Trump and McConnell, Beware

 

I first met Ruth Bader Ginsburg in the winter of 1978 when we were both fellows at the Center for Advanced Studies in the Behavioral Sciences at Stanford. Our interactions were always cordial. From the first time we talked, it was clear that she was a passionate advocate first, and a detached academic second. She was always immersed in filing certiorari petitions at the Supreme Court in connection with the hugely successful Women’s Rights Project, which she ran at the American Civil Liberties Union from 1972 until she was appointed to the Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia in 1980.

Ginsburg had the rare quality of being both passionate and rigorous in her work, and she displayed those same traits of grit and excellence at every stage of her career. Moreover, her excellence as a lawyer was not confined to the women’s rights issues that brought her fame. She also displayed an impressive expertise on the many procedural, jurisdictional, and constitutional issues that form a huge part of the high court’s docket. It was surely possible to disagree with her on the merits of any given case, as I often did. But it was not possible to dispute the brilliance, knowledge, and determination that she brought to her lifetime’s work.

Ginsburg was nominated and confirmed to the United States Supreme Court in 1993 by a 96-3 vote, in a relative period of peace between the huge confirmation battles of Judge Robert Bork and Justice Clarence Thomas, and those of Justice Neil Gorsuch and Justice Brett Kavanaugh. The most bitter fights have been over Republican nominees, a pattern that promises to continue with the next nominee, whom President Trump has stated, surely incorrectly, that he has “an obligation” (as opposed to an option) to nominate. He has already announced it will be “a very brilliant woman.” The thought that the immediate struggle would be put off until after the election was dismissed by Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell’s immediate announcement that he will try to persuade the Senate to confirm a nominee.

The obvious Democratic rejoinder is that McConnell himself held up the nomination of Judge Merrick Garland on the stated ground that the people should have a chance to speak in the presidential election before his nomination proceeded. That position, made when Barack Obama was president, was a fig leaf for a far more partisan calculation. McConnell thought that if Hilary Clinton were elected to the presidency, she would either renominate Garland or appoint some other nominee who, from his point of view, would be just as undesirable, but probably not that much worse. Obama had acted wisely in choosing Garland because he was an older judge from the more conservative side of the Democratic Party, someone who furthermore had impeccable credentials for the Supreme Court. But Obama’s calculated gamble failed because of the partisan wall Garland faced in the confirmation process. The only issues that matter at confirmation hearings seem to be abortion and reproductive rights; corporate speech and campaign finances; matters of race, gender, and sexual orientation; and issues relating to voting rights. On all of these critical topics, Garland would likely have sided with his Democratic brethren, clearly motivating McConnell to fight hard to retain that crucial fifth vote.

However, that strategy never quite panned out in practice, as defections from the conservative five are more frequent than those from the liberal four: think of Chief Justice Roberts’s critical vote to first sustain the Affordable Care Act in 2012 in NFIB v. Sebelius, and then his 2015 opinion in King v. Burwell, allowing enrollees in federal plans under the ACA to receive tax deductions; of Justice Anthony Kennedy’s 2015 decision in Obergefell v. Hodges, giving constitutional protection for same-sex marriage; and Justice Gorsuch’s 2020 opinion (joined by the chief justice) in Bostock v. Clayton County holding that Title VII of the 1964 Civil Rights Act protects both gay and transgender employees.

Nonetheless, Democrats still fume that McConnell stole their seat: but “stole” belongs in quotation marks. McConnell’s refusal to give Garland a hearing or vote lay within the sole discretion of the Senate. The manifest snub, given its preordained outcome, was a blessing in disguise that spared the nation the huge and ugly struggle that would mar the Kavanaugh confirmation hearings. But strategically, 2020 is not a rerun of 2016, as the Republicans control both the presidency and the Senate, and therefore do not want a presidential election to upset their appointment prospects.

