Stop the beatification of Scalia


I’ve been seeing so many articles praising Scalia, now that he’s dead. He was a consistent jurist; he was enthusiastic and lively; he was best friends with Ruth Bader Ginsburg; he was steadfast and sincere in his beliefs.

I don’t give a fuck.

For me, this is what defines Scalia: his dissenting opinion in Edwards v. Aguillard. The man was a confident ignoramus.

The body of scientific evidence supporting creation science is as strong as that supporting evolution. In fact, it may be stronger…. The evidence for evolution is far less compelling than we have been led to believe. Evolution is not a scientific “fact,” since it cannot actually be observed in a laboratory. Rather, evolution is merely a scientific theory or “guess.”… It is a very bad guess at that. The scientific problems with evolution are so serious that it could accurately be termed a “myth.”

The core of his argument was that the creationists said they were teaching the scientific evidence, and gosh, they sure seem sincere when they insist there is no religious purpose to teaching that the world was created in 6 days and there was a big flood and a boat, so who am I to question them? His originalism and insistence on a strict literal interpretation of what was said was a disingenuous sham that he hypocritically adopted whenever he saw a conclusion he wanted to reach for.

It’s also ironic that he was an affirmative action hire. Maybe he should have been appointed to a lesser court, except that I don’t believe any court in our country would be well-served by a racist dumbass.

Comments

  1. Athywren - Not the moon you're looking for. says

    Rather, evolution is merely a scientific theory or “guess.”

    Um….
    “Rather, the Sahara is merely a desert or ‘sand pit.'”

    Anyway, a certain games-based ragegasm that is still rolling on for some increasingly absurd reason is apparently quite pleased with him – it turns out he was wildly in favour of games… because he didn’t agree with restricting companies’ ability to create violent media or something like that. I’m not quite sure how one follows from the other, although I have to admit that I haven’t currently looked up the exact details of what he said, so maybe there’s something in there about how gaming makes your teeth whiter and your personality brighter?

  2. murwillumbah says

    That quote is out of context. He is paraphrasing the arguments that “creation science” advocates made to the Louisiana Senate.

    The offending quotation comes from a series of numbered paragraphs which are prefaced by:

    Senator Keith and his witnesses testified essentially as set forth in the following numbered paragraphs:

    He’s explicitly not endorsing those opinions. Look back a little further, and he says:

    Before summarizing the testimony of Senator Keith and his supporters, I wish to make clear that I by no means intend to endorse its accuracy. But my views (and the views of this Court) about creation science and evolution are (or should be) beside the point. Our task is not to judge the debate about teaching the origins of life, but to ascertain what the members of the Louisiana Legislature believed.

    His argument is that the lawmakers sincerely believed that creation science was a legitimate science, because that is what had been presented to them by “Senator himself and from scientists and educators he presented, many of whom enjoyed academic credentials that may have been regarded as quite impressive by members of the Louisiana Legislature.” (Italics mine.)

    Call his argument tendentious if you will, but he certainly did not mean what you’re accusing him of meaning.

  3. Matthew Trevor says

    Are you so out of touch with most of America, most of which believes in the Devil? I mean, Jesus Christ believed in the Devil! It’s in the Gospels! You travel in circles that are so, so removed from mainstream America that you are appalled that anybody would believe in the Devil! Most of mankind has believed in the Devil, for all of history. Many more intelligent people than you or me have believed in the Devil.

    That has to be my favourite Scalia quote. He doesn’t even try to hide the batshit crazy.

  4. says

    #3: That’s my point: when convenient, he’d invoke intent and ignore evidence to support views he wanted to be true. So he recites these idiotic lies of the creationists, and then declares that because Louisiana congressvermin believed these lies, the law was OK.

    Somehow, I don’t think if a murderer were on trial, and said they didn’t commit the crime, that Scalia would then give up and say that because he seemed sincere, we ought to ignore the evidence.

  5. says

    I agree with murwillumbah – in context it’s clear that Scalia was paraphrasing the arguments put forth by creationists, not endorsing them.

    I also find the sudden love for Scalia pouring forth from liberal outlets tiresome; it’s as if they are so afraid to be seen speaking ill of the dead they’ve had their common sense glands removed. But on the basis of this opinion alone it seems pretty unfair to characterise him as a creationist or a poor thinker.

  6. says

    Jesus.

