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  • Miers Hit on Letters and the Law

    This Washington Post article does a pretty good job of exhibiting the incompetence of Bush's nominee. She simply can't write well enough to be a Supreme Court justice. These people have to write opinions and dissents that go on record for the rest of the country's history, and this woman writes like an 8th grader.

    Miers Hit on Letters and the Law
    Writings Both Personal and Official Have Critics Poking Fun

    By Charles Babington
    Washington Post Staff Writer
    Saturday, October 15, 2005; Page A07

    Supreme Court confirmation battles usually involve excavations of the nominee's judicial opinions, legal briefs and decades-old government memos. Harriet Miers is the first nominee to hit trouble because of thank-you letters.

    Miers's paper trail may be relatively short, but it makes plain that her climb through Texas legal circles and into George W. Bush's inner circle was aided by a penchant for cheerful personal notes. Years later, even some of her supporters are cringing -- and her opponents are viciously making merry -- at the public disclosure of this correspondence and other writings from the 1990s.

    Bush may have enjoyed being told by Miers in 1997, "You are the best governor ever -- deserving of great respect." But in 2005 such fawning remarks are contributing to suspicion among Bush's conservative allies and others that she was selected more for personal loyalty than her legal heft.

    Combined with columns she wrote for an in-house publication while president of the Texas Bar Association -- critics have called them clumsily worded and empty of content -- Miers may be at risk of flunking the writing portion of the Supreme Court confirmation test, according to some opponents.

    "The tipping point in Washington is when you go from being a subject of caricature to the subject of laughter," said Bruce Fein, a Miers critic who served in the Reagan administration's Justice Department and who often speaks on constitutional law. "She's in danger of becoming the subject of laughter."

    Blogs are posting satirical Miers correspondence featuring made-up grammatical errors. Via e-mail, authentic Miers quotations have raced around the country, prefaced by derisive comments about her qualifications.

    One example, from a May 1996 letter asking George and Laura Bush to appear at a ceremony honoring her, displayed both an obsequious tone and a tortuous prose style. "I am respectful of both of your great many time commitments and I realize you receive many, many requests," she wrote. "Of course, I would be very pleased if either of you is able to participate. However, I will be pleased with your judgment about whether participating in this event fits your schedule whatever your decision. . . . I feel honored even to be able to extend this invitation to such extraordinary people."

    This was among the Bush gubernatorial correspondence released this week by the Texas State Library, and posted on Web sites, including the Smoking Gun. Miers was Bush's personal lawyer and lottery commission chairman when he was Texas governor and later became his White House counsel. Her letters have provided recent fodder for sarcasm for writers such as Gerard Baker in the conservative magazine the Weekly Standard. "Miers has delivered some thundering dictums in her various legal and paralegal roles," Baker wrote in a column first published in the Times of London. He cited a 1997 handwritten card that mentioned Bush's daughters: "Hopefully Jenna and Barbara recognize that their parents are 'cool' -- as do the rest of us. . . . All I hear is how great you and Laura are doing. . . . Keep up all the great work. Texas is blessed!"

    From the White House vantage point, such commentary is hardly a laughing matter. In part because she does not have a long record of serious constitutional writings -- in contrast to recently confirmed chief justice John G. Roberts Jr. -- Miers may be at particular risk of being turned into a judicial equivalent of Vice President Dan Quayle. Until his stumbling national debut, Quayle had been regarded as a bright senator from Indiana, but he never fully recovered from the initial blast of mockery.

    Fair or not, late-night comics have picked up the Miers thread. NBC's Jay Leno suggested the court may need "a woman who's had more courtroom experience, like Courtney Love." CBS's David Letterman envisioned Miers exclaiming as she watched the New York Yankees botch a playoff game: "And they call me unqualified?"

    Among those defending Miers is former Bush speechwriter Matthew Scully. In a New York Times op-ed column yesterday he called Miers an exacting writer and lawyer and hailed her "enormous legal ability." Earlier in the week, the Times's conservative columnist David Brooks savaged the columns Miers wrote in the early 1990s as president of the State Bar of Texas. "The quality of thought and writing doesn't even rise to the level of pedestrian," Brooks wrote. Passages he called typical of her "vapid abstractions" included: "More and more, the intractable problems in our society have one answer: broad-based intolerance of unacceptable conditions and a commitment by many to fix problems."

    Fein said he is more concerned about Miers's legal thinking than her syntax, especially as outlined in her three-page letter to then-Gov.Bush on June 11, 1995, when she was the former state bar president. The letter implored Bush to veto a bill moving through the Democratic-controlled legislature that would have prevented the state Supreme Court from capping lawyers' fees.

    "This proposed law does violence to the balance of power between the legislative and judicial branch of our State's government and constitutes an assault upon the powers of the Supreme Court" just as it had fallen into "Republican hands for the first time," Miers wrote.

    Fein said it is outrageous to invoke separation-of-powers arguments when a legislature -- wisely or not -- tries to foster free enterprise. By citing the GOP's new control of the Texas Supreme Court, he said, Miers seemed to be seeking a partisan outcome on shaky constitutional grounds.
    Emphases mine. The first because I just find it funny, and the second because it's just so badly written. She's using an adjective (your) as an object of a preposition. That's not even grammatically possible, and furthermore, it makes for a very ugly sentence. "I am respectful of both of your great many time commitments." All two of the time commitments, I suppose.

