The Tragi-Comedy of Sonia Sotomayor
by Michael S. Rulle Jr.“I’m looking through you, where did you go? I thought I knew you, what did I know? You don’t look different, but you have changed. I’m looking through you, you’re not the same.” — Lennon/McCartney: “Rubber Soul,” 1965
When Sonia Sotomayor was nominated in May, I wrote a satirical essay for Big Hollywood called The ‘Magic Latina’. The title was a send up of the “Magic Negro,” or “Magical Negro,” a fictional stereotype common in film and literature. The “Magic Negro” has been criticized by white and black commentators alike. Blacks, most famously Spike Lee, but many others, view the role as ultimately degrading. As Rita Kempley, writing for DVRepublic, said about the “Magic Negro,” “What’s the deal with all the holy roles?” The core of the critique is that the characters are given special powers and/or underlying mysticism. It is not that the characters per se are so bad. The perception is that this kind of character, the selfless and powerful, insightful, and sometimes magical being, is always black, has no “interior life”, and is always serving white people. To name a few at random, they include such famous stars as Hattie McDaniel (”Gone with the Wind”), Sidney Poitier (”The Defiant Ones”), Morgan Freeman (”Shawshank Redemption,” “Driving Miss Daisy,” “Bruce Almighty”), and Laurence Fishburne (”The Matrix”).
For those fixated on this kind of thing, once you get this thought in your head, it is difficult to get it out. As I stated in my last essay, the critics have a point, but it also seems strained. They really go too far and can appear paranoid. There are many characters in cinema and television of this type who are white (Simon Baker as “The Mentalist” comes to mind, having just seen the show last night). If Morgan Freeman is a “Magical Negro” in “Bruce Almighty” (according to Rita Kempley), then surely Christian Bale is the “Magical Caucasian” in Batman. One would have thought it difficult to see the role of God played by a talented black actor as racist.
There are also countless black actors playing roles with no “magical” powers. It is almost silly to name them. Forest Whitaker, Will Smith, Denzel Washington, Don Cheadle, Jamie Foxx, Eddie Murphy, Cuba Gooding and Halle Berry are just a few. The concept, while having some validity, is over done by those who promote its persistence. As true ethnic and racial equality (legally, politically, and sociologically) has become a virtual reality in America, there seems to be a simultaneous political movement to keep identity politics alive and well. In fact, it is a growth business.
What does all of this have to do with Sotomayor? And why is it a “tragi-comedy”? We now know Sotomayor spent years promoting an odd racial concept, which I parodied in the “Magic Latina.” She has said:
“Whether born from experience or inherent physiological or cultural differences, our gender and national origins may and will make a difference in our judging”. Also, “I would hope that a wise Latina woman with the richness of her experience would more often than not reach a better conclusion than a white male who has not lived that life.”
Sotomayor, ironically, embraced this “Magic Negro” concept by fixating on race, gender and ethnicity as “a”, or even “the” key ingredient in attaining “wisdom,” in this case, judicial wisdom. Clever people might say, “…of course those factors affect judgment.” But so might the fact that we studied math or history; or that we are tall or short; or that we are from Michigan and not Ohio; or that we were born in 1950 instead of 1960; or that our IQs are 120 and not 110; or that we are obsessed with advancement to the exclusion of all else. There are an infinite number of things which go into who and what we are.
The goal of law is to establish an objective standard, however difficult that may be and however difficult that is to put into practice. The “means” by which a Judiciary seeks objectivity, is through the use of Reason. Not intuition, faith, emotion, symbolic thinking, or, as the president so foolishly said, “empathy.” It does not matter that there can be different interpretations. The idea is one must use the faculties of reason to try and achieve a “blind result.” Further, why single out “gender and national origins” as the special differentiating factors? Watching and reading some of Sotomayor’s speeches on this topic over the years is cringe inducing. Of course, during her questioning last week by the Senate Judiciary Committee, she denied any knowledge of such views. These were all just bad word choices and mangled speeches that just somehow got tangled up in blue. She claims not to have ever believed such nonsense. “Her voice was soothing, but the words weren’t clear.”