    Here are these arguments. I’m not saying I believe them, I’m just going to leave them lying here. Well, I’m going to repeat them. See, I’ve just distilled down all these words to this core set of ideas, and reiterated them strongly for you. But no, no, no, I don’t really believe them, although I’m not going to say what’s wrong with them, or present any of the arguments against them. It’s just that the lawyers presenting them were so sincere and honest, and gosh they made a good case.

    Here you go, a nice pile of quotes. Meanwhile, I’ll just go stand over here in the corner, whistling innocently. It’s not as if I’m expected to judge their veracity.

    You realize that’s the argument you guys are making, right?

  7. says

    @#9, PZ:

    What, you don’t like the way Scalia did his job? Well, don’t ask for any big changes for his replacement. That kind of head-in-the-clouds, idealistic revolution is totally unrealistic. What we need is a pragmatic, gradual approach. Minor changes. That’s all we can hope for, because asking for anything truly different would be too much. Baby steps.

    So, for example, maybe we could get a far-right weasel who twists words in support of Mormonism. Or we could follow the transhumanist route and somehow upload Scalia’s mind into a female body — all the same prejudices, but better gender diversity! Or into a black man — even better, because it would be a smaller change, and big changes are bad and unrealistic. We need realpolitik — we must defer to the experience of establishment politicians, and there’s nobody more “establishment politician” when it comes to the Supreme Court than Scalia himself.

  8. throwaway, butcher of tongues, mauler of metaphor says

    vicar @10

    What, you don’t like the way Scalia did his job? Well, don’t ask for any big changes for his replacement. That kind of head-in-the-clouds, idealistic revolution is totally unrealistic. What we need is a pragmatic, gradual approach. Minor changes. That’s all we can hope for, because asking for anything truly different would be too much. Baby steps.

    * fatal eyeroll *

    I know you know the difference here in this situation. But sure, go ahead and falsely equivocate in a satirical whine about how your idealism was put in its proper context of the rate of change of political mindsets when there are no revolutions involved. I’m sure you feel better now that your snark put everyone else in their place.

  9. daemonios says

    I was surprised to see an overview of cases where Scalia made the right call, namely concerning privacy rights and illegal searches.

    OTOH Scalia also said creationist views are scientific, opposed equal rights for same sex couples, was pro-guns and once said, in not so many words, that the US constitution doesn’t give a fuck whether a death row inmate is actually innocent… In the end, I agree his legacy as a Supreme Court justice will be very unflattering.

    That said, many people have stated that for all his infuriating conservatism, Scalia was basically a good person. There are many people with whom I strongly disagree but who are good people nonetheless. I have nothing against bashing the man’s opinions, but wouldn’t mind seeing less bashing of the person.

  10. murwillumbah says

    #9: No, not remotely like any argument I’m making. I didn’t think Scalia was endorsing “creation science” at all. He never says they made a good case. He doesn’t even say that the “creation scientists” were being honest. What he does say is that they made their case in ostensibly secular terms.

    The dissent you linked to is not an opinion piece about evolution versus “creation science”; it’s a legal opinion about whether a particular law violates the principle that the government can’t make laws to favour or disadvantage particular religious groups. Different questions.

  11. says

    Demanding that people not insult a dead person is a reasonable thing to ask, and I said nothing about Scalia for that reason. Although I wish you good luck getting the sancitmonious and self-righteous to behave the same way (re: the deaths of Kurt Vonnegut and Katherine Hepburn).

    But demanding that people not factually talk about a person’s life, not talk about the person’s actions (criminal, unethical or other), not talk about their egregious views and their own words, is beyond insulting. Tim Russert was a war cheerleader, Jerry Falwell was a hateful bigot, Tony Snow was a mouthpiece for rationalizing war crimes. None of them and their actions should have been off limits, and Scalia certainly shouldn’t be either.

  12. says

    Oh my. “Quotes not in context.” Well, looks like Scalia is going to get the Harris treatment. Glad I’ll be going into town today. I’ll leave another Scalia quote here, though, one made last June, at a Catholic school, not a court:

    “Class of 2015, you should not leave Stone Ridge High School thinking that you face challenges that are at all, in any important sense, unprecedented,” he said. “Humanity has been around for at least some 5,000 years or so, and I doubt that the basic challenges as confronted are any worse now, or alas even much different, from what they ever were.”

    Emphasis mine. I’m sure all the rational context!ers can figure it out.

  13. redwood says

    Just as people always seem to know what God wants (the same things they want, doncha know), Scalia always seemed to know what the writers of the Constitution wanted–why, the same things he wanted. What a coincidence!

  14. Saad says

    But Caine, don’t you see he said “at least some 5,000 years.”

    When you have evidence that he supports creationism, post it.

