casii
Drama Llama
Posts: 5,525
Jun 29, 2014 14:40:44 GMT
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Post by casii on Feb 1, 2022 18:45:49 GMT
He really doesn’t know when to shut up does he…l His cheese has done slid off his cracker. To borrow a phrase from my Grandmother.
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Post by mollycoddle on Feb 1, 2022 19:00:23 GMT
He really doesn’t know when to shut up does he…l His cheese has done slid off his cracker. To borrow a phrase from my Grandmother. I am stealing that expression!
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Post by mollycoddle on Feb 1, 2022 19:02:31 GMT
I think that Cruz’s ambition frequently gets the better of him. He seems to say crap that he thinks will resonate with the RW base. It doesn’t paint a flattering picture.
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Post by revirdsuba99 on Feb 1, 2022 19:15:17 GMT
Only picking white candidates 112 times (108 men, 4 women) has discriminated against others is far worse!
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Post by onelasttime on Feb 1, 2022 19:16:22 GMT
“The problem(s) with Cruz's complaints about Biden's SCOTUS plan”
“What Biden sees as an opportunity to add some welcome diversity to the Supreme Court, Cruz sees "an insult to Black women." That doesn't make any sense.
By Steve Benen
There was no great controversy in the 2020 election about Joe Biden's vow to nominate a Black woman to serve on the Supreme Court. There were no attack ads about the Democrat's promise, for example, and there was no polling evidence to suggest a public backlash.
And that's because Biden's commitment was, and is, uncontroversial. There is a universe of possible Supreme Court nominees, each of whom is qualified and has the requisite background, and the president has decided he will select a Black woman from this group.
Biden made the pledge to help diversify a Supreme Court that has been dominated for generations by men who look like him. There have been 115 justices in U.S. history. Women represent only 4 percent of that total and black women represent zero percent.
The fact that the Democratic president wants to make some history is drawing all kinds of complaints from the right, though as The Washington Post noted, one Republican senator in particular seems especially annoyed.
Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Tex.) says President Biden's vow to nominate and confirm the first Black woman to the U.S. Supreme Court is "offensive" and "an insult to Black women." ... On his podcast, "Verdict with Ted Cruz," the Texas senator argued on Monday that Biden's pledge to nominate a Black woman sent a message to other Americans that they are automatically "ineligible" because of race and gender.
"The fact that he's willing to make a promise at the outset, that it must be a Black woman, I got to say that's offensive. You know, Black women are what, 6 percent of the U.S. population? He's saying to 94 percent of Americans, 'I don't give a damn about you, you are ineligible.'"
Six years ago, Donald Trump said he'd choose from a pre-approved list of jurists backed by conservative advocacy groups, including the Federalist Society. Or put another way, in a nation of 325 million people, the Republican said when choosing a Supreme Court nominee, he'd limit his focus to a small handful of individuals, representing an infinitesimally small percentage of the American population.
As far as Cruz is concerned, was Trump telling countless Americans, "I don't give a damn about you"?
In 1980, Ronald Reagan, for purely political reasons, made a public commitment to nominate the Supreme Court's first woman justice. By Cruz's standards, did Reagan say to half the population, "I don't give a damn about you, you are ineligible"?
Michael Gerson summarized the historical landscape nicely in his latest column:
Over the centuries, U.S. presidents have selected Supreme Court nominees in part because they were Federalists, or Southerners, or from a Jewish background, or Westerners, or African Americans, or women (in the case of Ronald Reagan's first choice), or Hispanic, or Federalist Society-approved. Now, with Black women treated this same way by Biden, some have declared the whole enterprise illegitimate. Everyone gets their day in the sun — until a group of Americans who, throughout our history, has suffered greatly from injustice and fought it mightily is about to be honored.
What Biden sees as an opportunity to add some welcome diversity to the nation's highest court; Cruz sees "an insult to Black women."
The Republican Party's efforts to narrow the gender gap and expand its reach to communities of color just took another step backwards.
