who cast pivotal votes over abortion rights, affirmative action, and the role of religion in public life. Specter said the interest groups are ``counterproductive,'' and no senators ``are going to run from a fight.'' Bush won't name a replacement before he returns July 8 from a summit of the Group of Eight industrial countries, spokesman Scott McClellan said July 1. If confirmed, the replacement would be the first new member to the high court since 1994 when Harry Blackmun left the court and was replaced by Stephen Breyer. Confirmation hearings would follow recent battles between Democrats and Republicans over lower-court nominees, which nearly brought the Senate to a standstill. Democrats had used filibusters to slow down the confirmation process. Filibuster Senator Dianne Feinstein, a California Democrat, on ``Fox News Sunday'' today, called use of the filibuster ``a last resort.'' ``I don't think there's one Democratic member of the United States Senate who would like to see a filibuster,'' she said. Massachusetts Senator Ted Kennedy said that while Democrats ``want to be able to support,'' Bush's nominee, ``if he wants to have a fight about it, then that's going to be the case.'' Specter said he anticipates holding hearings in August or September, with the hope of having a new justice by early October, when the high court starts its new session. Senators from both sides declined to comment on any of the prospective nominees, including Attorney General Alberto Gonzales, and appellate court judges John Roberts, Michael Luttig, Edith Jones and Edith Clement. Gonzales deflected questions about the Supreme Court nomination as he flew to Iraq to visit troops today, the Associated Press reported. ``I just look at the job that I do as attorney general,'' he said. ``I'm happy in that job.'' Questioning Bush's nominee can anticipate questioning on a wide array of specific topics, such as the 1973 Roe v. Wade abortion rights decision, said Senator Charles Schumer, a New York Democrat. ``The Supreme Court is a lifetime appointment that has enormous power,'' Schumer said on ABC's ``This Week.'' ``The number one thing I am interested in is the nominee's views,'' he said. The Senate should not ``put someone on the bench when you know nothing about their views on civil rights, on women's rights, on environmental rights and on everything else.'' Texas Republican John Cornyn said he would not ask nominees specifics about how they would vote on issues. Cornyn said the unrelenting criticism of interest groups from both sides could turn the hearings into a ``three-ring circus.'' Asking nominees hypothetical questions on how they would decide future cases would reduce the value of the hearings, Cornyn said. ``I just hope that this is a dignified process,'' Cornyn said. To contact the reporter on this story: William McQuillen in Washington at bmcquillen@bloomberg.net Last Updated: July 3, 2005 14:16 EDT