What happens next is anyone’s guess. Trump is likely to pick a nominee who will not alienate swing Republican senators like Susan Collins and Lisa Murkowski, who both have already announced that they want to postpone the vote so that it can be made by the person who wins the 2020 election. On balance, I think that they are correct, and the issue might become moot if other senators speak up, perhaps forcing Trump and McConnell to back down on an immediate vote. Nor is this necessarily a disaster for the Republicans, for as the conservative Richard Viguerie has urged, making this an election issue forces Biden to publish his own list of nominees, and gives legitimacy to any nominee Trump selects if he is victorious. As of this writing, both Trump and McConnell are all in. Both recognize that if they are to have any chance, Trump will have to nominate a moderate, not a hard-line, conservative woman.

If the nomination process plays through, I suspect it will galvanize Trump’s outraged opponents more than his supporters. If Trump’s nominee is confirmed and Trump wins the election, the unhappy standoff between the two parties is likely to continue with little institutional change. Of course, much depends on which woman occupies the seat. But no one can make any prediction as to what will happen if Trump’s nominee is confirmed, followed by Biden claiming the presidency and Democrats claiming the Senate.

Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer says that if the Democrats gain control of the Senate, “nothing is off the table.” In the New Yorker, Jeffrey Toobin gives content to that threat when he offers potential Democratic reforms, such as changing the rules on the filibuster and even adding new places to the lower federal court. More dramatically, the Democrats could plump for statehood for the District of Columbia (an issue that raises thorny constitutional issues) and Puerto Rico, to create a heavy tilt toward Democrats on an enormous range of political and electoral issues. Still others have proposed limiting the jurisdiction of the Supreme Court to help insulate progressive proposals, including those on the Green New Deal, from judicial invalidation.

But more to the point, the Democrats could seek to alter the number of seats on the Supreme Court. The Constitution speaks of one Supreme Court, but the number of judges has always been set by statute. Any effort to add seats would dramatically change the institutional dynamics of the court in ways that are hard to predict, but an unwieldy body could find it more difficult to hear and decide cases in a prompt and expeditious fashion. And the Republicans could try the same maneuver should they regain power when the majority of Democratic justices remain on the bench. The previous effort at court-packing by Franklin D. Roosevelt brought forth similar anxieties that were quickly put to rest by a turnover in court membership. But this change is likely to prove more permanent.

In general, it is highly risky to challenge sub-constitutional norms that have been embedded in the structure of government. The federal government is a complex lattice, and no one can predict what effects changing the structure of the Supreme Court will have. All this does not mean that we should not think more systematically about the structure of the Supreme Court, but only that such debates should happen outside the context of any particular nomination fight. For example, it would be wise for Congress to consider establishing term limits for the justices at some point after the presidential election—a process that would require a constitutional amendment. A term of eighteen years seems far preferable to a lifetime appointment, if only because it reduces the stakes in any given confirmation fight and secures rotation in office.

The risk for Trump is that if he pushes ahead, he will usher in a set of constitutional convulsions that will be difficult to undo. He already has five conservative votes. He should gracefully back off, and let the political process take its course.

© 2020 by the Board of Trustees of Leland Stanford Junior University.

Published in Law, Politics
Like this post? Want to comment? Join Ricochet’s community of conservatives and be part of the conversation. Join Ricochet for Free.

There are 75 comments.

Become a member to join the conversation. Or sign in if you're already a member.
  1. Saint Augustine Member
    Saint Augustine
    @SaintAugustine

    Franco (View Comment):

    Saint Augustine (View Comment):

    Hammer, The (View Comment):
    And for the record, everyone: Stop ragging on Epstein, just because you disagree with him. He is absolutely entitled to his opinion, and it doesn’t erase some 50 odd years of solid conservative scholarship every time someone says something you don’t like.

    Amen.

    What is this “entitled to his opinion” stuff? Everyone is entitled to his/her opinion, including those of us who “rag” on Epstein for his opinion.

