Magicians call it misdirection. You focus your audiences attention in one spot so they don’t notice the sleight of hand elsewhere. Magicians use misdirection to entertain. Politicians use misdirection to pull of the unconscionable in full view of the American people.
Judge Sonia Sotomeyer isn’t particularly notable in any sense. She’s not the first hispanic nominated for a position on the Supreme Court. She’s not even the first female to be nominated. Indeed, Reagan gets credit for putting the first woman on the Supreme Court. None of the judges can claim more than a partial hispanic heritage to date (and none have been bothered with the notion of promoting a mixed ancestry as any kind of qualification). The Obama administration and their surrogates in the media have done a splendid job, however, of promoting her selection as historic, ‘the first latina’ one headline proclaimed. It’s true in a technical sense, just not particularly noteworthy.
Sotomeyer is notable for the political baggage she carries. She is an activist judge who uses the bench to write new laws designed to shape society towards a idealogical goal. The Obama administration has little hope of seeing her succeed to the Supreme Court. And they know this. If it happens, then it’ll be a quick political score. However, the real reason for the selection of Sotomeyer is to serve as a sort of agent provocateur. The Obama adminstration knows full well that whoever they nominate will meet resistance from Republicans (a party in opposition with no real leadership does this as a matter of course). By making the target a female, a minority, they frame the debate as one of identity politics and not issues. Republicans will oppose her - they are right to do so - and they will expend all of their political ammunition in trying to prevent her from getting to the bench. They will muddy the waters, they will fail to respond substantively to questions of racial and gender equality believing that most people understand their concerns are solely the dangers of judicial activism in a society based on laws and they will end up being cast in the stereotype of old racist white men that they’ve always been portrayed as. They may win, succeeding in blocking Sotomyers appointment, but it will be a Pyrrhic victory. Then Obama will be free to nominate anyone he wants, and enjoy a smooth and quick appointment.
Make no mistake; Sotomeyer is not qualified for the Supreme Court. She has repeatedly and blatently ignored the letter of the law, issuing opinions which amount to confessions of seeking social justice at the expense of equal protection under the law. She is beyond a simple racist, having committed herself to philosophies of absolute bigotry when, in a 2001 address to the University of Berkeley law school titled “A Latina Judge’s Voice”, she stated:
“I would hope that a wise Latina woman with the richness of her experiences would more often than not reach a better conclusion than a white male who hasn’t lived that life.”
We as a society have long passed the point where we look at race, gender or religion as a deciding factor in how we regard people on professional levels. There is still a quiet racism that exists in social circles, and while this is still unacceptable from the standpoint of ethics, its the best we can expect from society only 40 years removed from race riots that brought martial law down on American cities. The Dream Dr. King spoke about still exists at a time known as “one day”, but we continue to progress towards that day as a society. But in the realm of politics, race and gender is still a stick used to bludgeon people in arguments over political ideology. We the electorate are guilty; we still allow ourselves to be misdirected by superficial aspects of politicians instead of their true nature.
Leaving Sotomeyer, I’d like to comment on the vegetative state of the right wing of the American political spectrum. The Obama administration and the modern left have been successfully waging a war against the right for nearly 4 years now. (The war is actually 12 years old; the successful portion is over the previous four.) Their guidebook is Saul Alinsky’s “Rules for Radicals”, which in my opinion is roughly equivalent to Sun Tzu’s “Art of War” in it’s depth, clarity and applicability to any situation which is more or less a conflict between groups of people. Republicans, like their mascot, are slow and do not display any apparent political intelligence. They should be adopting both these texts and incorporating them into their playbooks. Right now, the right is being slaughtered. There is no leadership coming from anyone in the Party establishment. There is no backbone within the apparatus. As a party in opposition, the GOP is ineffective and unable to speak for itself. Even the media is unable to find qualified political candidates or activists from the right to speak on behalf of the GOP; centrists, moderates and even Democratic leaders have had to fill the gap. As a dispassionate and political observer of politics, it’s sad. As a party member and qualified conservative, it’s infuriating.
As a nerd, science buff and and futurist, I could give two shits about the GOP. Scientists at the Lawrence Livermore National Labs have finally delivered Death-Star quality lasers! We’ve had some powerful lasers before, including prototypes flown on the ABL capable of destroying ICBM’s in flight. This laser, however does something no other laser has ever done - it can be used to jumpstart a nuclear fusion reaction with less energy than what the reaction produces. One problem with fusion power systems to date is that it takes more energy to start the reaction than we could recoup from the reactor in its lifetime. By using this laser as the ignition source, we can initiate nuclear fusion with a relatively small amount of input energy. This brings us one step closer to safe, powerful and efficient power generation that can propel our technological society forward like a shot from a cannon. And we can use it against Klingons.

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