    /s

  15. ModZero says

    That said, many people have stated that for all his infuriating conservatism, Scalia was basically a good person.

    He didn’t just disagree with those people over the superstring theory, he actually harmed innumerable people. Whoever says he was “basically good” just doesn’t think about those harmed as people.

  16. Athywren - not the moon you're looking for says

    @Caine, 15

    Humanity has been around for at least some 5,000 years or so

    Well… that’s definitely not false information – we haven’t been around for less than 5,000 years or so. But, yeah, a rather recent lower bound.
    Conservative estimates state that we’ve been here since at least lunch time.

  17. says

    Saad @ 17:

    But Caine, don’t you see he said “at least some 5,000 years.”

    Ah yes, the difference between thousands and millions is so easily confused. Yep.

    Whoever says he was “basically good” just doesn’t think about those harmed as people.

    It’s interesting, how much people will howl over a Catholic priest, bishop, cardinal, whatever, as not being basically good, because all the harm, but are more than willing to skip right over Scalia’s being a seriously devoted Catholic, and upholding Catholic views as often as he could.

  18. says

    Athywren:

    we haven’t been around for less than 5,000 years or so.

    :snort: I suppose if someone wanted to twist enough, they could attempt to argue this didn’t imply creationist belief, however, 5,000 years is the mantra of the YEC crowd.

  19. frog says

    His originalism and insistence on a strict literal interpretation of what was said was a disingenuous sham that he hypocritically adopted whenever he saw a conclusion he wanted to reach for.

    SO. MUCH. THIS.

    Everyone who defines him as a strict Constitutional literalist seems unable to parse logical fallacies and see how Scalia consistently interpreted everything through the lens of his ideology.

    Being a talented sophist doesn’t make one a deep thinker.

  20. Vivec says

    This liberal push to talk nicely about someone who gleefully supported sodomy laws and opposed abortion has definitely hardened my heart since I first heard he died.

    The world is better off without him, and I’m glad that he died. Not as any sort of punitive, karmic retribution, but because he’s no longer around to hurt people and further systems of oppression. The odious little goblin did everything in his power to make the world a worse place, and I’m not going to celebrate or respect a life spent hurting people.

    Scalia, and all his defenders (including the “don’t talk ill of the dead you meanie” liberals) can get fucked.

  21. dobby says

    Really sad that NPR did not have anyone on with a negative opinion of him. Nobody pointed out his bigotry, or the number of people he hurt. And nobody but nobody to question his “originalism”. Sad.

  22. Reginald Selkirk says

    murwillumbah #3″ His argument is that the lawmakers sincerely believed that creation science was a legitimate science, because that is what had been presented to them by…

    I.e. they said they were sincere, so they must be sincere. Because courts are unable to discern willful fraud. Even though courts do so on a routine basis.

  23. Menyambal says

    In the Second Amendment case, Heller, Scalia was certainly wrong, and certainly justifying the conclusion that he wanted to reach. The dissent puts forth the scholarly arguments against his view. The man was a hunter – he was out shooting things on his last day – and he knew what he wanted the Second Amendment to mean.

    The Supreme Court had no business getting involved in Bush v Gore, and no justification for the conclusion it reached. Scalia was deep in that, and deserves blame for everything W Bush did to this world. Scalia carried out a coup, and every fan seems to think he loved this country and followed the law.

    All the praise of Scalia makes him sound like a used-car salesman. Jolly sincerity and fast talk are not what I look for in a Constitutional scholar.

    And good golly. He was a Catholic – a few decades back that would have kept him from political office, but now it matters not a whit? How can people think he wasn’t pushing that religion’s viewpoint?

  24. Dunc says

    Everyone who defines him as a strict Constitutional literalist seems unable to parse logical fallacies and see how Scalia consistently interpreted everything through the lens of his ideology.

    This reminds me of a chap I met once who claimed that his church was the only one that didn’t “interpret” the Bible… Reading is a fundamentally interpretive act – and I don’t mean that in some fine-parsing “what is the meaning of ‘is’?” kind of way, I mean that it is literally impossible to read or hear anything at all without filtering it through your own mental schema.

    However, that’s not the argument I would usually employ against “constitutional originalism”, since it’s a bit post-modern for a lot of people… No, the argument I normally prefer to opt for is that it’s fucking stupid. It’s the sort of idea that you have to dress up in a lot of fancy talk and ten-dollar words in order for people not realise how obviously ridiculous it is. Times have changed, and interpretations need to change with them.