THE COMIC
History is partially a story of subjugation and conflict. It still persists today in obvious places around the world. Racial, religious, and ethnic conflict also existed in the United States. But Hispanics take a big league back seat to Native Americans and African Americans on that score. Frankly, I cannot see much of a difference between what Italians experienced up until the 1960s and what Hispanics experienced up until the 1980s. In fact, once you hold “the generation” constant-i.e., how many years ago your ancestors immigrated here, there is no ethnic bias to speak of against Italians or Hispanics. My four grandparents came from Italy around 1910 and I know their stories. The experience of Italians obviously does not compare to slavery or Jim Crow. And neither does the experience of Hispanics. The “ethnic conflict” issue today with Hispanics is really an illegal immigration Mexican problem, not a racial or ethnic problem. If Sweden were south of the US and we had such unfettered illegal immigration of Swedes, Chuck Shumer might today be crying about some woman nominee named Helga. (Yes, I realize Sotomayor is Puerto Rican, not Mexican).
But in the game of racial politics, a teary eyed Senator Shumer can see a modern day Rosa Parks when he looks at Sonia Sotomayor; while Dick Durbin sees only a “white man” when looking at Sam Alito. The whole issue, in one sense, is comical. I think I can speak expertly on this topic. I am related to several Hispanic immigrants and am even a father to half Hispanic/half Italian children. I am uncle and/or godfather to a few “all Hispanic” children of immigrants, as well. This trick was accomplished by marrying my wife, a “Hispanic” who emmigrated from Cuba (and who grew up in far worse circumstances in this country than Ms. Sotomayor). I can say with a pretty high degree of certainty that there are few groups who adapt faster to being “instant Americans” than children of Hispanic immigrants. Just add water and stir. Yet my children, nephews and nieces can “check the Hispanic box” on their college applications and presumably get beneficial treatment. It is a joke.
Affirmative action policies were designed in the 1960s to address real racism against Black Americans. Somehow, these policies, originally designed to correct past discrimination of Black people, have been allowed to be glommed onto by every ethnic group under the sun, except those whose ancestors are from Europe (unless you are a female of European ancestry). If one cannot see the humor in this, then comedy is not your bag. This is what happens when neo-Marxist doctrine gets hold of your educational and legal system; all hell breaks loose. It is hip to be a victim of the “dead white male” culture.
THE TRAGIC
When Obama starts apologizing about, and for, America, it makes me ill. However, this is what the left has wrought. What has made the United States exceptional, is its explicit stated foundational principle, written in the Declaration of Independence, “We hold these truths to be self evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of Happiness.” How did we get here from there?
It is difficult to say how. America has always taken its core principles seriously. When reality did not comport to principle, change was promoted until it did. Slavery was abolished and second class citizenry of women was abolished. Change happened legally first, then more gradually relative to true cultural acceptance. An Anti-American philosophy developed in the 1960s and 1970s, to challenge the traditional unifying concept which is the core principle of this country. The concept of Identity Politics has arisen as one of the main “alternatives” to the Founders’ principles. Sonia Sotomayor obviously was an “early adaptor” of this philosophy. She grew up in lower middle class circumstances and graduated valedictorian from the Catholic High School, Cardinal Spellman High . As one can see from the link, it is a pretty good school. My high school was in the same sports league as Spellman. It always seemed like a good school to me.
Yet, her entire identity as an individual almost seems invested in disadvantage, even inferiority, which government action and identity politics saved her from. She has said she is an “affirmative action baby” who scored worse than her classmates on the SATs at Princeton, due to cultural biases in the tests. Assuming there are so called cultural biases in the test, it seems absurd to think a Cardinal Spellman valedictorian would be a victim of such bias. Further, almost as a coping mechanism, she has made herself believe there is some kind of secret or magical wisdom from primarily identifying herself, not as an American, but as a “wise Latina”. But she did not need and certainly did not deserve special treatment. She was quite accomplished on her own. The American system did not prevent her from being successful. Like millions of other Americans through out our history, she worked hard to achieve success. Yet, for reasons of insecurity or bad faith, or worse, bad reasoning skills, she has needed to trumpet a key part of her success to overcoming institutional and cultural obstacles with the help of government mandated affirmative action policies. It is both sad and tragic that she cannot believe that her achievements were hers, and hers alone; neither impeded by cultural or political bias, nor enhanced by government policy. Wouldn’t a better message by her over the years to have been “work hard and in America you can achieve your goals and aspirations”? It is exasperating to see such convoluted reasoning as she has expressed over the years.
