The Obama-Sotomayor judicial 'logic'
...Logic is a terrible thing to waste on those who disagree with liberals, or at least liberals think so. This is one of the consequences of voters making a poor choice. In this case it is one that we will probably have to live with for many years.The consequence of Sotomayor and Obama's bigoted mindset is that they are, by definition, right, and those who disagree with them are wrong. This is classic ipse dixit reasoning, which is to say, reasoning based solely on the assumed superiority of one's standing. Again, this is the reasoning of a supremacist. It is intolerant, bigoted and surprisingly stupid.
The position does not hold up to rational analysis. According to Sotomayor and Obama, a person whose life experience has included a select series of privations is better-equipped to judge that experience than people who have not undergone those privations. This novel way of viewing privation is right out of the 1960s youth culture and the radical left. It is a flawed argument generally recognized as "argument by assertion" or "argument from authority."
One could argue with equal cogency that a person who has suffered these privations is unable to make wise judgments about them. Arguably, the deprived person has been traumatized by privation. In fact, such claims were made by some social scientists before the 1960s. They assumed that people from impoverished backgrounds lack a wider perspective on life. Thus, the deprived person could not judge bourgeois life clearly or impartially. Only a "wise person" free of this experience of privation would be capable of prudent judgment.
By Sotomayor and Obama's reasoning, the best doctors for treating cancer are doctors who have suffered cancer. The best counselors for treating alcoholism are reformed alcoholics or possibly practicing alcoholics. An even more illuminating reductio ad absurdum of Sotomayor and Obama's position is this: The best counselor against suicide is a "wise person" who had attempted suicide.
The problem with their position is that it assumes we are all prisoners of our experience except for Sotomayor and Obama, who somehow have transcended their experience. The rest of us cannot think objectively. In fact, we cannot read the law or the Constitution unimpeded by our backgrounds. Yet Sotomayor and Obama are here to guide and to govern. At some point, perhaps, we will get over this middle-class idea of holding elections. Or maybe Sotomayor and Obama simply will suspend them. They seem to know what is best.
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