  25. Bruce Fuentes says

    #13 You seem to be completely ignoring the paragraph following the quotation.
    “The core of his argument was that the creationists said they were teaching the “scientific evidence”, and gosh, they sure seem sincere when they insist there is no religious purpose to teaching that the world was created in 6 days and there was a big flood and a boat, so who am I to question them? His originalism and insistence on a strict literal interpretation of what was said was a disingenuous sham that he hypocritically adopted whenever he saw a conclusion he wanted to reach for.”

  26. raven says

    This don’t speak ill of the dead meme is useless.

    I had nothing good to say about Scalia when he was alive. Why should his death make any difference?

    In fact, I don’t make a practice of cheering when someone dies. There are exceptions though. I cheered when Jerry Falwell died and smiled when I heard about Scalia.

  27. Scientismist says

    Of course Scalia was a good man. A good man does God’s work here on earth. He was appointed to a high government position, proving that he was selected by God to do God’s work through government. This was difficult for others to see, as democracy obscures the will of the almighty, which in previous times was directly evident, as in the selection of a king through war and personal combat. Government and its courts wield the power of God, and this must be made clear to the people, who must be protected from the excesses of democracy.

    Scalia clearly believed all of the above. He said so in an article defending his position on capital punishment (“God’s Justice and Ours”). The dissent that PZ posted just shows Scalia doing what he was always careful to do, protecting the people, to the best of his ability, from the tendency of such democratic and humanistic institutions as science to diminish the importance of God in human affairs. He was a good man, if you mean by that a man who identifies his own opinions so closely with those of an imagined unevolved cosmic intelligence that it is simply unthinkable to ever question them. if an uncritical acceptance of a gross misrepresentation of science helps to keep God in the public schools, then that’s all good, too.

  28. raven says

    Scalia’s dissent in Edwards was just plain cuckoo.

    Since when is sincerity of belief a criterium for what is right and true? ISIS is sincere. Osama bin Laden was sincere. It is just irrelevant We don’t determine scientific theories and facts by the sincerity of scientists. We use data.

  29. Nerd of Redhead, Dances OM Trolls says

    Scalia was a religious bigot, and it showed in his work. He simply could not have his or or any other True Believer’s sincere beliefs topped or diminished by secular arguments. You see this bigotry in his “ceremonial deism”, a way to bring his imaginary deity into public events. You see it in his abortion arguments, where he was unable to question RCC mythology on abortion. You see it in his opposition to gays having the same rights as straight people, and the ability to have consensual sex with anybody in the privacy of their bedroom. It shows up in the arguments that a CEO’s sincere belief trumps government employment policies.
    In all these areas he wasn’t a true constitutional scholar. The constitution was second to religious fuckwittery.

  30. says

    I’m not glad he’s dead.
    I’m glad he’s off the supreme court.

    I can’t tell for sure but when he died it sounds like he was enjoying an all-expenses paid hunting junket at the Cibolo Creek lodge – which is one of those “hunting” lodges that offers oligarchs an opportunity to blast birds that are released from cages for their convenience. It’s not the same one where brave hero Dick Cheney had his quail hunting accident, but it’s the same idea: a bunch of oligarchs waddling around with guns blasting birds that are chased toward them. Kaiser Wilhelm and Hitler were into it too, as was Napoleon Bonaparte — in a funny little historical quirk, Bonaparte shot Marshal Massena’s eye out with pellet. So Cheney was merely making a historical nod to another over-important asshole who invaded too many places. Not that Hitler or the Kaiser were slouches in that department, but at least they didn’t shoot their hunting buddies.

    Bird Hunts
    A most remarkable hunting experience on the ranch is our pheasant and chukar shoots, available for eight or more hunters at a time. These take place at the base of a bluff from which the birds fly in a style similar to a European driven bird hunt. Hunters who participate are always thrilled by the shoot – and so are the spectators who watch. An open-air breakfast…

    (Cibolo Creek website)

  31. tkreacher says

    I actively hoped he would die, and I am glad it has happened.

    As for “friends and loved ones”, if I have a friend or loved one who establishes they are a vile bigot, they are no longer a “friend or loved one”. And if that “friend or loved one” was in a position to do incredible harm to others, and, for fucks sake, put the god damn world’s population at further risk – are you kidding me?

    Fuck his “friends”, too.