The Senate had an opportunity to really get at these issues, but chose basically not to. At least they forced Sotomayor to recant these opinions. This implies that Americans still believe in one nation, not a nation of separate identities. But what does she really believe? Is she the person who believes, as was implied in her 3 judge panel ruling in the Ricci case, that outcomes alone can be evidence of racial bias in an exam (rejected by the Supreme Court in a 9-0 vote)? Or can she finally be a person who no longer needs to kow tow to racial and ethnic politics, now that she will be on the Supreme Court? I don’t know. And the Republican Senators were too afraid to find out.
THE CLOSER
I stated earlier in the essay that true ethnic and racial equality is now a virtual reality in America. The hypersensitivity of people like Spike Lee to certain characters in cinema; and of people like Sotomayor, who trumpet ethnic differences as critical components in the culture (and therefore the judicial process), are out of step with much of American experience. At the very least, the emphasis is misplaced and destructive.
I enjoy watching crime based television shows. I hope to write an essay on one or two in the near future. For once, the entertainment industry, whether purposely or not, seems to implicitly refute these tales of ethnic separation and identity politics. At the very least, their message is a normative one of unity among different ethnic groups. Nothing speaks equality, and better, lack of ethnic hypersensitivity, than a crime fighting unit in a modern television series. These shows mix people of clear and obvious different backgrounds. The implied message, however, is not their differences, but their unity of purpose. The characters are primarily defined by what they have in common, rather than how they are different. A classic example is the series “The Closer.”
Based in Los Angeles, the key characters are a White Texan female (Kyra Sedgwick), a Black sergeant who is her “go-to guy” (Corey Reynolds), a Mexican-American detective (Raymond Cruz), an Asian Lieutenant (Michael Chan), and two white detectives (G.W Bailey and Tony Denison). The show is both comic and a traditional “who done it” mystery. The characters work together to solve crimes. No presumption of ethnic based wisdom is pushed. No victim status is accorded any of the characters.
Watching the Sotomayor hearings was like being in a time warp participating in a 70’s seminar on Marxist politics. They were not in tune with current popular culture. Identity politics is now a money and power scam. Sotomayor was questioned on her ethnic statements, but she was permitted to pretend it was clumsy language. The core of her stated philosophy was never really addressed. One of the “elephants in the room” was the large ghost of Miguel Estrada, who might have made the Supreme Court under Bush, had not the Democratic Senate, for the first time in history, through a filibuster, prevented a vote on his nomination to the DC circuit court. Somehow, Chuck Shumer failed to get teary eyed over that failed vote. Estrada made the mistake of not trumpeting his victim status.
Is the Hartford Fire department really that much of a different place than the fictionalized “Priority Homicide” unit in The Closer? But in a Sotomayor world, if the black guy happens to not pass the test, and the white guy does, that may be prima facie evidence of systematic racial discrimination. In our fictionalized world, the Corey Reynolds character was studying for his Lieutenant’s test at some point in the show. I don’t recall him complaining about its “cultural bias”. If he had, I think the rest of the “Priority Homicide” department would laugh out loud. But in the Senate, we get a 60 year old man crying over Cardinal Spellman valedictorians overcoming cultural bias, discrimination, and adversity, against all odds.
Forget the “tragedy” part. It’s all a joke.





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Of course, Will Smith was the angel of golf, or some such nonsense, in "Bagger Vance". That was a "magic negro". Also Michael Clark Duncan in "The Green Mile". There's more to the "magic negro" than just a black guy with special powers. I think it's more the idea that the white people in the piece all need saving, and the "magic negro" possesses that special wisdom that Sotomayor misspoke about so elequently with her "wise latina" remark.
Also note that, after saving all the white folks the magic negro almost always dissapears, leaving their world the better for his having been there, and yet still strangely, well, white.
This is a hollywood liberal's fantasy?
All of that notwithstanding, Sotomayor's appointment to the Court doesn't really matter. 5 to 4 is still 5 to 4. Did anyone think we were going to get a strict constructionist?
The Sotomayor hearing was a tragi-comedy as you posit. It is funny and sad that the Supreme Court will have a member who can't answer the simple question: "Do people have a right to self defense?"
If anyone has it in mind to run for the Senate, there is an issue which can and should be used against any Senator who votes to confirm such a dolt as this nominee.
What is that old saying something like "the lack of evidence is sufficient evidence" or something.
It is interesting to me that if you replace the word latina with white woman (or heaven forbid "man") in her infamous statement, no one would doubt it was racist.
But, we seem to default on the concept that only white people can be racist. And since they are the only ones that can be, they must be.
