Sandra Day O'Connor Warns Of "Beginnings" Of Dictatorship...


March 10

Huffington Post - NPR's Nina Totenberg aired an amazing story this morning about a talk that just-resigned Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O'Connor gave at Georgetown University. The first woman to serve on the High Court wouldn't allow her actual words to be broadcast, and that's a shame, because -- based on Totenberg's report -- every American needs to hear what she said. The Reagan appointee who became a moderate and an American icon -- Bush v. Gore notwithstanding -- all but named names in thinly veiled attacks on former House majority leader Tom DeLay and Texas Sen. John Cornyn, and ended with a stunning warning.

O'Connor told her Georgetown audience that judges can make presidents, Congress and governors "really really mad," and that if judges don't make people angry, they aren't doing their job. But she said judicial effectiveness is "premised on the notion that we won't be subject to retaliation for our judicial acts." While hailing the American system of rights and privileges, she noted that these don't protect the judiciary, that "people do".

Originally submitted by Scott M - Editor


Editor March 10, 2006 - 5:47pm

Retired, whatever. A bit of Deja Vu there, reminds me of Colin Powell and his chrief of staff, whatshisface.

Would she not share some of the blame if it happened?

Caribdude

Caribdude March 11, 2006 - 1:32pm

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