    What I am saying is his analysis is badly flawed and frankly unworthy of his outsized gravitas in other domains. . . .

    . . .

    I believe Hammer’s point was that we should be nice to Epstein and keep our criticisms targeted and in perspective, seeing as Epstein is on the right side of most questions.  But maybe “rag” is not a verb I understand very well.

    • #61
  2. kedavis Coolidge
    kedavis
    @kedavis

    Franco (View Comment):

    Saint Augustine (View Comment):

    Hammer, The (View Comment):
    And for the record, everyone: Stop ragging on Epstein, just because you disagree with him. He is absolutely entitled to his opinion, and it doesn’t erase some 50 odd years of solid conservative scholarship every time someone says something you don’t like.

    Amen.

    What is this “entitled to his opinion” stuff? Everyone is entitled to his/her opinion, including those of us who “rag” on Epstein for his opinion.

    What I am saying is his analysis is badly flawed and frankly unworthy of his outsized gravitas in other domains. That becomes dangerous. He’s not just some guy in a bar.

    One of the things that animate me most with my comrades in the right is their spectacularly bad political judgement as exhibited here by Mr. Epstein. These people have a lot of influence and they can be very persuasive – especially to people who are susceptible to credentialism and intellectual razz leaves-dazzle.
    They’ve been guiding the Republican Party to loss after loss. These are the same people who thought Jeb Bush was a worthy nominee. Or Chris Christie, or Marco Rubio. All these men would have been crushed by the Democrat machine. They would have lost us the 2016 election to Hillary had we taken their advice.
    They blithely move on as though nothing happened. They rarely admit they got anything wrong, and when they do, they continue to misdiagnose. And they still don’t get it!
    The most significant flaw these people have when it comes to political tactics and strategy (assuming they are actually acting in good faith) is they do not understand the nature of our – and their – enemies. It’s on display here in this thread, to include Jonah Goldberg’s plan for preemptive surrender in exchange for a promise from proven liars and nefarious forces.
    It continues to be a mystery to me how badly these people miss the obvious.
    Epstein is a big boy, and I doubt he even reads comments… which is probably part of his problem getting political analysis right.

    Well put.  I didn’t get to that aspect in my earlier comment, but that mostly is why it’s so much more damaging when someone like Epstein is naively wrong, or wrongly naive, when making these kinds of prognostications: people take them more seriously than is deserved, because of their (sometimes just supposed) expertise in other, totally-unrelated areas.  The worst of these, being, of course, actors, actresses, musicians…

    • #62
  3. Hammer, The Inactive
    Hammer, The
    @RyanM

    kedavis (View Comment):

    Hammer, The (View Comment):

    And for the record, everyone: Stop ragging on Epstein, just because you disagree with him. He is absolutely entitled to his opinion, and it doesn’t erase some 50 odd years of solid conservative scholarship every time someone says something you don’t like. That sort of purity test is absolutely absurd, and conservatives should be better than that. If Richard Epstein does not remain one of your most well-respected and highly trusted legal scholars, in spite of disagreeing with you from time to time, than you are an idiot, full stop.

    I happen to disagree with Epstein, and I think it is worth the risk of nominating a conservative; I also think that it would be disastrous to create incentives for these sorts of threats and bad behavior from the left, just because they don’t like the results of elections, or the timing of nominations, or whatever. The standard they want to set is, effectively, one-party rule, and they don’t give a damn about any sort of courtesy or underlying principle or anything else. If conservatives cave to that, it is unilateral disarmament and literally nothing more. Democrats are not acting in good faith, and their demands for Republicans to “act in good faith” are purely self-serving; that standard will flip, tomorrow, and everyone knows it, even the most vocal Democrats.

    The Epstein type of situation might be similar to the news-reporting-bias issue.

    When people have personal knowledge of some event that is reported in the “mainstream media” – be it the local newspaper, or TV station, or whatever – it seems they invariably recognize that the media reporting is wrong in some ways, often very important ways.