So we all realize that being racist is rare and dseverdly is pointed out and ridiculed. Now what about religion? (or a lack there of.) Most of us are embarassed by racism but some people are very open about religious bigotry,
The real tragedy of identity politics is how *racist* it is. Of course, derived from Marxism (and the earlier French materialist economists/ideologues), this is to be expected. It simply takes economic determinism and replaces it with racial determinism. Usually this type of determinism is mixed with an "everybody knows" standard of inclusion of economic determinism – just to keep things extra "victim-y."
I understand that cultural differences can play a serious role in peoples' outlooks on various things. However, if we subject any concept of objective reality to even group mentalities, we are, in fact, rejecting the possibility of objective truth, let alone Truth. This means that we really have no basis for declaring any one thing right or wrong since the very idea of there being "rights and wrongs" depends on the existence of absolutes. Without transcendent absolutes, all of government and law is relative to who is in power (validating Mao's axiom about political power coming from the barrel of a gun) and any appeal to something greater than any individual, or group identity, is vain.
That is why it is not accidental that those who think like Sotomayor and other "progressives" (what a nice little misnomer they have chosen for themselves, no?) also espouse a "living Constitution" theory of jurisprudence. It all depends on who you are. Emotion is the key – if you believe something strongly, it is "wrong" to be criticized for it (which infects even conservatives and, especially, Western Christians within the self-defined circle).
Something I find amusing: if you look around the internet (through Instapundit, Volokh Conspiracy, etc.) you can find links to several liberal attorneys/law professors who eviscerate Sotomayor's answers. One, from Georgetown Law, I think, even said something to the effect of "if she isn't lying, she's incompetent" regarding her answers to a very key juridical question. Personally? I think she did, in fact, lie to cover up her beliefs. But, as in Islam, lying to about your beliefs to keep from being stopped by "infidels," so to speak, is permitted.
the sinner,
Patrick
Is Sotomayor above the law?
Is Sotomayor above the law?
Dr. Richard Cordero's for the past 5 years he has been involved in 11 federal bankruptcy cases, which he has appealed from the U.S. Bankruptcy Court, WBNY, to the U.S. District Court, WDNY, to the Court of Appeals, CA2, and to the Supreme Court of the United States. It is because of his cases in the U.S. Bankruptcy Courts that he discovered certain judges are above the law because no one is stopping them. Dr. Cordero plainly and without apology states that Sonia Sotomayor has been a willing participant in a cover-up in concealing assets as part of a judicially run and tolerated bankruptcy fraud scheme. To protect such concealment of assets by a bankruptcy system insider and her bankruptcy appointee, Judge Sotomayor violated discovery rights by denying every single document in all creditor-requests, which would have exposed a judicially run bankruptcy fraud scheme. "Worse yet, by so doing, Judge Sotomayor failed to protect the single most important Constitutional guarantee that a judge, let alone a Supreme Court justice, is required to safeguard: due process of law." These are very serious charges. Does Dr. Cordero have any proof?
Yes.
In the 173 page questionnaire Sotomayor was required to answer and submit to the committee, she had to disclose ALL cases, see Heading: 13 – Judicial Office on page 87. The list is extensive, but no where will you find the DeLano case. A glaring omission that Sotomayor could not possibly have simply forgotten. She did not list it because to do so would expose her participation.
http://www.judicialwatch.org/files/documents/2009...
http://judicial-discipline-reform.org/SCt_nominee...
In the DeLano case, 06-4780-bk, Judge Sotomayor, presiding, and her colleagues on a panel of the Court of Appeals, 2nd Circuit (CA2), issued a summary order to protect, not the rule of law, but rather their appointee to a bankruptcy judgeship, Bankruptcy Judge John C. Ninfo, II, WBNY.
"He had covered up the concealment of at least $673,657 by the most unlikely of ‘bankrupts’: a 39-year veteran banker who at the time of filing for bankruptcy was and remained employed by a major bank, M&T Bank, precisely as a bankruptcy officer! Both M&T and Mr. DeLano are clients of the law firm, Underberg & Kessler, in which Judge Ninfo was a partner at the time of taking the bench.
Sotomayor, another radical in the gemstones of the OBAMA administration…. the list of WHO'S WHO in LIBERAL politics is getting longer with the addition of a LATINA WOMEN…. it is reverse discrimination/ really discrimination.. the people that cry the loudest about race relations are the ones throwing the bombs…. this administration will be and is the death of a conservative voice as we know it…….
