Site icon The Punching Bag Post

HORIST: The courting of Kavanaugh

<p>&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The political atmosphere in America &ndash&semi; the lines of conflict &ndash&semi; after the announcement of Brett Kavanaugh&rsquo&semi;s nomination to the United States Supreme Court are remarkably like they were in the days prior to the announcement&period;&nbsp&semi; That is because the leadership of the Democratic Party and the forces of the left&comma; including the elitist media&comma; have been waging the battle against the Trump nominee in absentia of a real person for several weeks already&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The Trump administration gets high marks for the staging of the announcement&period;&nbsp&semi; It was nothing like the pre-event predictions set forth by the &num;NeverTrump resistance movement&period;&nbsp&semi; It was not the television game show they had hoped to be able to criticize&period;&nbsp&semi; The President&rsquo&semi;s introduction was dignified&period;&nbsp&semi; The audience was impressive&comma; with a certain level of nostalgia induced by the presence of Maureen Scalia&comma; the wife of the late Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia&comma; and Ed Meese&comma; the former Attorney General under President Reagan&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>There was great enthusiasm &ndash&semi; one might even say jubilation &ndash&semi; expressed by the audience&period; Nominee Kavanaugh gave a warm and inspiring biographical speech&comma; introducing his background and his family to most Americans for the first time&period;&nbsp&semi; He pledged his devotion to the rule of law and the Constitution &hellip&semi; as written&period;&nbsp&semi; Of course&comma; all of that was a partisan and philosophic homecoming&period;&nbsp&semi; The audience was mostly composed of cheerleaders&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Once the cameras were returned to the various news outlets&comma; the analyses of Kavanaugh&rsquo&semi;s appointment took on predictable partisan tones based on preconceived narratives&period;&nbsp&semi; FOX News was obviously the most upbeat and laudatory of the appointment&period;&nbsp&semi; CNN shifted from a negative lean &ndash&semi; with some representation of supporting views &ndash&semi; during the Chris Cuomo hour&period;&nbsp&semi; It shifted to total negativism when Don Lemon took over&period;&nbsp&semi;&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Rachel Maddow set the tone for MSNBC with her not surprising mendacious negative narratives supported by the usual parroting panelists &ndash&semi; most notably Senator Cory Brooker&comma; of New Jersey&period;&nbsp&semi; Booker&rsquo&semi;s assessment was so brutally negative&comma; one might believe that Trump had nominated the Grand Dragon of the Ku Klux Klan&period;&nbsp&semi; For a man striving to take Trump&rsquo&semi;s job in the Oval Office&comma; Booker came off as anything but presidential&period;&nbsp&semi; His screed was something we are accustomed to hearing from political hacks&comma; not presidential aspirants&period;&nbsp&semi;&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Massachusetts Senator Elizabeth Warren and former Michigan Governor Jennifer Granholm were put before the cameras to repeat their thread bear arguments against a Kavanaugh confirmation&period;&nbsp&semi; They and the rest of the chorus of anti-Trump talking heads said the confirmation had to be stopped at all costs&period;&nbsp&semi; For lack of a feasible plan for how that might be done&comma; they called on their political base to rise up and &hellip&semi; well &hellip&semi; do something&period;&nbsp&semi; Sure&comma; they will have their people in the streets with placards and chants &ndash&semi; blocking traffic&comma; disrupting commerce and making a general nuisance of themselves&period;&nbsp&semi; Some of it may even get violent in keeping with the traditions of left-wing protests&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Outside of stamping their feet in frustration&comma; what exactly are the issues over which they will demand the defeat of the Kavanaugh nomination&quest;&nbsp&semi; The left&rsquo&semi;s answer is an extra dose of identity politics&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Like Chicken Little&comma; they see Roe v&period; Wade as their number one falling-sky issue&period;&nbsp&semi; Though it is not likely to be overturned in the short run&comma; if at all&comma; it provides the best fearmongering tactic to stimulate the ladies of the left&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>They also did their best to scare the gay community with the ridiculous argument that with Kavanaugh on the bench&comma; gay marriage will again be made illegal &ndash&semi; even though 37 states had already legalized gay marriage BEFORE the Supreme Court acted&period;&nbsp&semi; That is just not going to happen&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>To appeal to blacks&comma; the &num;NeverTrumpers threw out an unspecified attack on voting rights&period;&nbsp&semi; One must assume that they are again trying to convince America that having some form of identification to prove you have a legal right to cast a ballot is akin to poll taxes&comma; literacy tests and all those other obstacles the Democrats used to prevent blacks from voting&period;&nbsp&semi;&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The left spent a good deal of the post-announcement coverage illogically claiming that Kavanaugh will be the needed vote to kill Obamacare &ndash&semi; or what is left of it&period;&nbsp&semi; Since Justice Kennedy voted against Obamacare&comma; and it was Chief Justice John Roberts who provided the fifth vote to save it&comma; replacing Kennedy with Kavanaugh will make no difference at all&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Apart from the issues&comma; the anti-Kavanaugh folks dragged out their rather pathetic academic arguments&period;&nbsp&semi; Since McConnell did not allow a vote on Merritt Garland in an election year&comma; the Republicans should wait until after November&comma; they say&period;&nbsp&semi; The fact that the Garland nomination came in a PRESIDENTIAL election year&comma; and this is not&comma; is intentionally unnoted by the opposition&period;&nbsp&semi;&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Also&comma; there is a bit of hardball politics&period;&nbsp&semi; Senate Republicans held up a nomination they opposed because they could&period;&nbsp&semi; The people of America gave them that power&period;&nbsp&semi; They will not hold up the Kavanaugh appointment because they do not have to do so&period;&nbsp&semi; Senate Republicans enjoy the power of having a majority because the people decided to keep them on top&period;&nbsp&semi; One should not be surprised to find politics being carried out in &hellip&semi; politics&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The Democrats argue that Trump should not be able to exercise his constitutional power to make the appointment because he is under investigation&period;&nbsp&semi; That is an interesting&comma; if not peculiar&comma; academic argument&period;&nbsp&semi; But it has no basis in law&period;&nbsp&semi; Trump has the power&comma; has made a nomination and the Senate is likely to confirm Kavanaugh&period;&nbsp&semi; The best the left can do is to pout&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Kavanaugh has argued that a president must not be subjected to lawsuits or indictments while in office &ndash&semi; but can be slapped with them once out of office&period;&nbsp&semi; This is because the job is just too important&period;&nbsp&semi; We have already seen out a myriad of lawsuits are filed for the sole purpose of hampering a president for political reasons&period;&nbsp&semi; Kavanaugh&rsquo&semi;s opinion is not out of the mainstream&period;&nbsp&semi; In fact&comma; it is the current opinion of the Justice Department that a President cannot be subjected to a subpoena&period;&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Since Trump is the subject &lpar;not the target&rpar; of an investigation&comma; the anti-Trump crowd say that any justice he appoints is conflicted on any questions that may come before the Court stemming from the investigation&period;&nbsp&semi; Since Kavanaugh would have a lifetime appointment&comma; he would not be subject to pressure from Trump and if he felt conflicted&comma; Kavanaugh could always recuse himself from cases involving Trump&period; Furthermore&comma; virtually every justice ever appointed had to rule on cases generated by the president who appointed them&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>What Kavanaugh does bring to the court is an impressive record of professional accomplishment &lpar;drafting more than 300 decisions&rpar;&comma; a fine legal mind and a reputation for impeccable integrity&period;&nbsp&semi; That should hold him in good stead against what will most surely be an onslaught of vicious character assassins on his left flank&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;

Exit mobile version