    The takeaway from this should not be the assumption that we happened to catch the media in a mistake – or possibly a deliberate lie – but everything else they do is correct.

    The more likely scenario is that the media is wrong about most things, perhaps even everything, but we just don’t know it for sure because we don’t have personal, direct knowledge of everything that is being reported.

    So, if Epstein doesn’t take into account what has been directly seen of Democrat behavior in the past, isn’t the likelihood that he might be wrong about many other things too, that we took on faith or trust in his expertise, but we just didn’t know it for sure because we’re not all legal scholars able to point out his mistakes in those areas?

    We have decades of Epstein’s scholarship and commentary on the record…  sometimes I disagree with him, but usually I agree.  This is not a factual error, it is a judgment call.  He is absolutely entitled to make that prediction, and he may possibly be right.  I can disagree with his assessment of this one thing without calling his whole character into question.

    • #63
  4. Hammer, The Inactive
    Hammer, The
    @RyanM

    Basil Fawlty (View Comment):

    Hammer, The (View Comment):
    That sort of purity test is absolutely absurd, and conservatives should be better than that.

    Every time I’m told that conservatives “should be better than that” I grab for my wallet to make sure it’s still there.

    This is so amazingly stupid, Basil.  It will result in a narrowing of your bubble to the extent that yous are the only possible views that are acceptable – that is what the left does, and apparently it is infectious.  I am saying that the right should be better than that.  You’re not, and that’s your choice.  But at the end of the day, you’re the only one who suffers for it.

    • #64
  5. Hammer, The Inactive
    Hammer, The
    @RyanM

    kedavis (View Comment):

    Saint Augustine (View Comment):

    Hammer, The (View Comment):
    And for the record, everyone: Stop ragging on Epstein, just because you disagree with him. He is absolutely entitled to his opinion, and it doesn’t erase some 50 odd years of solid conservative scholarship every time someone says something you don’t like.

    Amen.

    His opinion can be his opinion. But it shouldn’t be given extra weight from his conservative/legal scholarship, because it’s evidently not based on that. It’s just his opinion, and in a situation like that, not necessarily better than anyone else’s.

    You will note that I disagreed with his opinion.

    What I’m talking about is the tendency – so ridiculously displayed by many on this thread – to make overly broad condemnations of the entire man simply because they disagree with his position, here.  He’s a traitor, he’s a rhino, he’s a liar, he’s an idiot, blah blah blah…  no, he’s smarter and better educated than virtually everyone saying those things.  That doesn’t make him right all the time, but it is asinine to pretend that it entirely delegitimizes him.  

    • #65
  6. Hammer, The Inactive
    Hammer, The
    @RyanM

    kedavis (View Comment):

    Richard Epstein: making this an election issue forces Biden to publish his own list of nominees

    Biden would not be “forced” to do any such thing. Nor would Democrat voters or pundits or the media insist that he do so. This is one of the items that calls into question Epstein’s credibility – if any – on political prognostication. Along with any belief that Biden or any other Democrat would honor a commitment they might make to supposedly not pack the court if they win, etc.

    Signed,

    Epstein’s Mother

    (Sorry, hadda.)

    True.  Epstein makes the mistake of assuming that Democrats will play by any rules at all, and the past 12 years have showed us that this is no longer the case.  I agree that it is on Democrats to earn back whatever degree of that trust they may ever have had.

    • #66
  7. Hammer, The Inactive
    Hammer, The
    @RyanM

    Franco (View Comment):

    Saint Augustine (View Comment):

    Hammer, The (View Comment):
    And for the record, everyone: Stop ragging on Epstein, just because you disagree with him. He is absolutely entitled to his opinion, and it doesn’t erase some 50 odd years of solid conservative scholarship every time someone says something you don’t like.

    Amen.

    What is this “entitled to his opinion” stuff? Everyone is entitled to his/her opinion, including those of us who “rag” on Epstein for his opinion.