END RANT/
Well, we had a president (Clinton) who committed perjury and only had his license revoked. Essentially, he openly declared himself above the law. And the country (especially the legal sectors) basically said, "yeah, OK, good with us!"
the sinner,
Patrick
How will our nation survive if those who take an oath, whether on the bench or in Congress, stomp on the law and trash the U.S. Constitution in their quest for financial or political gain? By acting as outlaws and gangsters of old, they set the standard for possible anarchy in this country, something no one wants to see. What the American people are seeing is total disregard for the law by elected officials and judges. This is a dangerous situation for our constitutional republic.
History will record that the baby boomers have failed as a generation
Fantastic piece, but you probably want to correct the final paragraph. The fire department was New Haven's, not Hartford's.
Nothing speaks equality, and better, lack of ethnic hypersensitivity, than a crime fighting unit in a modern television series.
I would have to disagree completely. Nothing speaks more of ethnic hypersensitivity than the contrived use of ethnic stereotypes on television. And this is really what the whole "magic negro" argument is. The Hollywood Liberal sits in his cocoon believing he is being a moral arbiter by subliminially "Mainstreaming" interracial harmony, homsexuality and whaterver "moral good" is in their pantheon of liberal beliefs. Unspoken is their belief that they move the culture by "normalizing" via TV's presentation of life the image of society they find morally preferable.
smart man, you sinner, you.
http://judicial-discipline-reform.org/ToE%20C%20A...
Off topic, but when is someone here going to review Maafa 21? It's the best re-branding of abortion evah – "Pro-Choice: The Ultimate Racism"
http://blackgenocide.com/
Oops – moving to open thread now. Sorry
http://judicial-discipline-reform.org/
Hey wait a minute I get right on that……..
Wait a Minute! She isn't a CIA operative or a an Oil Company. What gives here ……………
Kyra Sedgwick's "Brenda " is from Atlanta not Texas. Now that is someone who could have asked the right questions and gotten answers at said hearings.
I finally remembered why I found the "wise Latina woman" line so hilarious. It reminded me of the "Seinfeld" episode where Jerry was dating a Caucasian woman with the last name of "Chang." She starts giving advice to George's mother on the phone and Mrs. Costanza follows all of it because she thinks the girl is Chinese and believes that "Chinese people are so wise." When she discovers that the girl actually white, Mrs. C wails "I thought I was getting advice from a Chinese person. You're just some white woman." Wouldn't it be cool if Judge Sotomayor turns out to be actually Polish and just decided to go with the Latino identification as a good career move.
Let me assure you that her Hispanicness has been thoroughly vetted by a wide range of government entities and that she would have been fired on the spot if she was as you suggest. THAT is the stench of evil that is running this country. And "Law Enforcement" enables this swill.
Sotomayor looks like Silas Greenback from the old DangerMouse cartoons.
But you see, when they get anarchy as a result of their actions, they can step in, declare martial law and secure their power. Damn those pesky elections anyhow. Despite popular projectionist beliefs, the fascist takeover of our country will not come from the right.
Never let a crisis go to waste!
yikes! I am from NJ–all those CT cities must sound alike. I tend to leave errors once it has been posted, tough luck on me–but you are correct—if I can will change
In our country, the law is based upon the Constitution. Plain and simple. Yes, that same Constitution may be amended, and the law changed through due process, but, therefore, not in any other way. Not based upon someone's racial identity, or life experience, or what that person believes the law should mean. Unless this nominee is willing to judge and render decisions based solely upon our Constitution, and not shade that decision by personal experience, this person is not qualified to sit on our SCOTUS.
Dude. Brenda's from Georgia. That's a "Designing Women" accent, not a "Walker, Texas Ranger" accent.
hey, Gov Sanford chased after and got some advice from a wise Latina woman and no one is saying that he is a white doing right…. these double standards are giving us all headaches…. but I guess Obummer will need her as a Supreme once another BIRTH CERTIFICATE case makes it up there and the records need calibrating…..
Well, in fairness to the presiding judge in his case, he was also sanctioned to the tune of $90,000 for his "contumacious conduct." But of course for Clinton partisans, it was all just a witch hunt by a bunch of uptight hypocrites over sex. They seem to have never heard of the disbarment or the very steep sanctions levied against their favorite Commander in Heat.
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