About Me

My photo
This blog is the work of an educated civilian, not of an expert in the fields discussed.

Saturday, May 02, 2026

Trump Supports Anti-Christian Bias

Religion Clause Blog reports

Yesterday, the President's Task Force to Eradicate anti-Christian Bias issued a report (full text) titled Eradicating Anti-Christian Bias within the Federal Government. The 197-page Report (with an additional 368 pages of Exhibits) focuses on policies of the Biden Administration.

The report has the usual Trump anti-Biden bullshit. Biden, whose expression of religious beliefs was much more honest than Trump's, supposedly is "anti-Christian." 

Biden regularly wore his religion on his sleeve and did so a lot more credibly than the current occupant. His Administration also respected equality, including the diversity of Christian beliefs. 

Trump's Administration selectively weaponizes Christian beliefs, promoting Christian nationalism, while disrespecting many Christians. This includes changing long in place policy regarding ICE enforcement at places of worship.

Where is this so-called anti-Christian bias? For instance, people who blocked clinics, motivated partially by religious beliefs, were not allowed merely to continue to do so. Laws protecting clinics were enforced. So, people could freely obtain health care, pursuant to their (often Christian) moral beliefs.

Vaccine mandates were also enforced. First, the average Christian doesn't find vaccines problematic. Second, requiring workers, including health care workers, to vaccinate or use alternative methods to protect others, is not "anti-Christian bias."  

There are rules in place respecting non-profits with tax breaks. Religions and religious organizations, whatever the religion, don't deserve a special exemption from the rules here. 

And so, it goes on and on. The Trump Administration promotes a selective form of Christian nationalism. The Baptist Joint Committee for Religious Liberty has flagged the problems of Christian Nationalism. But then, they aren't the "Christians" the Administration is concerned about.

Religious liberty is a fundamental aspect of freedom, not just in the promotion of some favored ones. It is too precious to let such special pleading go on without comment. See also, Justice Thomas and his confused and biased take on how "they" ignore the true meaning of the Declaration of Independence. 

"Christianity" is not just a conservative form of it. "The left" are alleged to be anti-Christian and anti-religious. This is a vicious slander. 

Friday, May 01, 2026

SCOTUS Watch: Oral Arguments Wind Down

Order List

Two things stood out for me in a four-page order list. As Rick Hasen summarized on Bluesky:

The Supreme Court won't hear the case where a lower court temporarily stopped Texas from using its re-redistricted congressional maps. The Supreme Court just reversed that order without hearing argument or getting more briefs.

The liberals dissented (without opinion). There is a story here. We have another reversal, based on a short per curiam, of a 160-page or whatever district court opinion on the shadow docket. 

Steve Vladeck is on the case, not having patronizing conservatives referencing the "hysteria" over the question. Wow. Breyer says all is well. An accommodationist who is loath to criticize. I think his replacement is more on the money. 

(Vladeck, after the voting rights decision, wrote a partially paywalled piece on reforming the Supreme Court. He opposes court expansion.) 

Meanwhile, quoting Chris Geidner, they also granted another case:

SCOTUS grants another post-Jarkesy case about administrative agencies’ adjudicative powers, involving the Labor Department.

The liberals didn't like Jarkesy, but some left-leaning sorts thought it was correct to require additional usage of the federal courts. So, it's not a crystal-clear issue.

Arguments

The Supreme Court then spent two hours (too long) talking about "geofence" warrants. Sounds like a tricky case that they will try to rule on narrowly. OTOH, maybe it's too soon to judge.

The other notable oral argument (for me) is a late addition involving Trump's immigration policy. And with that, the oral arguments are likely done. 

Now, they will get to opinion writing, probably finishing by the end of June for their summer baseball camp plans or whatever they want to do. We will also likely see if Alito really is going to stay on. 