Postscript: In the same podcast, Cruz added that the White House is looking for a nominee who will "drive the court even further Left."
In reality, the Supreme Court hasn't been this conservative since the 1930s, and even if Biden's choice is confirmed, it will have no bearing on the court's dominant six-member far-right majority.“
The bolded part…they aren’t even being somewhat creative or convincing in their lies anymore.
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Post by revirdsuba99 on Feb 1, 2022 19:19:46 GMT
Cruz is pissed because no one wants to pick him!!
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msladibug
Pearl Clutcher
Posts: 2,536
Jul 10, 2014 2:31:46 GMT
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Post by msladibug on Feb 1, 2022 20:24:48 GMT
Is he a black woman, how can HE speak for black women? I know he does NOT speak for me or any of the black women/ men that I have talked to. He’s so twisted, He’s telling us how we black women feel? He needs to stay in his lane or get out the way.
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Just T
Drama Llama
Posts: 5,884
Jun 26, 2014 1:20:09 GMT
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Post by Just T on Feb 1, 2022 20:31:56 GMT
Postscript: In the same podcast, Cruz added that the White House is looking for a nominee who will "drive the court even further Left." WTAF??? The SC is not left, at all. How quickly they have forgotten that Trump put 3 conservative Catholics on the court. In what world is our SC left??
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Post by epeanymous on Feb 1, 2022 20:41:14 GMT
Is he a black woman, how can HE speak for black women? I know he does NOT speak for me or any of the black women/ men that I have talked to. He’s so twisted, He’s telling us how we black women feel? He needs to stay in his lane or get out the way. Ugh. Exactly. I don't even think he thinks he is -- he is speaking for the white people in his base, reminding them that any moves towards equality should feel like oppression to them.
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twinsmomfla99
Pearl Clutcher
Posts: 4,118
Jun 26, 2014 13:42:47 GMT
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Post by twinsmomfla99 on Feb 1, 2022 20:54:22 GMT
Postscript: In the same podcast, Cruz added that the White House is looking for a nominee who will "drive the court even further Left." WTAF??? The SC is not left, at all. How quickly they have forgotten that Trump put 3 conservative Catholics on the court. In what world is our SC left?? Well, in all fairness, nominating anyone who isn’t an all-out conservative wingnut would drive the court “further left.” It would still be very conservative, but it would be slightly left of where it is now. So in true conservative fashion, he is making a technically true statement but implying one thing far different and very scary to the base. It’s kind of like saying “OMG the temperature doubled between yesterday and today!” If it was one degree yesterday and two degrees today, the statement is technically true. However, if the context of the statement is intended to suggest we now have a heatwave, it is absolutely wrong.
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sassyangel
Drama Llama
Posts: 7,456
Jun 26, 2014 23:58:32 GMT
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Post by sassyangel on Feb 1, 2022 21:13:21 GMT
This tweet of his infuriated me in its gaslighting disingenuousness.
The sole reason Merrick Garland is not on the bench right now, is Mitch McConnell and the selective GOP appointment obstructionism of 2016 (which last I looked predominantly includes Ted Cruz). It has nothing to do with this.
Edit. Sorry didn’t realize his stupid video piece would embed too, so you’d have to see his smug face. Cover the screen or snort in derision when you see him, if you feel like it. 😂
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Post by peano on Feb 1, 2022 21:29:11 GMT
No one should fall for any of this. Republicans have been clear for years that they will oppose any Democratic appointment to the Court. Period. That’s funny since there were republicans that voted in favor of both Sotomayor and Kagan. You realize that was a figurative millenium ago, before Trump injected the Republican Party with his special poison.
