Justice Sotomayor publicly called out Kavanaugh for his Kavanaugh stop opinion, basically saying his privileged upbringing made him not understand the people involved. Some people handwaved it, but others acknowledged it was a significant comment. Joe's Eclectic Thoughts
Various thoughts on current events with an emphasis on politics, legal issues, books, movies and whatever is on my mind. Emails can be sent to almostsanejoe@aol.com; please put "blog comments" in the subject line.
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- Joe
- This blog is the work of an educated civilian, not of an expert in the fields discussed.
Wednesday, April 15, 2026
Sotomayor Apologies
Justice Sotomayor publicly called out Kavanaugh for his Kavanaugh stop opinion, basically saying his privileged upbringing made him not understand the people involved. Some people handwaved it, but others acknowledged it was a significant comment. Religious Liberty Commission Follies
At a Monday (April 13) hearing at the Museum of the Bible in Washington, D.C., Texas Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, a Republican and the chair of the commission, asked, “Would it not be a good recommendation that every school, every university, every business, has to have that one sheet on the bulletin board about protecting people’s religious liberty, and that the separation of church and state is the biggest lie that’s been told in America since our founding?”
The Trump Religious Liberty Commission meeting at the Museum of the Bible (book) is fitting. The museum is an evangelical enterprise significantly funded by Hobby Lobby.
The chair argued that "the anti-God left has used ["separation of church and state"] to suppress people of religion in our country." This is the "biggest lie" told in America since our founding. "Slavery is a positive good" is third or fourth, perhaps.
Religious liberty is extremely important. It is also highly debated. But the commission is not set up for an honest discussion. The discussion might offer references to Baptists, Madison, and Jefferson strongly supporting state/church separation.
This caricature of right-wing beliefs leads some to disdain any talk about religion. We will get references to fantasy people in the sky or some such thing.
A pending case reflects one single-minded view. A Catholic organization wants an exception to an LGBTQ equality provision. Another lawsuit involves a hospice that claims a religious exemption from a trans equality provision.
I find such litigation selfish. Not all Catholics believe in this anti-LGBTQ doctrine. Regardless, if you want to take part in public affairs, including public welfare services, it is not outrageous that basic equality has to be followed.
Is this what you want to worry about when providing hospice care to people? Not allowing them rooms in their self-designated genders? Will you only provide them care if they pray to Jesus Christ, too? How shallow a Christian you are.
(Catholic nuns don't use birth control.* That is b.s., too. The concern has to be the employees.
Some janitors at a school can't have birth control, even if it is their own employment-based health care. Some sisters realize that it is moronic.)
Last month, Meenu Batra, 53, who has lived in the South Texas border colonia of Laguna Heights since 2002, was on her way to Milwaukee, Wisconsin, to work another case. She’s been a court interpreter for over 20 years, the only one licensed in Texas for Hindi, Punjabi, or Urdu. Her language skills are requested nationwide, where she’s contracted to help people making their way through the immigration court system, just as she did for herself 35 years ago when she immigrated from India to New Jersey before settling in Texas.
Tuesday, April 14, 2026
Braving the Truth
Monday, April 06, 2026
SCOTUS Watch: Order List [And Other Stuff]
The Supreme Court handed down a short Order List before going on a little mid-April break. One grant:
Issue: Whether the Veterans’ Judicial Review Act stripped district courts of the jurisdiction, recognized by this court in Johnson v. Robison, to hear challenges to the constitutionality of acts of Congress affecting veterans’ benefits.
A bit of lay-up since both sides agreed they should take the case. The solicitor general also argued that the court below was correct. He also suggested the plaintiff sued the wrong person, helping to explain the curious "U.S. Congress" part of this case.
Meanwhile, among the orders is one in which Gorsuch did not take part. Only Kagan and Jackson explain themselves when such a recusal happens. They are right to do so.
Again, nothing is scheduled until next week, on Friday (conference/non-argument session, likely to swear in people), but something might come up.
Steve Bannon
SCOTUSBlog provides more details that show that even a brief, bland-looking Order List can have some interesting details. More Trump news, too:
The justices also sent the case of Stephen Bannon, a former adviser to President Donald Trump who was convicted of contempt of Congress, back to the lower court, where the Department of Justice has filed a motion to dismiss his indictment.
Bannon served his brief sentence. This has a symbolic quality. After an extended -- ridiculously so -- process, which must be reformed, Bannon actually was punished for obstruction of Congress.
This, of course, has to be discouraged. I am being sarcastic. Anyway, this seems to have a gratuitous feel to it. The United States provided a brief reply that it was dismissing the indictment "in the interests of justice." Yes. Justice for Trump stooges.
They had the prosecutorial discretion to do this, though in this case, it is horribly applied. Once they do so, the argument is made that the procedure applied here in this order is appropriate.
Iowa decided to supply an amicus as part of its Republican/Trump support role. It is laughable that Iowa felt it necessary to get involved here.
The procedural move here does not appear improper. The ultimate problem is that Trump yet again finds a way to remove even the bare minimum justice for the past wrongs he and his minions inflicted.
I'm open to being proven wrong. It does seem wrong that the Justice Department can step in at this point. But if the prosecution was actually improper, a later action of this sort might be sensible.
So, again, it does seem like it turns on discretion.
ETA: On the odds and ends front, some more rules (Appellate/Bankruptcy/Evidence) were released.
