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The Supreme Court Nominee Who Can’t Write
By Carey Roberts
June 29, 2009
Supreme Court opinions are words for the generations that can
affect the lives and welfare of millions. No one doubts that Supreme
Court nominee Sonia Sotomayor has a compelling life story. But more to
the point, we need to inquire about her aptitude to draft
thoughtfully-reasoned, well-crafted legal opinions.
On this count, there is reason for worry.
Sotomayor herself has admitted, “Writing remains a challenge for me
even today…I am not a natural writer.” Reporter Stephanie Mencimer has
characterized Sotomayor’s legal opinions as “good punishment for law
students who show up late for class.”
A cursory pass of Sotomayor’s writings reveals them to be clumsy to the
point of being impenetrable. This comes from her “wise Latina” speech:
“I also hope that by raising the question today of what difference
having more Latinos and Latinas on the bench will make will start your
own evaluation.”
So exactly what does “start your own evaluation” mean?
And this ringing – but ungrammatical -- declamation: “Other simply do
not care.” Maybe it’s acceptable to drop the final ‘s’ in Spanish, but
not in English.
Then there's the time Sotomayor referred to a chirping insect as “Jimmy
the Cricket” – with no apologies to “Jiminy Cricket.” That malapropism
triggered a summer reading assignment for the future Supreme Court
nominee to immerse herself in a round of children’s classics.
When it comes to Spanish grammar, Sotomayor doesn’t have a clue. In a
1996 speech she uttered this blooper, “in Spanish we do not have
adjectives. A noun is described with a preposition.”
There is in fact a good Spanish adjective for such an off-key statement: “absurdo.”
(For the compulsive linguists in the room, Sotomayor’s name comes from
a combination of the words soto (“thicket”) and mayor (“greater”).
Mayor is the adjective that modifies the noun soto. So Sotomayor means
“greater thicket.”)
Most telling is a person’s ability to think analytically and reason
logically, as revealed in a jurist’s ability to write well. Here again,
Sotomayor’s nomination raises eyebrows.
Ms. Sotomayor has asserted her Latino heritage makes her a better,
“wiser” judge. So see if you can follow this obtuse legal argument:
“For me, a very special part of my being Latina is the mucho platos de
arroz, gandoles y pernir -- rice, beans and pork….My Latina identity
also includes, because of my particularly adventurous taste buds,
morcilla, -- pig intestines -- patitas de cerdo con garbanzo – pigs’
feet with beans, and la lengua y orejas de cuchifrito, pigs’ tongue and
ears.”
So let’s get the word out to our nation’s jurists, Consuming swine guts makes you a more discerning and compassionate judge!
And when Sotomayor was asked to defend her membership in the all-female
Belizean Grove, she rendered this risible verdict: “to the best of my
knowledge, a man has never been asked to be considered for membership.”
In a 1986 interview on Good Morning America, Sotomayor railed against
the sex discrimination she allegedly had encountered. Want proof? “And
if you’re a male that grew up professionally in a male-dominated
profession, then your image of what a good lawyer is a male image.”
That’s right, discrimination has nothing to do with the actions you may
commit, it’s clinging to a politically-incorrect “male image.”
The real problem, of course, has nothing to do with one’s image of
being a good lawyer. The concern is the extent to which the affirmative
action mindset has permeated our society, watering down standards and
discriminating against more qualified applicants. “I am a product of
affirmative action,” Sonia Sotomayor boasted in a 1994 interview. “I am
the perfect affirmative action baby.”
During her now-famous address at the University of California School of
Law, Judge Sotomayor concluded in her rambling, nearly incoherent prose:
“There is always a danger embedded in relative morality, but since
judging is a series of choices that we must make, that I am forced to
make, I hope that I can make them by informing myself on the questions
I must not avoid asking and continuously pondering. We, I mean all of
us in this room, must continue individually and in voices united in
organizations that have supported this conference, to think about these
questions and to figure out how we go about creating the opportunity
for there to be more women and people of color on the bench so we can
finally have statistically significant numbers to measure the
differences we will and are making.”
If the Senate confirms Sonia Sotomayor next month, it will be only a
matter of time until such sentiments begin to make their way into the
legal opinions handed down from the High Court.
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