Opinions

Rick Hasen (Election Law guy) is EXTREMELY concerned about a big 6-3 (Alito v. Kagan) voting rights case handed down. It is "one of the most pernicious and damaging Supreme Court decisions of the last century." He's not one to exaggerate.

Kagan's concern is suggested by her dissent from the bench. Since we don't have audio (Oyez.com will provide it eventually after the term is over) or video, we can just read about both Alito (longer than usual) and Kagan's bench statements. 

Congress could, and eventually should, pass a new voting rights law. They have done so in the past in response to statutory construction. The current executive and legislature are not likely to do so.

I think Congress should have a fast-track process to address Court rulings regarding federal statutes. The 6-3 Supreme Court might then flag an alleged constitutional barrier to the legislation.

This is where court reform comes in. You have ethics reform, tweaking qualified immunity, term limits, and so forth. Various good policies on their own. 

A constitutional decision like Shelby v. Holder sometimes can be addressed (e.g., update the process there deemed out of date). Other times, you will run into a roadblock, like the Trump v. U.S. ruling. 

Some want to expand the Supreme Court. Others worry this will result in tit-for-tat responses and overall diminish the Court. 

Hardball will make for tough decisions at some point, including jurisdiction stripping and targeting their budget (minus reduction in salaries, which the Constitution prohibits). After all, if you use the budget to "blackmail" (pressure) the Court, does that not have some potential at threatening its integrity? 

I think we should put everything on the table. Reform will be tough. Serious reform, whatever it entails, might require ending the filibuster. Whenever bad opinions, especially ones with political/partisan valence like this one, arise, this talk does as well.

A trifecta is necessary. Let's start thinking. Meanwhile, jockeying by both sides in a districting race to the bottom continues. 

==

The first opinion was unanimous. The result in a future case could help liberals or conservatives. It involved the investigation of crisis pregnancy centers. 

Maybe it was the right decision, and it wasn't on the merits, though judges below disagreed. Was it that obvious? Shrugs. More on the background here

Executions

James Garfield Broadnax was nineteen when he was part of the robbery/murder of two people in 2008. Texas executed him. 

There is debate over how serious his role is, the use of race in jury selection, and other issues. Two confessed, one was given the death penalty. 

No comment by SCOTUS when rejecting the final appeals. The whole thing seems arbitrary. 

(A few judges have shown some concern about executing people under 21. The line now is eighteen.)

Florida executed someone sentenced to die for the rape/murder of his teenage step-niece, committed in 1976. James Hitchcock is not someone many will have sympathy for. It still is patently ridiculous to execute someone after 50 years. 

Florida is making a habit of this, though, even for them, 50 years is longer than most. As usual, I cite Breyer's dissent in Glossip v. Gross on this issue.

Since only a few justices over the years, none on the Court now, flagged that problem, his final appeals rested on other claims. His lawyers, yet again, raised a claim that the Florida lethal injection process is flawed.

Also, they again raise an innocence claim. It isn't new, so hard to see it working at this late date. He claims his brother did it. I doubt it. The time lag is my issue.

He committed horrible crimes. He was in prison for fifty years. Some members of the victim's family will obtain closure. That is a variable thing, and anyway, not enough to justify a few arbitrary executions.

A long prison term might also have led some to have closure. A lingering execution might have hindered the process as they waited a bit more time for it to happen.

Upcoming

No more oral arguments. 

There will be releases of orders (Monday) and non-argument sessions (often admission of bar members, but some opinion days might be mixed in) and conferences (Thursdays) until the end of June. At least, after a ten-day break after Monday (orders). 

(Memorial Day pushes one order day to Tuesday.)

There will also be various other days with orders and opinions, especially as things speed up in June. And probably a surprise or two mixed in. So, it goes.

Tuesday, April 21, 2026

Chadwick Willacy Executed

On September 5, 1990, Willacy, then 24, was burglarizing Sather's Palm Bay home when she returned home unexpectedly. Willacy bludgeoned Sather, 56, bound her hands and feet with wire and duct tape, and brutally strangled her with a cord. He later disabled smoke detectors, doused her with gasoline, placed a fan at her feet, and set her on fire.