    What I am saying is his analysis is badly flawed and frankly unworthy of his outsized gravitas in other domains. That becomes dangerous. He’s not just some guy in a bar.

    One of the things that animate me most with my comrades in the right is their spectacularly bad political judgement as exhibited here by Mr. Epstein. These people have a lot of influence and they can be very persuasive – especially to people who are susceptible to credentialism and intellectual razz leaves-dazzle.
    They’ve been guiding the Republican Party to loss after loss. These are the same people who thought Jeb Bush was a worthy nominee. Or Chris Christie, or Marco Rubio. All these men would have been crushed by the Democrat machine. They would have lost us the 2016 election to Hillary had we taken their advice.
    They blithely move on as though nothing happened. They rarely admit they got anything wrong, and when they do, they continue to misdiagnose. And they still don’t get it!
    The most significant flaw these people have when it comes to political tactics and strategy (assuming they are actually acting in good faith) is they do not understand the nature of our – and their – enemies. It’s on display here in this thread, to include Jonah Goldberg’s plan for preemptive surrender in exchange for a promise from proven liars and nefarious forces.
    It continues to be a mystery to me how badly these people miss the obvious.
    Epstein is a big boy, and I doubt he even reads comments… which is probably part of his problem getting political analysis right.

     

    Go back and read my comment, Franco.  This time read for content.  I said disagree with Epstein.  That’s not my complaint.  You make yourself look like an utter fool by – rather than simply disagreeing with a person – making everything in to a purity test and condemning the person in his entirety.  Nobody is going to agree with you on everything.  Children are often incapable of respectful and intelligent disagreement – in my opinion, this characterizes much of the left.  Let’s avoid that.

    • #67
  8. Stina Member
    Stina
    @CM

    Hammer, The (View Comment):

    Basil Fawlty (View Comment):

    Hammer, The (View Comment):
    That sort of purity test is absolutely absurd, and conservatives should be better than that.

    Every time I’m told that conservatives “should be better than that” I grab for my wallet to make sure it’s still there.

    This is so amazingly stupid, Basil. It will result in a narrowing of your bubble to the extent that yous are the only possible views that are acceptable – that is what the left does, and apparently it is infectious. I am saying that the right should be better than that. You’re not, and that’s your choice. But at the end of the day, you’re the only one who suffers for it.

    It’s not amazingly stupid. It is a rejection of concern trolling, which you are doing here.

    Do you have actual quotes to demonstrate people are calling Epstein a traitor or a Rino? I didn’t see any of that.

    I have seen an overwhelming disagreement of his opinion (which you say is ok) and lots saying it is foolish. There’s more bad mouthing of Jonah here, but ce la vie. The ad hominems are not without critical analysis of his opinion and are not standing in for a solid argument.

    Epstein’s education does not innure him to foolishness. Education is not wisdom. In fact, well educated people can be quite proud, leading to blind spots that make them susceptible to foolishness.

    • #68
  9. Miffed White Male Member
    Miffed White Male
    @MiffedWhiteMale

    Stina (View Comment):

     

    Epstein’s education does not innure him to foolishness. Education is not wisdom. In fact, well educated people can be quite proud, leading to blind spots that make them susceptible to foolishness.

    Go back and read Epstein’s post from March (?) when he predicted fewer than 6000 deaths from Covid if we did nothing.

     

    • #69
  10. Stina Member
    Stina
    @CM

    Miffed White Male (View Comment):

    Stina (View Comment):

     

    Epstein’s education does not innure him to foolishness. Education is not wisdom. In fact, well educated people can be quite proud, leading to blind spots that make them susceptible to foolishness.

    Go back and read Epstein’s post from March (?) when he predicted fewer than 6000 deaths from Covid if we did nothing.

     

    Which is clear evidence of him not knowing when not to open his mouth in prognostication on subjects he is not well versed in.

