Chattanooga Times Free Press

MARILYN MONROE V. SAMUEL ALITO

-

WASHINGTON — I was watching Vogue’s live feed as Kim Kardashian tried to walk the red carpet at the Met Gala in her skintight, flesh-tone dress, gallantly helped up the stairs by Pete Davidson. I flashed back to Marilyn Monroe on another May night in Gotham, doing similar mincing steps in a similar shimmering dress she was sewn into, when she suspired “Happy Birthday” to JFK.

Then Variety sent out a news bulletin that Kim was actually wearing Marilyn’s dress.

As I was contemplat­ing the comeback of this sartorial symbol of American seduction, I got another news bulletin: The Supreme Court was going to yank away the right of women to control their own bodies, strapping us into a time machine hurtling backward.

The two simultaneo­us emails were a perfect distillati­on of America’s bizarre duality — our contradict­ory strains of sexuality and priggishne­ss.

Justice Samuel Alito’s antediluvi­an draft opinion is the Puritans’ greatest victory since they expelled Roger Williams from the Massachuse­tts Bay Colony.

Alito is a familiar type in American literature: the holier-than-thou preacher, so overzealou­s in his attempts to rein in female sexuality and slap on a scarlet letter that one suspects he must be hiding some dark yearnings of his own.

Newt Gingrich pursued Bill Clinton like Inspector Javert, even as he was having an affair with a young political aide (whom he later married). And prissy Ken Starr hounded Monica Lewinsky, producing a seven-volume report that read like a panting bodice-ripper, full of lurid passages about breasts, stains and genitalia.

The 1999 version of Donald Trump, when he was still a fan of the Clintons and boasting that he was “pro-choice in every respect,” was appalled. “Starr’s a freak,” he told me back then. “I bet he’s got something in his closet.”

Like Ronald Reagan, Trump was a Democrat who turned conservati­ve, latching onto the Christian evangelica­l electorate. As Carl Hulse reported in “Confirmati­on Bias,” Trump soothed conservati­ves uneasy with his lax morality by promising to appoint justices who would overturn Roe v. Wade, chosen from a Federalist Society-approved list. The libertine who transgress­ed with women traded off their rights to nail down a base.

Now pervy Matt Gaetz tweets, “How many of the women rallying against overturnin­g Roe are overeducat­ed, underloved millennial­s who sadly return from protests to a lonely microwave dinner with their cats, and no Bumble matches?” This is a man under investigat­ion over whether he had sex with a 17-year-old and was a sex trafficker.

And let’s not even start on Madison Cawthorn’s fantasies of drug-fueled orgies.

This past week’s stunning reversal on women’s rights is the apotheosis of the last 40 years, through Reagan, Schlafly, Meese, Rehnquist and Scalia, climaxing in Mitch McConnell, who made a Faustian bargain to support chucklehea­ded Trump to get a conservati­ve court. Because of McConnell’s machinatio­ns blocking Merrick Garland and ramming through Amy Coney Barrett, Trump was able to name three anti-abortion conservati­ves to the court, all of whom prevaricat­ed under oath before the Senate about their intentions on Roe.

When will the Democrats stop being betas? As an emotional Gavin Newsom said at Planned Parenthood’s Los Angeles headquarte­rs, “Where the hell’s my party? Where’s the Democratic Party? Why aren’t we standing up more firmly, more resolutely?”

The Founding Fathers would be less surprised that there’s a popular musical about Alexander Hamilton than they would be that, in an age of space travel, the internet, Netflix and in vitro fertilizat­ion, the majority of the court is relying on a literal interpreta­tion of a document conceived in the agrarian 1780s.

They would be devastated that the court is just another hack institutio­n with partisan leaks. Alito helped open the door to dark money and helped gut the Voting Rights Act, but he wants to ban abortion largely because, he says, the Constituti­on doesn’t expressly allow it. That’s so fatuous. The Constituti­on doesn’t mention an awful lot of things that the court involves itself with. But while it expressly prohibits state-sanctioned religion, this court seems ready to let some rebel public school football coach convene a prayer session after games. These rogue justices are always ready to twist the Constituti­on to their purposes.

They are strict constructi­onists all right, strictly interested in constructi­ng a society that comports with their rigid, religiousl­y driven worldview. It is outrageous that five unelected, unaccounta­ble and relatively unknown political operatives masqueradi­ng as impartial jurists can so profoundly alter our lives.

Chief Justice John Roberts has been trying to protect the court’s reputation by working to split the difference on some of these explosive decisions. He may be doing that in this case. But he has lost control of a lost-its-marbles majority. To borrow an image from the great Mary McGrory, Roberts seems like a small man trying to walk a large dog. At this point, he can’t even see the end of the leash.

 ?? ?? Maureen Dowd
Maureen Dowd

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States