  32. says

    About Justice Scalia’s “originalist” approach to the Constitution:

    […] To law students who pointed out that it was the flexible, not the originalist approach that enabled Brown and other civil-rights breakthroughs, he’d reply that “Even Mussolini made the trains run on time,” or “Hitler developed a wonderful automobile. What does that prove? I’ll stipulate that you can reach some results you like with the other system. But that’s not the test.” In short, he never did reconcile originalism with Brown. And any legal philosophy that cannot be squared with that moral high point of the modern Supreme Court is fatally flawed. […]

    http://www.newyorker.com/news/news-desk/postscript-antonin-scalia-1936-2016

  33. stillacrazycanuck says

    There are many reasons to deplore the approach taken by Scalia to his responsibilities, but the passage PZ quoted from Edwards is not one of them. It is common, and indeed very useful, for jurists to summarize the competing evidence and legal theories advanced in a case, before or as part of the discussion of the legal principles that the jurist will apply.

    Doing so is not evidence that the jurist shares the opinions he or she has just summarized, especially when, as here, he prefaces his summary with an explicit disclaimer. It may well be relevant, to an understanding of his dissent to recognize that he appeared to think that the challenge was premature because the Act had not been implemented and there was no trial on the basic issue of whether Creation Science was science or religion: merely opinions voiced in the context of argument, and not judicially tested, as happened in Dover.

    It may be that his ignorant religious beliefs corresponded with the outcome, but bear in mind that he was a strong Catholic and as such might well accept the church’s position that evolution does have scientific validity (altho the church can’t bring itself to eliminate a supernatural role on some important issues). Catholic doctrine does not, as far as I am aware, accept YEC.
    As for the 5,000 year comment, he may (and I am guessing) have been thinking about recorded history of humans rather than the creation of all life. Then again, he might simply have been batshit crazy. In short, we do ourselves no favours with those who do not share our views when we engage in the sort of quote-mining that we deplore in others

  34. Artor says

    Daemonios @12 “I have nothing against bashing the man’s opinions, but wouldn’t mind seeing less bashing of the person.”

    Could you please explain how you separate the person from that person’s opinions? Scalia held odious opinions, and was able to enshrine many of those into law, causing measurable harm to millions of people. That makes Scalia as odious as the opinions he forced upon us. I, for one, cheered when I heard of his demise, and there were enthusiastic high-fives all around among my friends. Fuck that slimy rat-bastard, and good riddance!

  35. anteprepro says

    Moar from Saint Scalia:
    (Source is his wikipedia page)

    In 2004, in Rasul v. Bush, the Court held that federal courts had jurisdiction to hear habeas corpus petitions brought by detainees at the Guantanamo Bay detainment camp. Scalia accused the majority of “spring[ing] a trap on the Executive” by ruling that it could hear cases involving persons at Guantanamo when no federal court had ever ruled that it had the authority to hear cases involving people there.[53]

    Scalia (joined by Justice John Paul Stevens) also dissented in the 2004 case of Hamdi v. Rumsfeld, involving Yaser Hamdi, an American citizen detained in the United States on the allegation he was an enemy combatant. The Court held that although Congress authorized Hamdi’s detention, Fifth Amendment due process guarantees give a citizen held in the United States as an enemy combatant [Hamdi] the right to contest that detention before a neutral decision maker. Scalia wrote that the AUMF could not be read to suspend habeas corpus and that the Court, faced with legislation by Congress which did not grant the President power to detain Hamdi, was trying to “Make Everything Come Out Right”.[54]

    In March 2006, Scalia gave a talk at the University of Fribourg, in Switzerland, where he was asked about detainee rights. He responded, “Give me a break … I had a son on that battlefield and they were shooting at my son, and I’m not about to give this man who was captured in a war a full jury trial. I mean it’s crazy.”[55] Though Scalia was not referring to any particular individual, the Supreme Court was about to consider the case of Salim Ahmed Hamdan, supposed driver to Osama bin Laden, who was challenging the military commissions at Guantanamo Bay.[55] A group of retired military officers that supported Hamdan’s position asked Scalia to recuse himself, or step aside from hearing the case, which he declined to do.[56] The Court held, 5–3, in Hamdan v. Rumsfeld, that the federal courts had jurisdiction to consider Hamdan’s claims; Scalia, in dissent, contended that any ability by the Court to consider Hamdan’s petition had been eliminated by the jurisdiction stripping Detainee Treatment Act of 2005.[57]……