Florida executed another person who committed heinous crimes decades ago. The Supreme Court never held, even if a few justices flagged the problem, that such lag times were constitutionally problematic. 

(See, e.g., Breyer's dissenting opinion in Glossip v. Gross, including how the state interest decreases over time. The person did serve three decades in prison.) 

The last appeal also had a repetitive feel. His lawyers sought information regarding the lethal injection process. Sotomayor recently noted she was concerned about possible problems, especially since everything was not out in the open. 

A long prison sentence is appropriate in these cases. The capital punishment system is too flawed to be trusted. Executing a few people among a bunch of horrible people, including decades later, is not a good use of the public welfare. 

ETA: Trump Death Penalty Watch

The Garland Justice Department placed a moratorium on executions. A final report flagged problems with lethal injection usage. 

The Trump Justice Department [I use that label advisedly] has addressed a different sort of problem. Recently, there have been issues with obtaining execution drugs. Also, some botching of executions.

The TJD has decided to provide an open season for alternatives. They will leave open the usage of electrocution, nitrogen gas, and firing squads. 

Trump 1.0 waited until mid-2020 to start executing people. There are now only three people (mass murderers all) on federal death row. It would be remarkably quick for some newly applied death sentence to be carried out in less than four years.

The three people on death row were sentenced in 2015, 2017, and 2023. Realistically, it would be difficult to see more than two of them being executed by January 2029. I might be wrong. But five years would be rather fast. 

I'm strongly against the death penalty. I acknowledge my anguish if any of those three are executed would be rather low in comparison to many other things these clowns are doing. 

The Biden commutations have realistically limited the ultimate harm they can do on this front. They can try to get some death sentences. Even there, their efforts might be somewhat limited. 

One person in federal custody for other crimes was released to state custody, where he was executed. States might manage to execute someone else somehow, too, including among those Biden commuted. So, Trump has some room there.

Still, on the "execution" front, he has done a lot more damage, illegally killing people, including in Caribbean boat attacks. 

Monday, April 20, 2026

SCOTUS Watch: Order List and Other News

Order List

Today's Order List was long enough that it suggested additional writings. It also had some notable developments, including a case that might further weaken Oregon v. Smith (general applicable laws are generally acceptable for religious liberty purposes).

One case on the "shadow docket":

By a 6–3 vote, and with no opinion, the Supreme Court throws out a lower court decision denying qualified immunity who killed an unarmed, mentally ill man by using "bodyweight force" to restrain him. All three liberals dissented.

A per curiam error corrects a lower court Fourth Amendment decision. Sotomayor, without comment, wouldn't provide relief. Jackson dissents with an opinion. 

Sotomayor, in a statement, discusses a dispute involving a child abduction measure. She agrees it is something they should eventually address. 

This specific lawsuit, however, is procedurally inappropriate to take. Nonetheless, she argues it was at least partially a self-inflicted wound by the Court.

Sotomayor, without comment, also noted she would have granted a case alleging evidence was not properly supplied in a criminal case. 

Justices Alito, Kavanaugh, and Barrett didn't take part in some decisions without saying why. Only Kagan and Jackson consistently provide their reasons. 

Shadow Docket Story

Steve Vladeck addresses a NYT article, with internal documents, discussing a major change in the shadow/emergency/interim docket in 2016. I agree with his overall analysis. The articles provide sunlight on issues of special concern. The actions are troubling.

Fix the Court suggests a proper response would be congressional legislation requiring transparency. If they abuse the process, jurisdiction stripping and budget cuts would be some possible consequences. 

(This was suggested in an email I received via a subscription.)

Or we can go the route of certain conservatives who think the leak is the biggest problem. The overall comments there, as I noted in a comment, ignore that internal deliberations are regularly leaked. Full documents are a step beyond that, but that might be appropriate (e.g., Pentagon Papers).

