Tag Archives: civil rights

A Different Ethical Framework

I recently read this article by a Christian doctor who continues to perform abortions.  I was struck by this line:

I wrestled with the morality of it. I grew up in the South and in fundamentalist Protestantism, I was taught that abortion is wrong.

Yet as I pursued my career as an OB/GYN, I saw the dilemmas that women found themselves in. And I could no longer weigh the life of a pre-viable or lethally flawed fetus equally with the life of the woman sitting before me.

In listening to a sermon by Dr. Martin Luther King, I came to a deeper understanding of my spirituality, which places a higher value on compassion. King said what made the good Samaritan “good” is that instead of focusing on would happen to him by stopping to help the traveler, he was more concerned about what would happen to the traveler if he didn’t stop to help.

I became more concerned about what would happen to these women if I, as an obstetrician, did not help them.

I just blogged about how the Pro-Choice movement needs to rethink its strategy about how it presents itself to a new generation.  This is one example of moving the debate into a moral playing field instead of a policy one, albeit a consequentialist perspective.  This type of debate occurs on economic policy for instance.  President Obama and Rep. Paul Ryan offer different perspectives on how to balance the budget and when to raise taxes.  On gay marriage, people quote lines in Bible about the sinfulness of homosexuality who oppose gay marriage and people quote the inclusiveness of Jesus and his followers to support gay marriage.  Moralizing is not hard to do and quoting Jesus is not hard to do either, it just requires various frameworks to discuss specific topics.

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Liberals for Ron Paul?

By Luke Brinker

One week ago, just as the latest controversy over Ron Paul’s racist, homophobic, and conspiracy-minded newsletters erupted, the Texas congressman and presidential candidate’s favorability among Democrats stood at 59 percent. This week, the Republican’s favorability among Democrats skyrocketed to 70 percent. (During the same period, Paul’s favorability among Republicans declined.)

Jonah Goldberg of Liberal Fascism fame will probably pounce on these numbers to suggest that it’s Democrats, not Tea Party Republicans, who are more inclined toward racism. While this man-bites-dog narrative may be provocative, it’s incorrect. Keep in mind that Paul’s Iowa surge has occurred largely within the past few days. With that surge came increased media attention to the congressman’s anti-war, anti-drug prohibition views. Many liberals are quite receptive to those views, overlooking Paul’s wild-eyed views on monetary policy and ignoring his social conservatism.

As Paul’s poll numbers rose over the past week, his GOP rivals’ attacks focused mainly on his outside-the-GOP-mainstream foreign policy views, not the appalling content of his newsletters. Paul’s positions on these issues were never well-concealed, to put it mildly, but his unexpected boost in the polls led fellow contenders to train more fire on them. His decreasing favorability among Republicans, then, is not surprising.

None of this is to let Paul’s liberal fans off the hook. It’s appalling to witness such left-wingers as Robert Scheer and Matt Stoller extol Paul’s virtues as an anti-imperialist, anti-financial establishment spokesman. Scheer and Stoller both mention Paul’s newsletters as stains on his record worthy of being taken seriously, but they argue that they should not be disqualifying. Paul, Scheer and Stoller assert, raises too many important questions about American empire, the war on drugs, and crony capitalism to be dismissed by the media elite.

With the caveat that Paul’s unwillingness to buy into alarmism on Iran, his opposition to the disastrous drug war, and his stand against the Iraq war are all admirable, such positions do not outweigh Paul’s ties to sickening racial bigotry, homophobia, anti-Semitism, and 9/11 trutherism. It is nothing short of disgusting to watch liberals to acknowledge that, sure, Paul may oppose the 1964 Civil Rights Act, but at least he agrees with us on some foreign policy questions. (But not all; he’s against international organizations and aid to poor countries.) This is a candidate whose reflexive opposition to the welfare state led supporters at a GOP debate to cheer “Let him die!” when confronted with the case of an uninsured 30-year-old who found himself the victim of an accident. (Paul thinks voluntarism would suffice.)

Paul rightly points out that war should never be a first resort, but are liberals really prepared to support a candidate whose opposition to war extends even to the Civil War?

 

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What Joe Nocera Gets Wrong about Robert Bork

By Luke Brinker

Although I much preferred his predecessor Bob Herbert, I respect New York Times columnist Joe Nocera, who often brings keen insight and intrepid reporting to economic and financial issues. So I was disappointed by his column asserting that our nation’s broken judicial confirmation process can be traced back to the 1987 defeat of conservative jurist Robert Bork’s nomination to the Supreme Court. Nocera, who notes that  only two Senate Democrats voted to confirm Bork, errs in two fundamental ways: first, in portraying Bork’s defeat as the product of pure partisan politics, and second, in his claim that “The Ugliness Started With Bork.”

