By Becket Adams
Sunday, June 02, 2024
To save democracy and restore the soul of a nation,
members of the American press are prepared to burn everything down, including
the branches of the federal government.
Current target: the conservative-majority United States
Supreme Court.
Leading the charge: the New York Times, ProPublica,
and Rolling Stone magazine.
On May 29, the Times published an
opinion article arguing that the Justice Department should exercise its
authority and force Supreme Court justices Samuel Alito and Clarence Thomas to
recuse themselves from January 6–related cases.
The Justice Department has no such authority. The
article’s author, Democratic representative Jamie Raskin, is talking out of his
hat — par for the course.
Raskin’s preposterous argument represents the latest
salvo in a broader campaign to paint Alito as a corrupt, illegitimate justice.
In fact, Raskin’s op-ed is just one part of a broader effort
spearheaded by the Times, which suggests that Alito is sympathetic
to the January 6 rioters. The paper’s “evidence” lies in a moment
from 2021 when Martha-Ann Alito, in a fit of pique aimed at some particularly childish
neighbors, raised an upside-down American flag, which is understood to be a
signal of distress. The other bit of “evidence” supporting the Times’
thesis is that the Alitos flew the George Washington–commissioned Appeal
to Heaven or Pine Tree flag outside their beach house in New Jersey.
An inverted U.S. flag and the Revolutionary-era Pine Tree
flag are infamous symbols of the “stop the steal” January 6 Capitol riot,
according to the Times and left-wing activists. Notably,
the Times and left-wing activists are virtually the only
groups making this claim. In fact, it did not even make an appearance
until the Times’ reporting, probably because the claim is not true.
Critics of the Court are simply trying to will “facts” into existence. It’s an insidious
bit of gaslighting.
Stories alleging that Alito and his wife are
treasonous-adjacent are outright absurd. It’s cock-and-bull nonsense,
particularly the bit about the Pine Tree flag, which the Times characterizes
as “provocative.” The flag is not “provocative.” It has never been
“provocative.” It’s “provocative” only now because critics of the
conservative-majority Supreme Court need it to be so.
Moreover, the Pine Tree flag was not widely known for any
supposedly insidious “Christian nationalist” undertones prior to the Times’
campaign against Alito — not with the anti-police demonstrators who flew it
throughout the unrest of 2020, nor the New Englanders who fly it regularly, nor
even the city of San Francisco, which had been flying it in front of City Hall
until just last week, when it was removed because the Times and
others now claim that it’s problematic.
It’s clear what’s happening: Political agents invented a
scandal from thin air, alleging “facts” that didn’t exist until they said so.
The record-keepers at the Times and elsewhere then fell into
line, revising the historical record to accommodate the new “truth.”
Meanwhile, you, the reader, are made to feel crazy
because you remember the before times. You remember well that the Pine Tree
flag was not “provocative” until May 16 when the Times told
you it was. You know the flag was not “provocative” until partisan operatives
decided to leverage it against a conservative Supreme Court justice. Those
claiming otherwise are either liars or too stupid to realize they’re being
used. Don’t doubt your memory. You’re not nuts.
What’s worse is that the Times’ hit on Alito
is in service of a greater effort to tear down one of the three branches
of the federal government. Indeed, the Alito smear is just one front in
the war on the Court’s legitimacy. The Times hit comes on the
heels of ProPublica’s sustained campaign against Clarence
Thomas, in which the justice is cast as entirely responsible for the beliefs
and remarks of his wife and in which he is characterized as a corrupt,
bribe-prone crook. Like the Alito smear, there’s not much of anything to ProPublica’s reporting
despite its best efforts to insinuate and suggest otherwise.
Then, there’s Rolling Stone, which published
a report this week exposing the fact that Justice Amy Coney Barret’s husband
is an attorney with clients.
“Amy Coney Barrett’s Husband Is Representing Fox in a
Lawsuit,” reads the scoop’s headline. Its subhead adds, “Supreme Court Justice
Amy Coney Barrett’s husband, Jesse Barrett, is defending Fox Corp. in a
defamation case.”
There’s no need to read beyond the headline and subhead
because there’s nothing newsworthy there.
Prediction: Neil Gorsuch will be the next targeted
justice. Left-wing operatives and their subservient boosters in the press are
simply working their way down the list.
More seriously, the thing that underscores the absurdity
and cynicism of these attacks is the fact that these same newsrooms have
had little, if anything, to say all these years about similar “scandals”
involving the court’s liberal justices.
The late Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, for example, never
disclosed when her husband’s law-firm colleagues had business before the
Supreme Court. Nor did she ever recuse herself from cases involving those
colleagues.
The Times has published 22 opinion and
news articles regarding the Alitos and their flags — twenty-two articles,
some of which were authored by Pulitzer winners. Yet the Times published
exactly zero articles about Marty Ginsburg’s work pals appearing before his
wife at the Supreme Court.
The point isn’t to shout, “What about!” Instead, it’s to
note the Times and others clearly don’t care about judicial
impropriety, “provocative” behavior, conflicts of interest, or the like. They
care only that liberals no longer control the Supreme Court.
It’s almost June, and you know what that means: The
Supreme Court is nearing the end of its term and will be handing down decisions
on a slate of major cases. It’s important to remember the timing here as
the Times and others, who claim to care deeply about democracy
and our institutions, continue their war of attrition against the branch of the
federal government that has slipped, for the foreseeable future, beyond their
control.
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