Thomas vs. Progressives

Prof. Segall focuses on his corruption -- Harlan Crow -- but also links to a wider discussion, how his usual "just so" historical account is garbled. This is who conservatives deem their model judge. 

Happy Birthday, Justice John Paul Stevens. And Adolf Hitler, apparently, going by Justice Thomas. 

Meanwhile ...

Some good news in a lower state court in Pennsylvania, which, on state constitutional grounds, struck down a Hyde Amendment. A concurring opinion also cited religious liberty. 

Some state courts went this route in the past. The principle should be applied nationwide. 

ETA: Two non-ideological opinions were handed down on Wednesday. Sotomayor had the unanimous opinion for one. Thomas had the other opinion, with a dissent by Alito, Roberts (relatively rare dissenter), and Kavanaugh. Sometimes, disagreements aren't always along the expected lines. But 6-3 is still a thing. 

Sunday, April 19, 2026

Mets ... 0-11

The Rockies managed to beat the Dodgers at least once! They went 3-10. The Mets lost 11 in a row! Multiple teams (including the Phils, Astros, and Blue Jays) are struggling. But that is some losing streak. 

Saturday, April 18, 2026

Bible Reading Marathon

Trump Will Participate in a Marathon Bible Reading

He will read a passage from the Old Testament that his Christian supporters cite as a call to national repentance and divine blessing.

I have long had an interest in the Bible. I listen to Bart Ehrman's weekly podcast. I took a New Testament course a long time ago. I have read a lot about the subject. I once read the whole Bible. 

I am reading this book by Rachel Held Evans' sister. It works both as a general discussion of grief and grief rituals as well as a Christian discussion. She comes from that tradition. She's a good writer. 

People will have a cynical reaction to this effort. Trump surely doesn't seem like an honest broker here. The verse he read is somewhat ironic if read honestly:

If my people, which are called by my name, shall humble themselves, and pray, and seek my face, and turn from their wicked ways; then will I hear from heaven, and will forgive their sin, and will heal their land.

Certain evangelicals read some biblical quotes in a Christian Nationalist way. The original context was the Jewish people in ancient times. The current meaning should not be inferred to be a statement of Trump triumphalism. 

I think, quite honestly, our nation should humble itself and seek forgiveness for its wicked ways. It has supported Trump and committed much damage beyond that. It needs to accept what it did. It has to work toward healing.

Susie Wiles, the White House chief of staff, will read Proverbs 31, which includes a wide-ranging list of qualities of “a wife of noble character” that has become a touchstone for many Christian women.

This is another somewhat ironic choice. How would the original author feel about her position? How noble is it to be Trump's chief of staff?

Rachel Held Evans spoke repeatedly about that chapter, about "women of valor." Rachel did not just read the Bible. She studied it in depth. That is the best way. Also, it's a good thing to discuss. 

I suppose when the whole "Bible" is read, it will be the Protestant Bible. I was taught using the Catholic Bible, which has additional material. 

Congress, some time back, read the whole Constitution. Well, not really. They edited it somewhat, skipping over amended parts. That allowed them to skip over the slavery stuff. Did they read the whole thing when they did it again more recently? They should read the whole thing.

The Bible can get tedious, especially all those genealogies and rules and regulations. A few of the prophets go on for quite a long time. But it's okay if they want to read the whole thing. Should be done humbly and not as a partisan thing.

We see the world through a glass, darkly

ETA: I liked the book on grief. The chapters sometimes went too long. 

It is significantly a personal narrative, since she had multiple miscarriages and her sister died. (Her grandmother also died, but that is fairly typical for someone her age.) She is a bit privileged.

She has a husband, family, friends, and a rewarding career. Lots of people don't have all of that to fall back on. Toss in faith, no matter how she noted she sometimes struggled with it.