Bork, who attended college and law school at the prestigious University of Chicago and served as solicitor general and circuit judge, undoubtedly had sterling legal and intellectual credentials when President Ronald Reagan nominated him to replace retiring justice Lewis Powell, a centrist. So why did his nomination go down in defeat? Bork denounced the civil rights and liberties protections granted by Chief Justice Earl Warren’s Supreme Court in the 1950s and 1960s (even while pledging fealty to Brown v. Board of Education), and even was on the record as endorsing Southern states’ right to impose poll taxes, which were historically used as a means of suppressing black voter turnout. His service in the Nixon Justice Department, given that administration’s record on the rule of law, was also a bit disconcerting.

In the conservative myth – now apparently accepted by the generally moderate-to-liberal Nocera – Bork lost his confirmation vote because of unfair efforts by the likes of Sen. Ted Kennedy to malign the judge as a bigot and misogynist. But when the Senate defeated the Bork nomination on a 58 to 42 vote, six Republicans – Sens. John Chafee (Rhode Island), Bob Packwood (Oregon), Arlen Specter (Pennsylvania), Robert Stafford (Vermont), John Warner (Virginia), and Lowell Weicker (Connecticut) voted against confirmation. Before dismissing these men as a bunch of liberal RINOs, it’s worth remembering that Specter, as the ranking Republican on the Senate Judiciary Committee, was one of the foremost defenders of now-Justice Clarence Thomas when he faced credible accusations of sexual harassment in 1991. For 13 percent of the Senate Republican caucus in 1987, Bork’s extremism and poor civil rights record were too much to countenance.

And what of the claim that divisive judicial politics started nearly a quarter century ago with Bork? Nocera, who’s 59, is old enough to remember the late 1960s effort by conservatives to impeach Chief Justice Earl Warren. The effort is believed to have had the private sympathies of no less a GOP luminary than Richard Nixon. The Chicago Tribune explains:

 It’s still quite easy to remember the billboards that dotted the South in the 1960s with the common message: Impeach Earl Warren.

The chief justice of the U.S. Supreme Court was a pariah to a lot of Southern whites because the court he led so fundamentally changed their way of life. …

Warren was the kind of “activist judge” that Republicans have so effectively demonized, at least since the Reagan era. From the moment he joined the court and fashioned a unanimous decision in Brown vs. Board of Education, the first of many historic civil rights rulings, Warren and his court often took steps that neither Congress nor the White House would. …

Warren was a durable Republican from California who was supported in the decidedly conservative editorial pages of the Los Angeles Times in his many successful election campaigns, most notably his three terms as governor.

He was so popular he once won both the Republican and Democratic primary in the state, and his political potential was seen as limitless. He clearly eyed the White House and somewhat grudgingly agreed to be Thomas Dewey’s running mate in the 1948 presidential election.

By 1952, many saw him as a front-runner for the Republican presidential nomination. And he might well have won if not for the somewhat surprise entry of Dwight Eisenhower in the race during a time of war with North Korea.

Eisenhower, Newton writes, had a consolation prize in mind for Warren, namely to be solicitor general with an assurance that he would be considered for the first opening on the Supreme Court. The day Eisenhower was to make that appointment official, Chief Justice Fred Vinson died.

That single act changed history’s course.

Warren joined a court with justices who took a decidedly dim view of civil rights legislation and any expansive reading of the Constitution that would limit states’ rights. But Warren, Newton notes, used his abundant political skills to win a unanimous decision in Brown vs. Board of Education.

Eisenhower would later express regret about appointing Warren, but no one was more disappointed than then-Vice President Richard Nixon, whose rocky relationship with the chief justice dated back many years to their days in California.

The Supreme Court, as the apex of one of three coequal branches of our federal government, offers pronouncements on a multiplicity of consequential issues – civil rights, a woman’s right to an abortion, the meaning of the Second Amendment, the rights of prisoners detained at Guantanamo Bay, the role of money and politics, the constitutionality of the federal health care overhaul, and on and on – so it shouldn’t be any surprise that in the modern era, the Court has become a polarizing issue. And as the case of the liberal Republican Earl Warren attests, the phenomenon did not start with Robert Bork.

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