I've taken some flack in the last 24 hours due to some celebratory
words on the death of former Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia.
But this "do not speak ill of the dead" business is the
ultimate in hypocrisy. Are people saying that we need to observe some
kind of revisionist history as soon as someone dies?
It's important to not just remember but remind people of the
suffering Scalia caused and the irreversible damage to the country
and even the world he has wrought.
As a matter of fact, Scalia's legacy is one of hypocrisy, his
so-called "originalism" being a convenient myth to be
turned on and off to justify predesignated results that supported
his vision of American fascism.
Brilliant? Yes... brilliantly diabolical. He is the father of the
very corporatism many of us seek to reverse this elections season.
What better time to discuss that legacy than upon his death and the
death of the Scalia era of constitutional abuse?
You'll get no apologies from me. I'm deliriously happy one of, if
not the most murderous figures of our time is dead. People claim that
every life is precious. But there's a unique irony here in welcoming
the death of someone who has made so many lives so cheap.
How many women have died- or worse lived lives of poverty and
misery- due to lack of abortion services?.. How many guns are on the
streets killing our kids? How many state-sanctioned murders- often of
people too poor to buy their way out or even of the wrong person- has
he caused? How many died in Bush's wars after Scalia appointed him?
Now is not the time to be silent.
In a way we're really debating the old canard regarding
whether one would go back in time to "kill baby Hitler" but
with the "twist" of asking whether we should be happy if
someone else did.
By law, death was the only way Scalia's reign of terror was going
to end. And it couldn't have come a day too soon.
Personally I'm long beyond the youthful folly of blanket
pacifism in the face of powerful- for lack of a better word- evil.
That doesn't indicate any less of an adherence to the principles of
non-violence, just a recognition that the death of an active
oppressor can be time for celebration.
Frankly, I'm still kind of apprehensive of the flying monkeys.
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