Dear Mr. President,
The departure of Justice Scalia has left an immediate
vacancy on the Supreme Court. I am
hereby humbly – my hands are shaking as I write this – applying for that
job.
I am not talking “Lifetime Appointment” – that is
understandably out of the question. I
would not actually want that. Who wants to physically deteriorate in
public?
I am thinking about a temporary
appointment – until the next president is elected. I believe I can capably handle things in the
interim, which includes months of “Vacation Adjournment” so we are talking
about a few weeks. A handful of
cases. Hopefully easy ones.
I believe that what I am proposing here for is doable. Correct me if I’m wrong – I am aware you used
to teach this stuff – but I have this recollection from the “Constitutional
Law” class I took recently at UCLA
Extension that to serve on the Supreme Court, you do not necessarily have to be an attorney.
In that case, a guy who wrote for Taxi and The Larry Sanders
Show is not unilaterally disqualified.
Okay, I only “consulted” on Larry
Sanders, but still.
I understand that what I am suggesting is radical, but I am
convinced it’s not crazy. Why not, for
the first time in history, appoint a “regular person” to the Supreme
Court? Instead of… – Man, I’d hate to be
wrong about this; it would knock a big hole in my credibility – having, as we
have now, justices, all of whom were
appellate judges. Or at least judges. I may be “off” with the “appellate.” Forgive me.
I’m ignorant, and I’m scared.
Think about that. One
hundred percent Supreme Court Justices with the same background. And not a single person from show business. Can that really be acceptable?
Here’s something
you probably already know.
Other countries – you can Google which ones because I do not know them offhand – offer
appointed triumvirates, mixing “lay” people and practicing attorneys, injecting
a variety of experiences into the adjudicating procedure.
So there’s precedent.
Unless by “precedent” you mean American
precedent, in which case there isn’t. As
you see, I can talk like an attorney if I have to. Although I am not certain that’s a “plus”.
Two Questions You May Want To Ask Me:
Question One:
“Are you qualified to serve on the Supreme Court?”
Technically, I am not.
I did attend law school for
six weeks, which I imagine, as a qualification, is hardly sufficient. And it was a Canadian law school at that.
The thing is, applying the commonly accepted standard of “qualified”
would preclude a vast number of us from gaining ascendancy to the Highest
Court in the Land, leaving only attorneys for effective consideration.
I do not know this for certain, but barring a person from
serving on the Supreme Court because they are not an attorney when it is not a
Constitutional requirement that they be
an attorney – that sounds like “workplace discrimination” to me. Should that be happening at the Supreme
Court? I mean, “Holy Frankfurter!”
Question Two:
“Can you be impartial?”
Okay, this is going to be controversial. But in my view, no judges are impartial. You
want evidence? Every important Supreme
Court decision that’s gone 5-to-4 along ideological fault-lines.
I have never understood this. There’s a “Confirmation Hearing” for Supreme
Court Justice. The candidate’s record as
a lower court judge reflects that, when ideological considerations are involved,
they rule consistently in what can be
objectively determined to be a liberal or conservative direction. A senator on the Judiciary Committee then asks,
“Can you be impartial?”
It seems to me the only honest answer they can give to the
question of impartiality is:
“Well I haven’t been so far.”
What do I offer as candidate for temporary Supreme Court
Justice? Honesty. Punctuality.
And, holding my biases in check, an unequivocally open mind. Rest assured, I will not “nickel-and-dime”
you on compensation. I’ll take whatever
you’re offering. A “pro-rated”
arrangement comes to mind. You can
“round up” or “round down”. I am not
losing this job over pennies.
Mr. President, we have an opportunity to be bold. Try something memorable. Something for the
history books beyond “He was the first African-American president” and “He liked
to sing.”
You want to go the “traditional” route? Fine.
See where that gets you. Tipoff:
“Guantanamo – open or closed?”
Will it be easy? Of
course not. But to those who say that my
confirmation to the Supreme Court is an unfathomable “Hail Mary”, I say: Mr. President,
Drop back…
And let it fly.
Sincerely,
Earl Pomerantz.
(Applicant for the opening at the Supreme Court.)
(Note to Readers:
If any of you knows President Obama or somebody who does, I’d appreciate
it if you would pass this along. Thank
you.)
You'll be competing for the open seat with Chuck Lorre: http://chucklorre.com/index.php?p=518
ReplyDeletewg
Maybe you and Chuck could get a time share on an associate's chair.
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