    The Court returned to the issue of abortion in the 2000 case of Stenberg v. Carhart, in which it invalidated a Nebraska statute outlawing partial-birth abortion. Justice Stephen Breyer wrote for the Court that the law was unconstitutional as it did not allow an exception for the health of the mother. Scalia dissented, comparing the Stenberg case with two of the most reviled cases in Supreme Court history: “I am optimistic enough to believe that, one day, Stenberg v. Carhart will be assigned its rightful place in the history of this Court’s jurisprudence beside Korematsu and Dred Scott. The method of killing a human child … proscribed by this statute is so horrible that the most clinical description of it evokes a shudder of revulsion.”[69]

    In 2007, the Court upheld a federal statute banning partial-birth abortion in Gonzales v. Carhart.[70] University of Chicago law professor Geoffrey R. Stone, a former colleague of Scalia’s, criticized Gonzales, stating that religion had influenced the outcome as all five justices in the majority were Catholic, whereas the dissenters were Protestant or Jewish.[71] This angered Scalia to such an extent that he stated he would not speak at the University of Chicago as long as Stone is there.[72]……

    Five years later, in Adarand Constructors, Inc. v. Peña he concurred in the Court’s judgment and in part with the opinion which extended strict scrutiny to federal programs. Scalia noted in that matter his view that government can never have a compelling interest in making up for past discrimination by racial preferences,

    “To pursue the concept of racial entitlement—even for the most admirable and benign of purposes—is to reinforce and preserve for future mischief the way of thinking that produced race slavery, race privilege and race hatred. In the eyes of government, we are just one race here. It is American.[74]”

    In the 2003 case of Grutter v. Bollinger, involving racial preferences in the University of Michigan’s law school, Scalia mocked the Court majority’s finding that the school was entitled to continue using race as a factor in admissions to promote diversity, and to increase “cross-racial understanding”. Scalia noted,

    “This is not, of course, an “educational benefit” on which students will be graded on their Law School transcript (Works and Plays Well with Others: B+) or tested by the bar examiners (Q: Describe in 500 words or less your cross-racial understanding). For it is a lesson of life rather than law—essentially the same lesson taught to (or rather learned by, for it cannot be “taught” in the usual sense) people three feet shorter and twenty years younger than the full-grown adults at the University of Michigan Law School, in institutions ranging from Boy Scout troops to public-school kindergartens.[75]”

    …….

    In one of the final decisions of the Burger Court, the Court ruled in 1986 in Bowers v. Hardwick that homosexual sodomy was not protected by the right of privacy and could be criminally prosecuted by the states.[78] In 1995, however, that ruling was effectively gutted by Romer v. Evans, which struck down a Colorado state constitutional amendment, passed by popular vote, which forbade anti-discrimination laws being extended to sexual orientation.[79] Scalia dissented from the opinion by Justice Kennedy, believing that Bowers had protected the right of the states to pass such measures, and that the Colorado amendment was not discriminatory, but merely prevented homosexuals from gaining favored status under Colorado law.[80] Scalia later said of Romer, “And the Supreme Court said, ‘Yes, it is unconstitutional.’ On the basis of—I don’t know, the Sexual Preference Clause of the Bill of Rights, presumably. And the liberals loved it, and the conservatives gnashed their teeth.”[81]

    In 2003, Bowers was formally reversed by Lawrence v. Texas, from which Scalia dissented. According to Mark V. Tushnet in his survey of the Rehnquist Court, during the oral argument in the case, Scalia seemed so intent on making the state’s argument for it that the Chief Justice intervened.[82] According to his biographer, Joan Biskupic, Scalia “ridiculed” the majority in his dissent for being so ready to cast aside Bowers when many of the same justices had refused to overturn Roe in Planned Parenthood v. Case …….

    Scalia believed that the death penalty is constitutional.[87] He dissented in decisions that hold the death penalty unconstitutional as applied to certain groups, such as those who were under the age of 18 at the time of offense. In Thompson v. Oklahoma (1988), he dissented from the Court’s ruling that the death penalty could not be applied to those aged 15 at the time of the offense, and the following year authored the Court’s opinion in Stanford v. Kentucky sustaining the death penalty for those who killed at age 16. However, in 2005, the Court overturned Stanford in Roper v. Simmons and Scalia again dissented, mocking the majority’s claims that a national consensus had emerged against the execution of those who killed while underage, and noted that less than half of the states that permitted the death penalty prohibited it for underage killers……In 2002, in Atkins v. Virginia, the Court ruled the death penalty unconstitutional as applied to the mentally retarded. Scalia dissented, stating that it would not have been considered cruel or unusual to execute the mildly mentally retarded at the time of the 1791 adoption of the Bill of Rights, and that the Court had failed to show that a national consensus had formed against the practice.[89]………

    And more: http://abcnews.go.com/Politics/OTUS/supreme-court-justice-antonin-scalias-political-outbursts/story?id=16694778

    [On the Supreme Court reversal of the Voting Rights Act]
    “There’s no question that the Voting Rights Act has done enormous good.” But he said that when Congress reauthorized it, it should have considered a new determination of which states should be covered. “Maybe the whole country should be covered. Or maybe certain parts of the country should be covered based on a formula that is grounded in up-to-date statistics, ” he said…..