I respect her overall, helped by an overall liberal outlook. Still, that got to be a bit much after a while, especially with all the talk of rituals involving the community. Not everyone has "a community."

I also am not a Christian. Christianity can be fine. Stephen Colbert is a Christian and all that. 

This addendum is not about my disagreement with the basics of Christian doctrine. Still, the whole died for sins business. Such a great sacrifice!!!!!

That has long annoyed me. Many people suffer and die for a whole lot less. They often don't even know if their death will mean much. They might sacrifice for one person. Imagine dying to save humanity?

(I'll grant the premise! Still dubious!) 

And, sorry to bring this up, why did they need to be saved in the first place? Oh well.

Friday, April 17, 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

At a recent appearance at the University of Kansas School of Law, I referred to a disagreement with one of my colleagues in a prior case, but I made remarks that were inappropriate. I regret my hurtful comments. I have apologized to my colleague.

She had second thoughts. She publicly apologized via the public information office. 

It would be interesting to know what happened. Did Kavanaugh suggest his feelings were hurt? Did colleagues tell her she crossed the line? Did she realize Murc's Law (only Democrats have agency)? 

Chris Geidner, after some people pushed back, posted a discussion on why the apology made sense. Eh. Sure. Typical small group dynamics, even beyond the importance of his vote. 

Plus, it's the classy thing to do. You apologize sometimes when you deep down don't think you should have to do so. 

It reminds me of when there was talk that Sotomayor was bothered about Gorsuch not wearing a mask. He was sitting next to a senior citizen with diabetes. He apparently thought people were being too "woke" about COVID or something.

They released a treacly joint statement about how they were pals. She didn't ask him to wear a mask. It was one big misunderstanding. Sure.

Did a conservative justice ever apologize? Ginsburg apologized for publicly saying she didn't want Trump elected. Stevens, during the Kavanaugh confirmation, noted people told him he was too public about his opposition to Kavanaugh after his outburst. He seemed a bit embarrassed.

When did a conservative justice apologize? That's what rankles. She has to publicly apologize for that asshole? Well, that's what adults do, I guess. 

Thomas Speaks 

I have seen her remarks compared to Justice Thomas criticizing "progressives." 

Thomas has promoted his conservative values for years. He has strongly supported his wife, who is a big Trump supporter, including after the 2020 elections.

He was not specifically criticizing a colleague. I do not think some of his more overheated dogma should get a pass. Still, it is not really the same thing. 

OTOH, if the assumed problem is that Sotomayor is opining generally on ideological grounds, Thomas and other conservatives show that she is far from alone. 

Thomas Writes 

The single opinion released today:

Chevron has plausibly alleged a close relationship between its challenged crude-oil production and the performance of its federal avgas refining duties—not a tenuous, remote, or peripheral one—and has therefore satisfied the “relating to” requirement of the federal officer removal statute. 

Thomas, as he often does in these technical cases, wrote the opinion. Jackson disagreed in part. 

Her concurrence includes her concern about legislative intent and the message that judges should follow legislative will. She separately criticized the use of the shadow/interim/emergency/whatever docket. Even a "minor" case has some bit of interest.

On that front, this was the case that Alito belatedly decided to recuse himself. His recusals generally involve financial conflicts. Sometimes, honestly, a judge doesn't catch a possible conflict early enough.

Recusals often do not change the result of the case. The case here was largely unanimous. Sometimes, a recusal might matter more. The principle of even the appearance of impropriety matters the most. 

It is rarely a compelling matter to take a specific case. The specific legal question is likely to arise again, if it's worth worrying about.  

There is more flexibility in lower courts, including a district judge sitting my assignment on a panel. There should be a way to do that with the Supreme Court.

OTOH, as noted, it rarely matters too much. 

ETA: A housekeeping order was released. One tidbit: "The motion of petitioners for leave to file the joint appendix in an 8½- by 11-inch format is granted."

The motion noted that since the Court sped things along, it would be difficult to use the usual format within time constraints. Okay.