Tigger_Magic
I am opinionated, independent-minded, self-righteo
- Joined
- Mar 18, 2005
- Messages
- 3,265
I disapprove of Ms. Miers' nomination because she is not qualified to serve on SCOTUS. She graduated from a law school (certainly not one of the top ones), so yes she has her law degree. She apparently argued a case before SCOTUS. But what else is in her resume that supposedly qualifies her to be an Associate Justice? There's nothing short of being the first woman to head the TX Bar Association and being female. Maybe the latter is enough for Laura Bush, but neither one indicates that Ms. Miers is the sort of brilliant legal mind the nation needs wrestling with constitutional issues. Then again, we got stuck with Souter and Ginsburg, so maybe Miers is not so bad after all?Laugh O. Grams said:Saw Pat Buchanan last Sunday on Meet the Press and he was incredibly angered by President Bush and his betrayal of the 40 year Republican Revolution's mission to reshape the SCOTUS, beginning with Nixon. Knowing your politics they way that many of us do, is your angle for disapproving of the Miers' nomination solely due to her lack of experience, or like Buchanan, due to the fact that Bush should have nominated a Priscilla Owens-type who's far right leanings are well known and not a shot in the dark?
My bottom line is qualifications, not political, religious, or other leanings. With SCOTUS there is no such thing as a sure thing. O'Connor was supposed to be a sure thing and look how she worked out. As Ann Coulter put it, we need "lawyers with giant brains to memorize obscure legal cases and to compose clearly reasoned opinions about ERISA pre-emption, the doctrine of equivalents in patent law, limitation of liability in admiralty, and supplemental jurisdiction under Section 1367...", not someone with a literally paper-thin resume and no significant accomplishments.


But it doesn't stop some from performing in the theatre of the absurd for the enjoyment of many others. If the House were to impeach Presidents for "gross incompetence, gross negligence, and dereliciton of duty", I'm not sure too many in the 20th century would have been spared. Just because one disagrees (even vehemently) with a President's policies and decisions, those disagreements do not rise to the level of impeachment. I don't have a lot of faith in our 435 Representatives, but it is fortunate that, so far, they've been able to exercise more restraint than some on this board.
This is the best you can come up with for "gross incompetence, negligence and dereliction of duty? Scraping the bottom of the partisanship barrel for these examples? I am sure President Bush could have single-handedly stopped a cat 5 hurricane and just like the little Dutch boy, he could have stuck his finger in the levees and stopped the flooding.