    [In support of Citizens United]
    “I don’t care who is doing the speech — the more the merrier. People are not stupid. If they don’t like it, they’ll shut it off.”….

    [Against the Equal Protection Act]
    “”Sorry, to tell you that. … But, you know, if indeed the current society has come to different views, that’s fine. You do not need the Constitution to reflect the wishes of the current society. Certainly the Constitution does not require discrimination on the basis of sex. The only issue is whether it prohibits it. It doesn’t. Nobody ever thought that that’s what it meant. Nobody ever voted for that. If the current society wants to outlaw discrimination by sex, hey we have things called legislatures, and they enact things called laws. You don’t need a constitution to keep things up-to-date. All you need is a legislature and a ballot box. You don’t like the death penalty anymore, that’s fine. You want a right to abortion? There’s nothing in the Constitution about that. But that doesn’t mean you cannot prohibit it. Persuade your fellow citizens it’s a good idea and pass a law. That’s what democracy is all about. It’s not about nine superannuated judges who have been there too long, imposing these demands on society.”
    ….
    [A cross on public land]
    In response to the statement that Jews would not want their tombs marked with a Christian symbol, Scalia said, “The cross is the most common symbol of the resting place of the dead. What would you have them erect? Some conglomerate of a cross, a Star of David and, you know, a Muslim half moon and star?”

    “I don’t think you can leap from that to the conclusion that the only war dead that that cross honors are the Christian war dead,” he continued. “I think that’s an outrageous conclusion.”
    …..
    [In support of physical interrogation]
    “Is it really so easy to determine that smacking someone in the face to determine where he has hidden the bomb that is about to blow up Los Angeles is prohibited in the Constitution?”

    And some good reads on a terrible man:
    https://newrepublic.com/article/106441/scalia-garner-reading-the-law-textual-originalism
    http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2014/08/the-twilight-of-antonin-scalia/378884/
    http://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2014/06/scalia-v-scalia/361621/

  36. Scientismist says

    stillacrazycanuck @38:

    he was a strong Catholic and as such might well accept the church’s position that evolution does have scientific validity

    On the other hand, we know that he did not accept the position of the Catholic Church on the death penalty. The man was convinced that he, not the Church, spoke for God, and that he, being appointed to the court by God, had the divine right and duty to work God’s will through his court opinions. He was a thoroughgoing theocrat who believed that the expressions of his own bigotries, hatreds and ignorance were God’s will, not his, so why should he ever re-examine them or consider the plight of the mere humans whose lives he blighted.

    I’ve been mentally singing “Ding Dong, the Witch is Dead” since Saturday; but that’s not fair. The Wicked Witch of the West at least took ownership of her own evil.

  37. Athywren - not the moon you're looking for says

    @Scientismist

    I’ve been mentally singing “Ding Dong, the Witch is Dead” since Saturday; but that’s not fair. The Wicked Witch of the West at least took ownership of her own evil.

    Unless you accept the Truth of Wicked into your heart and recognise The Wizard of Oz as the blatant anti-witch propaganda that it is, in which case the worst that can be said of her is that she was an ornery SJW!
    (#endwitchshaming)

  38. unclefrogy says

    He was a smug, arrogant authoritarian who had an exalted opinion of himself and his ability to think and write. Who thought his opinions were always the correct ones. He would have found a fine place for himself in service to a King. He is dead and no apologetics, no glowing eulogies are going to change that nor bring him back
    uncle frogy

  39. Bruce Fuentes says

    #38 Crazycanuck
    You are misrepresenting what PZ is saying in his post. Read the paragraph after the quote and PZ’s responses in this thread.

    In my mind Scalia would look in much better light if he indeed was saying these things himself. Because that would just show that he was an ignoramus scientifically. This decision does not show this but it also does not show he did not believe in YEC. There are other comments out there that show he very might well have been an adherent of YEC. You and I have no idea what he actually meant but his religious views certainly hint that he was not talking about any sort of recorded history. Scalia was always very careful and prepared with his words.
    Instead of confirming he was an ignoramous scientifically this dissent shows him in even worse light. As others have shown his criteria is reaching a decision is horribly skewed. Sincerity of belief is a terrible criteria to determine anything in the legal realm. That this was his criteria shows what a flawed, vile Justice he was. Actually, using the name Justice for him would be a misnomer.

