A brilliant idea, actually, from Aziz Poonawalla in his City of Brass blog:
Keep in mind that the primary function of a SCOTUS justice is to interpret law and write opinions and dissents. In this they do have a staff to assist them with research, but ultimately the reasoning by which they arrive at their opinions (or dissent) is the key trait we are ultimately trying to assess. Thurgood Marshall may have been more of a seat of the pants type, but really not even his most ardent disciple (and Kagan comes close) will emulate him.
So, lets give our prospective nominees some homework. Instead of Senators grilling the nominee from the same obsolete handbook of judicial activism BAD slavish adherence to our political views GOOD, how about every member of the Senate Judiciary Committee (Republican and Democrat alike) pick a recent (10 years) SCOTUS case and ask the nominee to write either a dissent or opinion on it, as if she were a sitting justice?
Unfortunately, this idea makes too much sense to ever be accepted.
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It'll never happen.
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What I find really funny though, is that I haven't seen anything in any major website or blog, about the SCOTUS ruling yesterday on the Chicago gun ban. I found out by reading Voice of America (VOA.com) that SCOTUS struck down the ban, and kicked it back to the appeals court to clean up the mess.
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I read the Times for one reason only - it's the only NY general news paper that writes for people who have more than a first-grade education. Politically, the Post suits me better, but I can't stomach their writing, which is pretty clearly for drooling mouth-breathers that move their lips if the word has more than one syllable.
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