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Watch: Thomas Sowell Schools Joe Biden in Congress

Few figures in conservativism are more revered than Thomas Sowell

A free-market economist, social‌ theorist⁢ and philosopher, Sowell’s work has spanned decades and influenced generations.

Sowell wrote a nationally ⁢syndicated column, authored ⁣dozens of books and ​dazzled ⁣television audiences time ‌and time again with his common sense, anti-intellectual approach to political and cultural issues.

The following ⁤story is part of The Western Journal’s exclusive series “The Sowell Digest.” Each issue​ will‍ break‌ down and summarize one of Sowell’s many influential works.

In 1987, Thomas Sowell appeared before the Senate Judiciary Committee to testify in support of Judge Robert Bork, whom then-President‍ Ronald ​Reagan had nominated⁣ to the‌ U.S. Supreme Court.

Sowell opened with a statement defending Bork’s record and views. Then, he answered questions from the ‍committee chair, Democratic Sen. Joe Biden of​ Delaware.

Both Sowell’s opening statement and his answers to Biden reflected the intense atmosphere surrounding the nomination hearing. ​As usual, Sowell made his case with restrained eloquence, but ⁤he also knew​ that important principles⁣ were at stake. While endorsing Bork,⁤ Sowell ⁤gave a powerful defense of both equality before the law and constitutional originalism.

Reagan announced Bork’s nomination on ⁣July 1. Liberal Democrats responded,⁢ as they always have, by stoking‌ fear and playing⁣ what⁤ we now call “identity politics.” Democratic Sen. Ted Kennedy of Massachusetts took the ⁤lead.

“Robert Bork’s America is a land in which women would be forced into ‍back-alley abortions, blacks would ⁢sit at segregated lunch‌ counters, rogue police could break down citizens’ doors in midnight raids, schoolchildren ⁢could not be ⁤taught about evolution, writers and artists could be⁣ censored at the whim of the ⁣Government, and the doors of the Federal courts would be shut on the fingers of millions‌ of‌ citizens,” Kennedy said according ⁢to the New York Times.

Thus, with the ⁤slanderous charge that Bork supported “segregated lunch counters,” among other things, Kennedy set the tone⁢ for the most contentious Supreme Court nomination in‍ U.S. history.

It was⁤ in ​this context that Sowell ​appeared before Biden’s committee.

In⁤ his opening statement, Sowell rejected the Democrats’ use of categories such as sex and race to evaluate Bork’s record.

“The ​statistics thrown around ⁢recklessly as to how Judge‌ Bork has ⁢allegedly voted against⁤ women X percent of the time, or for some⁢ other class of litigants Y percent of the time, are⁢ no more reliable than the definitions used by the special-interest sources from which they come,” Sowell​ said.

Then, Sowell made it ⁤clear that‌ he spoke for ‌the principle of⁢ equality before the​ law.

“Civil rights need‍ to be understood not simply as a special benefit to minorities ⁤but‍ as ‍something essential to everyone,” he said.

Later, Biden ‌engaged Sowell on the subject of school desegregation.

The exchange revealed much confusion ‌on Biden’s part — a confusion common among those on the political left who struggle to understand certain aspects of constitutional originalism.

For instance, in the 1950s and 1960s,⁤ a leftist and a constitutional originalist would have agreed on the need for school desegregation. However, where a‌ constitutional originalist would have said⁤ that segregation violated the Constitution,​ a leftist would have ‌argued that the ​government had‌ a special responsibility to ​look after certain groups and to adjudicate their ⁤interests according ⁤to historical grievances, ⁣which required that judges expand the Constitution’s original meaning to suit modern needs.

Sowell made all of this ⁣clear in ⁢his ​exchange with Biden.

“The problem is not whether you ​believe that school segregation should have ​ended. I believe that it should have ended long‍ before. Judge Bork believes it should have ended long before. What he and what I have objected to are the principles used⁣ in that decision ​because those principles take on a life of their own, and they come back to haunt you in other areas. Obviously, there’s this old ‍phrase ‘hard cases make bad law’ derived from that fact. You dream ‍up a principle to ⁤reach this result, and then the principle has a life of its‍ own,” Sowell said.

Biden ⁢ seemed⁣ confused.

“So the⁣ principle of desegregating‌ the schools,” he began ⁢before Sowell quickly ​interrupted and corrected⁣ him.

“No. That ⁣wasn’t the principle. The‍ principle was the ‍reason that they picked for it,” Sowell said.

“Well, that’s all I’m saying. OK. The reasons they picked for desegregating the schools you and ‌Judge Bork agree were wrong principles and they, should have not, the court shouldn’t have ​done that,” Biden said in a vain attempt to clarify.

“No. No. The court should have done it,” Sowell replied. “Both of ​us have said the court should ⁤have done⁤ it. And in my case and I​ think in his case the court ‌should⁤ have done it ⁤a lot sooner,” he added.

“How?” Biden asked.

“They should have ruled that it wasn’t equal protection of ⁤the law because nobody in his right mind believes⁢ that there was equal protection of the law in the Jim Crow Era of these school⁢ systems,” Sowell responded.

“I’m just trying to figure out what you’re saying,” Biden said.⁤ Clearly, the chairman of ‍the Senate ‍ Judiciary⁣ Committee was out of his depth.

Sowell then reached his argument’s crescendo. In short, he said,‍ anyone who supports special treatment under the ‌law supports the principle of segregation.

“See, this is ‌what bothers ‍me. People are talking about how judges should be⁢ sensitive to this particular group or that particular group, and if that means ⁤anything, if⁤ it means⁢ he’s applying the law differently, that’s precisely⁣ how blacks were ‍held down for generations in the South, by applying the law differently,” Sowell said.

It was a masterful conclusion to an impressive ​testimony.

Biden, who struggled to follow Sowell’s reasoning, refused to recommend Bork for the⁢ full Senate’s approval. On ⁣Oct. 23, 1987, the Senate voted 58-42 against⁢ confirmation.

The ‍post Watch: The Time Thomas Sowell Schooled Joe Biden in Front⁤ of Congress appeared first on The Western‌ Journal.



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