Pubdate: Mon, 09 Jul 2007 Source: News Journal, The (Wilmington, DE) Copyright: 2007 The News Journal Contact: http://www.delawareonline.com/newsjournal/opinion/index.html Website: http://www.delawareonline.com/newsjournal/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/822 Author: Harry F. Themal Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/Bong+Hits+4+Jesus (Bong Hits 4 Jesus) THIS SUPREME COURT LEAVES BAD PRECEDENT When the legacy of George W. Bush is measured by future generations, Iraq in all its dimensions may well be the key factor in labeling him one of our most misguided presidents. Historians may concentrate on his administration's usurpation of authority and disdain for the U.S. Constitution's balance of powers between the three branches of the government. Yet no effect will probably be more lasting than Bush's appointments of Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Samuel Alito. Much has been written about the Supreme Court's turn-around decisions this term on school desegregation, late-term abortion and campaign financing. The pattern that struck me as the most frightening is the court's failure to honor individual rights and access to the courts -- a trend Delawareans had already seen when Alito served as a judge on the Third Circuit Court of Appeals. He was the only one of 12 judges to favor the DuPont Co. over the head captain in the Hotel DuPont's Green Room, who sued under the Civil Rights Act because she was squeezed out of her job after she complained. Barbara Sheridan won a jury verdict and eventually a cash settlement. But Alito's lone-wolf dissent in 1995 resounded in his Supreme Court confirmation hearings a decade later. The test Alito wanted to apply to prove discrimination would almost have precluded anyone's being able to sue and win. Alito used the same specious reasoning this term in his Supreme Court opinion throwing out the lawsuit of a female supervisor at an Alabama tire factory who for years was paid less than her male counterparts. The court ruled 5-4 she should have filed her complaint 180 days after her paycheck was drawn, not when she discovered the discrepancy, even though salaries were a closely held secret at the company. Alito and the court overturned decades of contrary decisions by the courts and federal agencies in favor of workers. Alito was also part of the 5-4 majority in an even more egregious case of the court's stepping on individual rights. An Ohio prisoner convicted of murder filed an appeal by the deadline set by a federal judge, who had misstated the date. The appeal came a few days after the deadline in federal statutes. The judge was wrong, but Justice Clarence Thomas wrote, in effect, that's just too bad and the inmate is out of luck as the court reversed previous allowances for "unique circumstances." Another instance of citizens being denied their rights involved the Alaska high school student who held up a sign at a parade reading, "Bong Hits for Jesus." He was not on school grounds. No one could interpret what he meant. Yet the court ruled again 5-4 that his First Amendment protection of free speech did not apply, that the school could discipline him because he might have been advocating the illegal use of drugs. Other Supreme Court decisions questioned who really has standing even to be allowed to bring cases into federal court. Sen. Joseph Biden, who closely questioned Alito during confirmation hearings and voted against him (as did Sen. Thomas Carper) recently wrote in the Miami Herald, "The court's newest members are rewriting the Constitution according to their vision and remaking the court - long a protector of human dignity and liberty, a tribunal before which David and Goliath stand on equal footing - in their image. They've already turned the court upside down - and this is only their first term." Last week at an Iowa barbecue Biden called Bush "brain-dead." In 18 months this country will be rid of Bush, Vice President Cheney and their acolytes. Yet no matter who is sworn in in 2009, this country will suffer for decades under the mean-spirited, anti-individual philosophy of this Supreme Court. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek