When I heard it was happening, I immediately signed up.
Associate Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor would be
appearing locally (in an onstage interview with Eva Longoria.) She was flacking her new memoir, but this is
America. Who isn’t?
An encounter with a Supreme Court Justice, a current member
of the august body that returned Dred Scott to slavery and later integrated the
schools. You have to go, don’t you? I mean, I
do. Not just to hear her speak, but
– because it is inevitably always about me – to ask her a question.
I knew there’d be questions.
I’m an avid viewer of C-SPAN 2’s “Non-Fiction Weekends”, where
authors speak about their books, and at the end, interested attendees line up behind
stand-up microphones, each of them invited to ask one short, direct question
without making any speeches.
This time, it would be me.
I knew the rules, and was determined to participate.
If my earlier writings had not made it clear, you can chalk
that up to ineptitude over intention.
The concept, crystal clear in my head at least, is the following: The major institutions in this country – law,
government, the economy to name three big ones – do not work. But we pretend they do, because it is deemed
superior to believe something untrue that gives us a reliable sense of order
than to believe something that is true but would cause us to run screamingly
into our houses, close the curtains and pull the blankets over our heads.
Conclusion: We believe
things work because it feels better. Not because they actually do.
Case In Point: The
Supreme Court.
The Year 2000: There
are five Republican appointees and four Democratic appointees. The Court’s decision will determine the outcome
of the presidential election. The
presidency is handed to the Republican nominee. The vote:
Five to four. Precisely along
party lines.
“The system works.”
Really?
The outcome of a case of that nature, and other nationally
important decisions – such as Citizens
United which allowed corporations to spend as much money on political campaigns
as they wanted, which was also
decided along party lines – was at the core of my question for Associate
Justice Sotomayor, the question being this:
“What does it feel like to go into a conference {where they vote} knowing that everybody’s mind is already made up?”
You see what I’m driving at there? “Madame Justice, the revered institution on
which you serve does not really work.
You’re just pretending it
does.”
“The Supreme Court”, he adds glibly, “is just show business,
with robes.”
I ran my question by Dr. M who would be attending the event with
me, and to my amazement, surprise and relief, she did not think it was
stupid. Or embarrassing. Or disrespectful. Or rude.
Glory be! She seemed to actually approve!
Dr. M’s unexpected enthusiasm triggered the arrival of another question:
“Historically, how did the Supreme Court evolve from the least powerful of the three branches of
government to, arguably, the most powerful? (Full Disclosure: This was a rewrite of the original version of
the question, which was, ”What are the ‘checks and balances’ on the Supreme
Court?”, which is rhetorically “know-it-all” because there aren’t any. And my second shot at it was, “How did the
Supreme Court evolve from the least powerful branch of government to being able
to elect a president all by itself?”, which, though it would likely have
garnered applause from the reliably liberal-leaning audience in attendance,
seemed, to me, to be too self-congratulatorily smartass.)
Now that I had two questions to fuel my temporary reprieve
from obscurity – which, even though they were short and direct were still two questions – it occurred to me to
overcome that transgression of the rules by being winningly endearing and
folksy. I instantly restructured my impending
“Moment in the Sun.”
“I have two
questions,” I would begin, take a brief, self-effacing pause and then
say…”because I don’t run into you that often…”
Having charmed them into submission, I would then unsheathe
my two dynamite questions and score big-time, at least in my future
recollection.
You see how prepared I was?
I was determined to score big-time.
At least in my own future recollection.
All right, to draw this out no longer than is strictly
necessary, we arrive at the venue twenty minutes early. As we are about to enter the “orchestra” area
of the theater, we are informed that it is already fully occupied, and we are directed
to the balcony. We wind up sitting half
a dozen rows from the ceiling, among the highest seats in the balcony…
A balcony glaringly featuring no stand-up microphones
whatsoever.
(There were two of them in the “orchestra.”)
It turns out it was okay.
Sonia Sotomayor, an unstoppable dynamo who had doggedly bootstrapped her
way to the top, was there to talk, neither
about the history of the Court, nor its transparent politicization, but to tell
her story and deliver the encouraging self-help mantra: “If I can do it, so can you.”
(I should have known where we were headed from the title of
her memoir: My Beloved World.)
My inquiries, it became clear, would have been jarringly out
of place. From her irrepressible
enthusiasm and her genuine amazement at her supremely improbable rise to power,
my skeptical recriminations would have made me feel the way I once described another misplaced sourpuss:
Like a spider on a birthday cake.
We sat through two questions of Q & A, and then left.
Sonia Sotomayor is one humble, smart, enthusiastic, earthy, inspiring
and classy Associate Chief Justice. And
I honored her that day with my silence.
Of course, if I’d been sitting in the “orchestra”…
That's too bad. I would have liked to hear her answers to your questions.
ReplyDeleteAs far as the Supreme Court getting involved in the 2000 Presidential Election, I was disappointed that they got involved. But (using my own ellipsis-ending sentence), if Al Gore had only been able to carry his home state...
But, Earl, you invariably brought something else up. Is the court a court that reviews whether something is constitutional, or is it simply another legislative body?
ReplyDeleteIt appears to be the latter, and Eleanor Kagan and Sonia Sottamayor seem to prove that, as well.
It goes hand in hand on why nothing works in Washington.