Read the rest of the op-ed here.As political theater, the Sonia Sotomayor hearings tanked faster than the 2008 Fred Thompson presidential campaign. They boasted no drama to rival the Clarence-Anita slapdown, the Bork hissy fits or the tearful exodus of Samuel Alito’s wife. There was rarely a moment to match even the high point of the Senate’s previous grilling of Sotomayor — in 1997, when she was elevated to the Second Circuit. It was then that Senator John Ashcroft of Missouri previewed the brand of white male legal wisdom that would soon become his hallmark at the Bush Justice Department. “Do you believe there’s a constitutional right to homosexual conduct by prisoners?” he asked. (She aced it: “No, sir.”)Yet the Sotomayor show was still rich in historical significance. Someday we may regard it as we do those final, frozen tableaus of Pompeii. It offered a vivid snapshot of what Washington looked like when clueless ancien-régime conservatives were feebly clinging to their last levers of power, blissfully oblivious to the new America that was crashing down on their heads and reducing their antics to a sideshow as ridiculous as it was obsolescent.
Sunday, July 19, 2009
Frank Rich: They Got Some ’Splainin’ to Do
Posted by Broadway Carl at 4:29 PM
Labels: Frank Rich, GOP, Op-Ed, Sonia Sotomayor
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4 comments:
Graham,Sessions and Coburn have their red necks so far up their asses,they really need to see a proctologist.
OK, is Frank Rich exaggerating for effect or did THIS actually happen??:
"But when Tom Coburn of Oklahoma merrily joked to Sotomayor that “You’ll have lots of ’splainin’ to do,” it clearly didn’t occur to him that such mindless condescension helps explain why the fastest-growing demographic group in the nation is bolting his party."
Did Coburn really make a Desi Arnaz reference??? Dear merciful Christ...
Or, I should say, a "Ricky Ricardo" reference...
Fraulein - yes, >he imitated Ricky Ricardo.
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