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Post by onelasttime on Feb 1, 2022 21:31:39 GMT
WTAF??? The SC is not left, at all. How quickly they have forgotten that Trump put 3 conservative Catholics on the court. In what world is our SC left?? Well, in all fairness, nominating anyone who isn’t an all-out conservative wing it would drive the court “further left.” It would still be very conservative, but it would be slightly left of where it is now. So I’m true conservative fashion, he is making an technically true statement but implying one thing far different and very scary to the base. It’s kind of like saying “OMG the temperature doubled between yesterday and today!” If it was one degree yesterday and two degrees today, the statement is technically true. However, if the context of the statement is intended to suggest we now have a heatwave, it is absolutely wrong. Except they are replacing a liberal Justice with another liberal Justice. I suppose it’s possible the new Justice could be more to the left then Breyer . But with a 6-3 majority not much will change so it doesn’t really matter. So I’m not even seeing it a technically true statement. IMO he is just flat out lying. Again.
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sassyangel
Drama Llama
Posts: 7,456
Jun 26, 2014 23:58:32 GMT
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Post by sassyangel on Feb 1, 2022 21:34:01 GMT
WTAF??? The SC is not left, at all. How quickly they have forgotten that Trump put 3 conservative Catholics on the court. In what world is our SC left?? Well, in all fairness, nominating anyone who isn’t an all-out conservative wingnut would drive the court “further left.” It would still be very conservative, but it would be slightly left of where it is now. So in true conservative fashion, he is making a technically true statement but implying one thing far different and very scary to the base. It’s kind of like saying “OMG the temperature doubled between yesterday and today!” If it was one degree yesterday and two degrees today, the statement is technically true. However, if the context of the statement is intended to suggest we now have a heatwave, it is absolutely wrong. It’s been driven beyond conservative since the late 60s. I just counted, republicans have 15 (yes fifteen!) SJC picks confirmed since then, democrats have had 4. Since the late 1960s. So WTF is he taking about?
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twinsmomfla99
Pearl Clutcher
Posts: 4,118
Jun 26, 2014 13:42:47 GMT
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Post by twinsmomfla99 on Feb 1, 2022 23:33:46 GMT
Well, in all fairness, nominating anyone who isn’t an all-out conservative wing it would drive the court “further left.” It would still be very conservative, but it would be slightly left of where it is now. So I’m true conservative fashion, he is making an technically true statement but implying one thing far different and very scary to the base. It’s kind of like saying “OMG the temperature doubled between yesterday and today!” If it was one degree yesterday and two degrees today, the statement is technically true. However, if the context of the statement is intended to suggest we now have a heatwave, it is absolutely wrong. Except they are replacing a liberal Justice with another liberal Justice. I suppose it’s possible the new Justice could be more to the left then Breyer . But with a 6-3 majority not much will change so it doesn’t really matter. So I’m not even seeing it a technically true statement. IMO he is just flat out lying. Again. Good point about replacing a liberal with a liberal. And again, no one seemed to mind when RBG was replaced with uber-conservative Barrett.
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Deleted
Posts: 0
Nov 24, 2024 9:20:36 GMT
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Post by Deleted on Feb 1, 2022 23:40:59 GMT
I think Cruz says things, that he knows are ridiculous, just to get a sound bite or a headline. Because he knows that most of his base won't read an entire article. Also, he likes to be in the news whether it be positive or negative. I think all of his nonsensical ways are part of his strategy to get elected. It worked for trump.
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Post by iamkristinl16 on Feb 2, 2022 3:43:46 GMT
Except they are replacing a liberal Justice with another liberal Justice. I suppose it’s possible the new Justice could be more to the left then Breyer . But with a 6-3 majority not much will change so it doesn’t really matter. So I’m not even seeing it a technically true statement. IMO he is just flat out lying. Again. Good point about replacing a liberal with a liberal. And again, no one seemed to mind when RBG was replaced with uber-conservative Barrett. A lot of us had a problem with Barrett. But not the same people who are complaining now.