SCOTUS doesn't intervene in an election dispute. Sounds like a blatant case, even if you don't like the law. Might have line drawing issues. Easy case here.
I say more here including about Sotomayor stuff.
Sunday, April 05, 2026
The Autobiography of Malcolm X
I read a book about Roots, which was written by Alex Haley, who wrote an extended epilogue to this volume. My copy also had a foreword by Malcolm's oldest daughter. The book as a whole was quite readable, if somewhat repetitive. Don't trust all of his citations of ancient history. Tragically, he was assassinated right when he was taking a more open-minded approach. But it was like it was fated.
Saturday, April 04, 2026
DALLAS v. STANGLIN
Stanglin was released on April 3, so was part of a list of cases on a website that provides day-by-day summaries. The case involves a law that "authorizes the licensing of 'Class E' dancehalls, restricting admission thereto to persons between the ages of 14 and 18 and limiting their hours of operation."*
I have written various posts on this blog dealing with privacy-related cases, particularly involving birth control and abortion. This case came up a couple of times, including a review of a book on dance.
The challenger ended his oral argument in this case on a privacy note, though freedom of association was a key issue. The lower court cited precedent to show that "social" association is included there.**
The right to freely associate is not limited to "political" assemblies, but includes those that "pertain to the social, legal, and economic benefit of our citizens."
The Supreme Court overturned. It cited a recent case limiting "intimate" association to small groups (the dance halls had hundreds of people). The case, the majority by Chief Justice Rehnquist argued, also did not expand "expressive" association to social dancing.
Rehnquist applied "social" narrowly to mean "nothing more than that the right of expressive association extends to groups organized to engage in speech that does not pertain directly to politics." That's dubious.
Justice Stevens (with Blackmun) agreed that the law was legitimate while noting in an opinion concurring in judgment that:
the opportunity to make friends and enjoy the company of other people — in a dance hall or elsewhere — is an aspect of liberty protected by the Fourteenth Amendment.
He did not provide an analysis for this conclusion, but it is correct. We have a right to marry, for instance, and that entails meeting people in various contexts on the road to marriage.
(I'll toss in that even non-expressive athletic dancing is important to personal wellness to a degree that it is not a trivial aspect of personal freedom.)
The opinion is partially concerned with limits. Anything -- we saw this with the conversion therapy case -- might involve expression.
We express ourselves in some fashion by basically anything we do. Dance halls are also not the first thing you think about regarding the "right to association."
Nonetheless, people go to dance halls quite literally to associate. They meet people and interact. They express themselves. Dancing, including "social" dancing, is a means of expression. The importance of dances in Jane Austin novels comes to mind.
A social gathering at a restaurant is also not what many people would associate (ha) with the First Amendment. But it has some of that character. We meet and talk. We associate. We share ideas.
I found it troubling years ago, and still do, that Brennan and Marshall just went along with the open-ended language of the majority opinion. The concurrence provided a way to underline that there were constitutional interests involved.
They probably thought the case was not worth worrying about. Easy cases, if this is one, however, leave open the possibility of troublingly open-ended legal conclusions. The ability, if sometimes taken too far, to regulate minors was a way to uphold the law.
Likewise, the regulation of business establishments, including those with a large number of people, might warrant freer rein. The law did not deny teenagers the ability to dance with adults. It regulated a certain type of for-profit establishment of a certain size.
Stevens argues that this law, if anything, furthered the constitutional rights that the class of teenagers had. No need to say they have none (other than some general right against arbitrary treatment) in this context.
A question by Rehnquist suggests a red flag. Could the government (when this could be criminalized) ban two men dancing to advance anti-same sex sodomy laws? Limits of gay bars, including bars with large clientele, had First Amendment and right to privacy implications. Social activity = rights.
Social dancing should not be treated on the same level of constitutional scrutiny as the regulation of eyewear and other "rational basis" cases. The case is a troubling overreach and unnecessarily so.
Justice Brennan was careful not to even let cases involving alleged child pornography (e.g., Osbourne v. Ohio) be used to limit the right of privacy and other constitutional rights. His silence here was dubious.
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* The enterprise appears to have arisen from another daily SCOTUS history project, which provides single moments involving various subjects. It always not case specific. Some key cases are not chosen.
I comment there now. A recent comment on a school prayer case received more than usual attention. I stopped replying since I think I said enough.
** Griswold v. Connecticut cited free speech and freedom of association cases to help show how privacy is necessary to protect constitutional rights. Multiple cases also protect, if to a somewhat more limited degree, the constitutional rights of minors.
Friday, April 03, 2026
Sex of Comments
Sigh
I enjoy commenting online. I have done so for decades now. But some people repeatedly cannot handle discussing things reasonably. They often, sarcastically, "translate" what you have to say in ignorant ways using a biased translator. They make snide remarks based on ignorance. They don't want to or have the ability to honestly engage, no matter how much you work at it. It is so tiresome.
Thursday, April 02, 2026
SCOTUS Watch
Order List
The Supreme Court on Monday agreed to weigh in on a procedural question arising from a pregnancy discrimination case – specifically, whether a defendant can raise an affirmative defense (that is, a legal excuse or justification) later in the proceedings when it did not raise that defense in the answer to the plaintiff’s complaint.
After a brief order list, Sotomayor (with Jackson) spends some time explaining why the justices should have taken a criminal justice case. Finding troubling criminal justice cases that suggest the arbitrary nature of the criminal justice system is her thing.
(The opening link provides more details)