  40. violet says

    Following up on this as well:

    Daemonios @12 “I have nothing against bashing the man’s opinions, but wouldn’t mind seeing less bashing of the person.”

    Yes, it’s quite easy to take this sort of high ground when the man’s opinions didn’t affect you personally. But I don’t blame people for wanting to bash his person, when he made a living out of bashing theirs. He was particularly nasty to homosexuals and he was in favor of the death penalty even if some of the people put to death were actually innocent. More than 150 people have been exonerated from death row and he wrote all those people off as an acceptable loss. He was okay with legal bigotry as long as a majority of people in a state were sufficiently bigoted. That does not fit my definition of a good person and I think someone who didn’t hesitate to get personal in his Supreme Court decisions should be spared from personal criticisms in life or death. I also think that if the man explicitly didn’t care if a person died unnecessarily, or if a person was made criminal for being born a certain way, then said people are perfectly justified in bashing his person.

  41. billroberts says

    I have to agree.

    To quote one of his most famous dissents “This Court has never held that the Constitution forbids the execution of a convicted defendant who has had a full and fair trial but is later able to convince a habeas court that he is “actually” innocent. Quite to the contrary, we have repeatedly left that question unresolved, while expressing considerable doubt that any claim based on alleged “actual innocence” is constitutionally cognizable.”

    In my opinion, the man was a sociopath. How else can one account for such a casual attitude toward justice?

  42. raven says

    He is dead and no apologetics, no glowing eulogies are going to change that nor bring him back.

    So we hope.

    No matter what, don’t pull that wooden stake out of his heart!!! Just in case.

  43. chrislawson says

    To those defending Scalia’s reference to the creation scientists — I suggest reading his dissent again. What’s he’s done is sprinkle a thick layer of legal bullshit over it to make it look like he’s just quoting them. It’s the equivalent of a journalist saying “I’m not calling the President a goat-sucking alien, I’m just reporting on the rumour that he’s a goat-sucking alien.” How do I know this?

    1. He says that it should not matter what the judges themselves believe about the scientific integrity of the creation scientist position.
    2. Despite the fact that it should not matter, he then quotes/paraphrases the creation scientists position at length detailing exactly the kind of information he claims is not relevant to the case.
    3. He later refers to these beliefs as “statements of fact”.
    4. For a man happy to quote the creationists at length (even though he says it does not matter) he does not quote or paraphrase one single paragraph from the opposing side, even going so far as to ignore all the evidence they provided that creation science is a religious, not a scientific belief.

    That alone should be enough to convince you that Scalia was buttering up for the creationists, but then let’s add…

    5. Scalia argues that the Lemon test should be abandoned…
    6. Scalia argues that the First Amendment means that the government “must advance religion”…
    7. Scalia argues that any even remotely secular side-benefit means that any legislation is OK by the 1st Amendment — in his view, a law that mandated wearing of a large cross in public schools would be acceptable provided the legislators mentioned the secular economic benefits to cross makers in a meeting some time.

    In short, he was not just quoting the creationists, he was cheerleading for them.

  44. says

    @#11, throwaway, butcher of tongues, mauler of metaphor

    I know you know the difference here in this situation. But sure, go ahead and falsely equivocate in a satirical whine about how your idealism was put in its proper context of the rate of change of political mindsets when there are no revolutions involved. I’m sure you feel better now that your snark put everyone else in their place.

    Considering that Hillary Clinton’s criticisms of Sanders’ call for a “revolution” involve deliberately ignoring the fact that he was using it as a metaphor, which he explained when he used it, you can go pound sand.

    Besides, how do you know that replacing Scalia with a more liberal judge isn’t “outside the rate of change of political mindsets”? The Republican Party, who Hillary Clinton apparently believes she can work with (which, in practice, will translate into “whose bills Hillary Clinton is apparently willing to pass”) certainly thinks we ought to have a replacement who is as far-right as he was. If we’re going to permit them to dictate what is and isn’t possible on other matters of policy, why is the Supreme Court exempt? Clinton’s claim, like so much else she has said in this campaign, doesn’t bear scrutiny.

  45. a_ray_in_dilbert_space says

    The fundamental problem with Scalia as a Jurist: He was trying to interpret a classic document of the enlightenment (the constitution) with a pre-enlightenment mind.