Not Courting Evangelicals
One of the historical oddities of George W. Bush's decision to nominate Samuel Alito to the Supreme Court is that if confirmed, he will establish a majority on the court of Roman Catholics. This fact hasn't gotten a lot of comment so far, in part because it is and should be irrelevant to his qualifications, and in part because hardly anyone noticed that Clarence Thomas reverted to his Catholic upbringing in recent years, joining Justices Scalia, Kennedy, and Chief Justice Roberts as Catholic members of SCOTUS.[via NewDonkey.com, HT: Jesus Politics]
Given the brief but intense campaign by some conservative evangelicals to tout Alito's unsuccessful predecessor, Harriet Miers, as establishing an "evangelical seat" on the Court, you have to wonder how they privately feel about yet another Catholic nomination....
None of this, of course, means politicized conservative evangelicals wouldn't be happy with a Justice like Alito, who on the key constitutional issues they care about, has nearly perfect views. But beneath the surface, you do have to wonder what they think about the heavy representation of their ancient enemy, as contrasted with their own invisibility, on an institution that they regard as one of the commanding heights of American society.
This is a comment unrelated to your post (sorry):
ReplyDeleteDo you have any idea why your blog doesn't show up properly (i.e. it's text-only) in Firefox? I have never had any problem with blogspot blogs with the exception of yours.
Somehow the stylesheet isn't being read properly, or something like that. I do hope to deal with it soon...I'm just not sure how to solve it without rechoosing my template.
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