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Post by aj2hall on Feb 4, 2022 2:13:45 GMT
Great opinion about Biden's pledge to nominate a black woman. A couple of important points 1. Republicans objected to Sonia Sotomayor and said the same racist things - she wasn't qualified, she was picked because of her Puerto Rican Heritage etc. President Obama did not announce ahead of time that he was planning to nominate a woman. Their objections this time really have nothing to do with Biden's pledge, it's just a convenient excuse. 2. Racism is 200 years of white male judges, racism is not appointing one black woman www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2022/02/biden-supreme-court-nominee-smear-campaign/621408/About the author: Adam Serwer is a staff writer at The Atlantic, where he covers politics. Joe Biden hasn’t yet picked a nominee to fill the seat of retiring Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer, but conservatives already know that the nominee is unqualified. After all, Biden has vowed to nominate a Black woman. As New York magazine’s Jonathan Chait writes, conservative outlets are lamenting that Biden has elevated “skin color over qualifications,” accusing Biden of trying to foment “tribal warfare” and of engaging in “discrimination,” and insisting that the eventual nominee would be “an affirmative-action hire, a kind of a trophy in a display case. The token Black woman.” One conservative legal commenter sneered that instead of his preferred choice, the president would be appointing a “lesser black woman.” Republican senators have already indicated that they will not support anyone Biden nominates, so it’s not like the nominee’s qualifications would actually make a difference to them. If this all sounds somewhat familiar, it’s because the last time a Democratic president nominated a woman of color to the Court, legal elites on the right and the left insisted that Sonia Sotomayor was an unqualified affirmative-action pick who was chosen only because she is of Puerto Rican descent. The idea that conservatives would not be making such arguments if Biden had not announced in advance that he would be appointing a Black woman is nonsense; Barack Obama did not announce any such criteria before nominating Sotomayor, and they said virtually the same things about her—conservatives attacked her as a “quota pick” who was chosen “because she’s a woman and Hispanic, not because she was the best qualified.” At the time, Sotomayor had more judicial experience before being nominated than any other sitting justice, and that remains the case today, with the appointment of three new justices by Donald Trump. Now, I could point out that, like Sotomayor, every person on the shortlist of potential nominees has impeccable credentials. I could note that Supreme Court seats have long been about ethnic-coalition politics and patronage, as Slate’s Dahlia Lithwick and Mark Joseph Stern have written. I could point out that Ronald Reagan promised to appoint a woman to the bench during his campaign, because it was “time for a woman to sit among our highest jurists” and because such “appointments can carry enormous symbolic significance”; he ultimately nominated Sandra Day O’Connor. I could point out Reagan’s ongoing concern with representation when he nominated Antonin Scalia because he wanted a candidate of Italian “extraction.” I might note that George H. W. Bush’s nomination of Clarence Thomas to replace Thurgood Marshall, the first Black justice on the Court, was in keeping with previous eras’ tradition of having “Jewish” and “Catholic” seats. I might argue that under Trump, who similarly pledged to appoint a woman before selecting Amy Coney Barrett, having a law degree and a crank blog was sufficient qualification for the federal bench. And I could point out the absurdity of arguing that racism is when you first nominate a Black woman to the Supreme Court after more than 200 years, not when you exclude Black women from the nation’s highest court for more than 200 years. These are all relevant points, but none of them would change anything, because the coordinated attack on the qualifications of a nominee who has not yet been named is not about preventing her from being confirmed. This is a relatively low-stakes judicial battle, because Biden’s choice will not alter the 6–3 conservative majority on the Court, and the Democrats’ slim Senate majority will likely be sufficient to confirm the nominee, barring unforeseen complications. This is not an argument that can be won by facts and logic, because it is not about winning an argument at all. Rather, these attacks are meant to reiterate the narrative that liberals elevate unqualified Black Americans at the expense of others who are truly deserving, as part of a larger backlash narrative, one that echoes past eras in American history, in which advocacy for equal rights is turning white conservatives into an oppressed class. Republicans will likely be unable to block the nominee, but they can extract a political price, motivate their own voters, and dull the historic significance of Biden’s choice by orienting the political conversation around the idea that another shiftless Negro is getting free stuff at others’ expense. “Black women are, what, 6 percent of the U.S. population?” Senator Ted Cruz of Texas helpfully summarized on his podcast. “He’s saying to 94 percent of Americans, ‘I don’t give a damn about you.’” Cruz continued, “He’s saying, ‘If you’re a white guy, tough luck. If you’re a white woman, tough luck. You don’t qualify.’” All of the nonwhite justices in American history would fill a third of the current Court. For Cruz, this is apparently far too many. This kind of political narrative predates affirmative action by more than a century. During Reconstruction, President Andrew Johnson complained that Congress’s attempt to defend the rights of the emancipated as the white South tried to force them back into conditions of near slavery amounted to establishing “for the security of the colored race safeguards which go infinitely beyond any that the General Government has ever provided for the white race.” Running for president in 1868, a few short years after abolition, Horatio Seymour, the Democratic nominee, argued that the “laborers at the North” had been made to “feed and clothe these idle Africans,” as though all the South’s wealth had not been built on their labor. The Supreme Court justices who struck down a law in 1888 barring discrimination on the basis of race, helping pave the way for Jim Crow, argued that the time had come for Black Americans to cease being a “special favorite of the laws.” The idea that Black people are getting something they have not earned by gaining access to something white people have long had began the second that slavery was abolished. Of course, Black Americans are not the only ethnic minority that has been attacked in this way in Court confirmation battles. Sotomayor is far from the first or only example. In his history of the Thurgood Marshall confirmation fight, the journalist Wil Haygood recounts that the patrician nativist Senator Henry Cabot Lodge attacked the first Jewish nominee, Louis Brandeis, in similar terms. “If it were not that Brandeis is a Jew, and a German Jew,” Lodge insisted, “he would never have been appointed and he would not have a baker’s dozen of votes in the Senate. This seems to be in the highest degree un-American and wrong.” The segregationist Strom Thurmond accused Marshall, by then a judge, former solicitor general, and litigator of great renown, of lacking “an elementary knowledge of basic constitutional principles.” As the above examples show, the initial appointment of a member of an underrepresented minority to the Court has frequently been met with the insistence that he or she does not deserve the position. Attacks on a nominee’s qualifications, especially when a nominee has extensive legal experience, or in this case, when she has not yet been named, tend to be proxies for ideological objections. Republicans would have few concerns about nominating some baby-faced Federalist Society ideologue who had been shoveled onto the federal bench a few months prior. Thurmond objected to Marshall both because he was Black and because Marshall had spent his life fighting for racial equality, a principle Thurmond had spent his life opposing. Questioning Marshall’s qualifications was a way to register those objections in the language of constitutional fidelity rather than mere prejudice. Marshall’s opponents failed to block his nomination, but they nevertheless used it as a platform for their own narrative, which was that the civil-rights movement and a liberal Supreme Court, rather than centuries of discrimination and exclusion, were responsible for the riots erupting across the nation, and that confirming Marshall would make such problems worse. Marshall’s opponents, Wil Haygood writes, “figured it a potent time to bring up issues of crime and security, which they imagined would greatly weaken Marshall given his reputation as an attorney who had fought to give the accused equal rights.” Those objecting to Biden fulfilling his pledge to nominate a Black woman in this manner are similarly using this opportunity to put forth a familiar narrative, that liberals elevate unworthy Black candidates at the expense of those more deserving. Appeals to meritocracy in this context are not about merit; they are a means to diminish people whom these critics would see as undeserving no matter what they achieve. If the Republicans seeking to stoke resentment over this appointment can successfully turn the story of the first Black woman on the Supreme Court into another example of Black people getting free stuff they haven’t earned, they will be perfectly satisfied, even if she is confirmed. The important battles over the future of the Court have already taken place, and the right has already won them. Adam Serwer is a staff writer at The Atlantic, where he covers politics.
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used2scrap
Drama Llama
Posts: 6,097
Jan 29, 2016 3:02:55 GMT
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Post by used2scrap on Feb 4, 2022 3:23:00 GMT
Ted Cruz as a spokesperson for all black women is a strange flex. 🙄🤦♀️😔
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