Thursday, April 28, 2005

Scalia Sodomy Commenter Makes Statement

Eric Berndt, the student who, so wonderfully, asked Scalia what Scalia would have policemen asking everyone else ("Do you sodomize?"), has made an explanatory statement -- well worth reading!

From The Nation, 18 April 2005:

Debriefing Scalia

Editors' Note: Justice Antonin Scalia got more than he bargained for when he accepted the NYU Annual Survey of American Law's invitation to engage students in a Q&A session. Randomly selected to attend the limited-seating and closed-to-the-press event, NYU law school student Eric Berndt asked Scalia to explain his dissent in Lawrence v. Texas, the 2003 Supreme Court case that overturned Bowers v. Hardwick and struck down the nation's sodomy laws. Not satisfied with Scalia's answer, Berndt asked the Justice, "Do you sodomize your wife?" Scalia demurred and law school administrators promptly turned off Berndt's microphone. As Berndt explains in his post to fellow law school students, it was an entirely fair question to pose to a Justice whose opinion--had it been in the majority--would have allowed the state to ask that same question to thousands of gays and lesbians, and to punish them if the answer is yes. We reprint Berndt's open letter below.

Fellow Classmates,

As the student who asked Justice Scalia about his sexual conduct, I am responding to your posts to explain why I believe I had a right to confront Justice Scalia in the manner I did Tuesday, why any gay or sympathetic person has that same right. It should be clear that I intended to be offensive, obnoxious, and inflammatory. There is a time to discuss and there are times when acts and opposition are necessary. Debate is useless when one participant denies the full dignity of the other. How am I to docilely engage a man who sarcastically rants about the "beauty of homosexual relationships" [at the Q&A] and believes that gay school teachers will try to convert children to a homosexual lifestyle [in oral argument for Lawrence]? [more at LINK]

Thursday, April 21, 2005

Major Human Rights Conviction (Spain/Argentina: Scilingo)

SPAIN: ARGENTINE OFFICER CONVICTED
New York Times "World Briefings" 20 April 2005, p. A8


The National Court convicted Adolfo Scilingo, a former Argentine naval officer, of crimes against humanity during Argentina's 1976-1983 military dictatorship. It was the first conviction under a law that allows courts here to prosecute crimes in other countries if they constitute violations of international law. Mr. Scilingo is expected to serve 30 years in prison. He admitted throwing dissidents from planes into the sea but later retracted the confession. Renwick McLean (NYT)

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Much more detailed article here:

'I don't try to justify myself'
The Guardian
Thursday April 21, 2005

This week a former Argentinian naval officer who threw 30 prisoners to their deaths from planes was jailed for 640 years. In court he protested his innocence, but Giles Tremlett recalls the day he heard his chilling confession [more at link]

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I just read these articles tonight after watching Polanski's film, [second link -- spoiler warning-->] Death and the Maiden... Great film, incredible coincidence. Netflicks it today while the news is still warm.

Saturday, April 09, 2005

Republicans invoking Stalinist anti-communism

This is incredible: as reported in the Washington Post (and which I read about on AmericaBlog), the "culture of life" Republicans, at a meeting to discuss how to crush judges who oppose killing children, declared that Supreme Court Justice Anthony M. Kennedy (who voted against killing children) "upholds Marxist, Leninist, satanic principles drawn from foreign law" [as lawyer Edwin Vieira put it] given that he had voted to decriminalize sodomy.

Their solution for routing out such communist behavior? A Stalinist one (!!) "
Vieira continued by saying his 'bottom line' for dealing with the Supreme Court comes from Joseph Stalin. 'He had a slogan, and it worked very well for him, whenever he ran into difficulty: "no man, no problem," ' Vieira said. The full Stalin quote, for those who don't recognize it, is "Death solves all problems: no man, no problem.' "