    • #70
  11. kedavis Coolidge
    kedavis
    @kedavis

    Hammer, The (View Comment):

    kedavis (View Comment):

    The Epstein type of situation might be similar to the news-reporting-bias issue.

    When people have personal knowledge of some event that is reported in the “mainstream media” – be it the local newspaper, or TV station, or whatever – it seems they invariably recognize that the media reporting is wrong in some ways, often very important ways.

    The takeaway from this should not be the assumption that we happened to catch the media in a mistake – or possibly a deliberate lie – but everything else they do is correct.

    The more likely scenario is that the media is wrong about most things, perhaps even everything, but we just don’t know it for sure because we don’t have personal, direct knowledge of everything that is being reported.

    So, if Epstein doesn’t take into account what has been directly seen of Democrat behavior in the past, isn’t the likelihood that he might be wrong about many other things too, that we took on faith or trust in his expertise, but we just didn’t know it for sure because we’re not all legal scholars able to point out his mistakes in those areas?

    We have decades of Epstein’s scholarship and commentary on the record… sometimes I disagree with him, but usually I agree. This is not a factual error, it is a judgment call. He is absolutely entitled to make that prediction, and he may possibly be right. I can disagree with his assessment of this one thing without calling his whole character into question.

    The main point is that being a legal scholar doesn’t necessarily confer on anyone, including Epstein, any special expertise in political punditry.

    • #71
  12. Hammer, The Inactive
    Hammer, The
    @RyanM

    kedavis (View Comment):

    Hammer, The (View Comment):

    kedavis (View Comment):

    The Epstein type of situation might be similar to the news-reporting-bias issue.

    When people have personal knowledge of some event that is reported in the “mainstream media” – be it the local newspaper, or TV station, or whatever – it seems they invariably recognize that the media reporting is wrong in some ways, often very important ways.

    The takeaway from this should not be the assumption that we happened to catch the media in a mistake – or possibly a deliberate lie – but everything else they do is correct.

    The more likely scenario is that the media is wrong about most things, perhaps even everything, but we just don’t know it for sure because we don’t have personal, direct knowledge of everything that is being reported.

    So, if Epstein doesn’t take into account what has been directly seen of Democrat behavior in the past, isn’t the likelihood that he might be wrong about many other things too, that we took on faith or trust in his expertise, but we just didn’t know it for sure because we’re not all legal scholars able to point out his mistakes in those areas?

    We have decades of Epstein’s scholarship and commentary on the record… sometimes I disagree with him, but usually I agree. This is not a factual error, it is a judgment call. He is absolutely entitled to make that prediction, and he may possibly be right. I can disagree with his assessment of this one thing without calling his whole character into question.

    The main point is that being a legal scholar doesn’t necessarily confer on anyone, including Epstein, any special expertise in political punditry.

    I agree.

    My dispute was with those individuals who made a much more broad condemnation of Epstein because of his take on this political issue.

    • #72
  13. kedavis Coolidge
    kedavis
    @kedavis

    Hammer, The (View Comment):

    kedavis (View Comment):

    Hammer, The (View Comment):

    kedavis (View Comment):

    The Epstein type of situation might be similar to the news-reporting-bias issue.

    When people have personal knowledge of some event that is reported in the “mainstream media” – be it the local newspaper, or TV station, or whatever – it seems they invariably recognize that the media reporting is wrong in some ways, often very important ways.

    The takeaway from this should not be the assumption that we happened to catch the media in a mistake – or possibly a deliberate lie – but everything else they do is correct.

    The more likely scenario is that the media is wrong about most things, perhaps even everything, but we just don’t know it for sure because we don’t have personal, direct knowledge of everything that is being reported.

    So, if Epstein doesn’t take into account what has been directly seen of Democrat behavior in the past, isn’t the likelihood that he might be wrong about many other things too, that we took on faith or trust in his expertise, but we just didn’t know it for sure because we’re not all legal scholars able to point out his mistakes in those areas?

