Chattanooga Times Free Press

DON’T THANK TRUMP; THIS IS ALL MITCH

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The architect of this fresh American madness should take his rightful bows today, deep and from the waist, and it’s not Donald Trump, whose grasp of advanced legal concepts is only that he can’t be restrained by them.

Sen. Mitch McConnell is the man of this stroke-of-midnight hour, in which the Supreme

Court is apparently primed to obliterate half a century of reproducti­ve rights.

This is McConnell’s court, conceived and sculpted to his exact specificat­ions by any means necessary, and who better to retrofit the machinery of momentous legal and moral decisions than a comically rich 80-year-old white guy who happens to be the chosen representa­tive of 57% of voters in Kentucky, Addison Mitchell McConnell III?

“Give the people a voice,” is McConnell’s all-time money quote on Supreme Court nominees, which is what he said when President Barack Obama nominated Merrick Garland to succeed ace righty warhorse Antonin Scalia. Scalia passed away in February of 2016, nine months before a presidenti­al election. “Give the people a voice.”

As then-majority leader of the Senate, McConnell scuttled Garland’s nomination without a hearing and without compunctio­n.

Four years later, liberal lioness Ruth Bader Ginsburg died, 46 days before a presidenti­al election, and Mitch “Give the people a voice” McConnell was suddenly no longer the people’s champion.

By people, he’d meant his people, not your people. So he was ready with an arch conservati­ve pro-life replacemen­t for RBG, wrapped in a big advise-andconsent bow for the embattled Trump — Amy Coney Barrett. McConnell had previously blessed Neil Gorsuch, who got the seat Garland should have had, and Brett Kavanaugh, which is how we got to a 6-3 court that will apparently incinerate Roe v. Wade this summer.

This all broke late Monday when Politico published a leaked Supreme Court document indicating that the justices had already voted to overturn Roe v. Wade, with a formal ruling due in the coming months. A draft of the ruling by Justice Samuel Alito argues there is no constituti­onal right to abortion and that its further adjudicati­on should be handled by the states, which can limit it or ban it outright. Raped? Too bad.

Incest? Sorry, good luck to ya.

So a lot of people who lost their alleged minds when various government entities told them to wear a COVID-19 mask amid 1 million American deaths are going to see their government force women to carry unwanted pregnancie­s to term and be like, “OK, sounds good!”

Monday was not a terribly good day for the legal system overall. On Monday in Atlanta, the legal system launched potentiall­y its worst sideshow in years when a special grand jury was convened to “consider” whether Trump may have illegally interfered in the 2020 election.

Twenty-three random Georgians were empaneled to “consider” whether a man who called Georgia’s secretary of state to say he wanted to “find” exactly 11,780 votes, one more than Joe Biden got in the state, “might” have done something illegal.

Not a tough one.

If you haven’t heard it 100 times, listen again to the way Trump says “votes” on that call. He is completely dismissive of this particular bedrock of democracy. While he was strongarmi­ng Georgia Republican­s, Trump was simultaneo­usly luring Twitter followers to Washington (“Gonna be wild!”), where he would — on television — inflame them at a rally on Jan. 6 and set them upon the Capitol for a day of violence.

The Georgia grand jury can “consider” all this for up to a year, after which it can make some recommenda­tions and issue a report.

That’s the system for rich white men. Meanwhile in Texas, a poor Black woman got a five-year sentence for mistakenly voting while ineligible, never mind she didn’t know she was ineligible, never mind her vote never counted. Five years.

Ain’t that America? Sure as heck is. Just don’t tell the kids about it.

 ?? ?? Gene Collier
Gene Collier

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