    And that's not even getting into the ridiculous obsequiousness.

    I fully expect her to become another justice's lapdog, if she gets confirmed at all. I really hope she doesn't, but I fear that Bush will be able to leave a legacy of idiocy that lasts beyond his time.
    "You're the biggest user of hindsight that I've ever known. Your favorite team, in any sport, is the one that just won. If you were a woman, you'd likely be a slut." - Slowwhand, to Imran

    Eschewing silly games since December 4, 2005

  • #2
    Your is an adjective? Huh, so it is. I would have never expected it.
    "Compromises are not always good things. If one guy wants to drill a five-inch hole in the bottom of your life boat, and the other person doesn't, a compromise of a two-inch hole is still stupid." - chegitz guevara
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    Jasonian22: Bill, you are STILL young and stupid."

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    • #3
      Frankly I'm happy she's been nominated. It's fun watching the consies tear themselves to pieces

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      • #4
        Originally posted by Kuciwalker
        Frankly I'm happy she's been nominated. It's fun watching the consies tear themselves to pieces
        Hey, I said the exact same thing in the thread about the nomination.
        Tutto nel mondo è burla

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        • #5
          Originally posted by Bill3000
          Your is an adjective? Huh, so it is. I would have never expected it.
          Yes, your is an adjective, and only an adjective. Not to be confused with "yours," which is generally a pronoun (as in "My team is better than yours")
          "You're the biggest user of hindsight that I've ever known. Your favorite team, in any sport, is the one that just won. If you were a woman, you'd likely be a slut." - Slowwhand, to Imran

          Eschewing silly games since December 4, 2005

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          • #6
            Originally posted by Jaguar

            Yes, your is an adjective, and only an adjective. Not to be confused with "yours," which is generally a pronoun (as in "My team is better than yours")
            More properly, "your" is a determiner. Contrast it with a "pure" adjective like "red": you can say "Your dog is nice" but not *"Red dog is nice"; "The red dog is nice" but not *"The your dog is nice". Other determiners include "the", "a", "this", that", "many", etc.

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            • #7
              Originally posted by Boris Godunov
              Hey, I said the exact same thing in the thread about the nomination.
              Which I didn't read

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              • #8
                Why do you have a picture of a waffle with a quarter on top of it as your avatar?
                12-17-10 Mohamed Bouazizi NEVER FORGET
                Stadtluft Macht Frei
                Killing it is the new killing it
                Ultima Ratio Regum

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                • #9
                  This is a great bit from an NYT story:

                  ‘‘You know, she’s a very gracious and
                  funny person,’’ said Joshua Bolten, the
                  director of the Office of Management
                  and Budget, whom Miers succeeded as
                  deputy White House chief of staff in
                  2003. ‘‘I was racking my brain trying to
                  think of something specific.’’

                  In the next breath, Bolten recalled re-
                  laxing with her at Camp David. ‘‘She is a
                  very good bowler,’’ he said. ‘‘For
                  someone her size, she actually gets a lot
                  of action out of the pins.’’
                  Golfing since 67

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                  • #10
                    And let's add yet another glowing testimonial from another Bushie:

                    "She was always pleasant, always polite, always being tough as the paper kept moving," said former White House press secretary Ari Fleischer. "Is that a skill you need to be a Supreme Court justice? No, I don't think so."
                    Loyalty is the paramount virtue in the Bush White House. I've learned that the hard way: Every time I've predicted that some Bush appointee or other...


                    I'm with Boris and Kuci on this one.
                    "I have as much authority as the pope. I just don't have as many people who believe it." — George Carlin

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                    • #11
                      The more and more I read about this, the more I'm convinced it was a clever trap by Senator Frist.
                      Christianity: The belief that a cosmic Jewish Zombie who was his own father can make you live forever if you symbolically eat his flesh and telepathically tell him you accept him as your master, so he can remove an evil force from your soul that is present in humanity because a rib-woman was convinced by a talking snake to eat from a magical tree...

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                      • #12
                        God I hope she isn't confirmed and he has to choose someone both conservative and intelligent.
                        I make no bones about my moral support for [terrorist] organizations. - chegitz guevara
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                        • #13
                          Originally posted by chegitz guevara
                          The more and more I read about this, the more I'm convinced it was a clever trap by Senator Frist.
                          Did you mean Reid? 'Cuz I don't know why Frist would do such a thing...
                          Tutto nel mondo è burla

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                          • #14
                            Originally posted by Boris Godunov
                            Did you mean Reid? 'Cuz I don't know why Frist would do such a thing...
                            I think he's saying that Frist wants the Dems to use up their political capital on Miers and have little left for the actual nominee.
                            “I give you a new commandment, that you love one another. Just as I have loved you, you also should love one another. By this everyone will know that you are my disciples, if you have love for one another.”
                            - John 13:34-35 (NRSV)

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                            • #15
                              I've not seen anything that has ever indicated that Frist had anything to do with the selection of Miers. But lots of people have posited that since Miers was on a "suggested" list of candidates Reid gave to Bush, it was some trick to get Bush to nominate someone who would divide the right. I don't buy it, though.
                              Tutto nel mondo è burla

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