    We have decades of Epstein’s scholarship and commentary on the record… sometimes I disagree with him, but usually I agree. This is not a factual error, it is a judgment call. He is absolutely entitled to make that prediction, and he may possibly be right. I can disagree with his assessment of this one thing without calling his whole character into question.

    The main point is that being a legal scholar doesn’t necessarily confer on anyone, including Epstein, any special expertise in political punditry.

    I agree.

    My dispute was with those individuals who made a much more broad condemnation of Epstein because of his take on this political issue.

    Well at least to me, it can depend on the issue at hand.  If Epstein is capable of ignoring reality in regard to the trustworthiness of the Democrat Establishment, I would certainly look closer to see if he might be ignoring reality elsewhere too, even including within his actual area of expertise.

    • #73
  14. Franco Member
    Franco
    @Franco

    Hammer, The (View Comment):

    Franco (View Comment):

    Saint Augustine (View Comment):

    Hammer,

    What is this “entitled to his opinion” stuff? Everyone is entitled to his/her opinion, including those of us who “rag” on Epstein for his opinion.

    What I am saying is his analysis is badly flawed and frankly unworthy of his outsized gravitas in other domains. That becomes dangerous. He’s not just some guy in a bar.

    One of the things that animate me most with my comrades in the right is their spectacularly bad political judgement as exhibited here by Mr. Epstein. These people have a lot of influence and they can be very persuasive – especially to people who are susceptible to credentialism and intellectual razz leaves-dazzle.
    They’ve been guiding the Republican Party to loss after loss. These are the same people who thought Jeb Bush was a worthy nominee. Or Chris Christie, or Marco Rubio. All these men would have been crushed by the Democrat machine. They would have lost us the 2016 election to Hillary had we taken their advice.
    They blithely move on as though nothing happened. They rarely admit they got anything wrong, and when they do, they continue to misdiagnose. And they still don’t get it!
    The most significant flaw these people have when it comes to political tactics and strategy (assuming they are actually acting in good faith) is they do not understand the nature of our – and their – enemies. It’s on display here in this thread, to include Jonah Goldberg’s plan for preemptive surrender in exchange for a promise from proven liars and nefarious forces.
    It continues to be a mystery to me how badly these people miss the obvious.
    Epstein is a big boy, and I doubt he even reads comments… which is probably part of his problem getting political analysis right.

     

    Go back and read my comment, Franco. This time read for content. I said disagree with Epstein. That’s not my complaint. You make yourself look like an utter fool by – rather than simply disagreeing with a person – making everything in to a purity test and condemning the person in his entirety. Nobody is going to agree with you on everything. Children are often incapable of respectful and intelligent disagreement – in my opinion, this characterizes much of the left. Let’s avoid that.

    Purity test? How do you get that?

    As I said, it’s bad analysis coming from someone who should know better. These people do not deserve a special pass when they molly-coddle the left out of some beltway congeniality. Or some higher principle they nobly ascribe to at the expense of ordinary conservatives who want to be free from these leftist tyrants. Or just plain political naïveté.

    Epstein is perfectly capable of defending himself, but he probably doesn’t bother reading comments. Although I’d really be interested in his defense. It must be a doozy! 

     

    Condemnation of the person? Didn’t happen.

     

    • #74
  15. The Reticulator Member
    The Reticulator
    @TheReticulator

    Hammer, The (View Comment):
    What I’m talking about is the tendency – so ridiculously displayed by many on this thread – to make overly broad condemnations of the entire man simply because they disagree with his position, here. He’s a traitor, he’s a rhino, he’s a liar, he’s an idiot, blah blah blah… no, he’s smarter and better educated than virtually everyone saying those things. That doesn’t make him right all the time, but it is asinine to pretend that it entirely delegitimizes him.

    Very good point but the term is RINO, not rhino.  

    • #75
Become a member to join the conversation. Or sign in if you're already a member.