Injustice Antonin Scalia's latest gaffe is his stance on renewal of the vital Voting Rights Act. Recently, he called Section 5 of that vital Act a "perpetuation of racial entitlement." Scalia's words once-again make perfectly clear his opposition of laws promoting the equality of all Americans. What is even worse is that the conservative majority on the Supreme Court is actually considering agreeing with Scalia and striking down this vital law. As is often the case, Scalia appears to be the prime-mover here, with a scathing style which pressures his colleagues on the Court to take reactionary positions.
Since I now live in Georgia, I can clearly see how vital this section of the Voting Rights Act is, even today, even if it is detested by many in Georgia's power structure. What galls racists and their ilk is that Georgia, like most other Southern States, must seek Federal approval of significant changes in voting laws and rules. Yet, just judging from the most recent national elections, the era of disenfranchisement in Georgia is far from past. Some of my own college students were among those prevented from using their college ID cards as proof of residency, so that they could vote in their college districts, where they reside for more than half of each year while in school (their drivers' licenses usually show their family addresses.)
That stance took place even under the present Voting Rights Act, and is intended to reduce the number of young people who often vote progressively. If Injustice Scalia gets his way, such disenfranchisement will become considerably more rampant. Any fair-minded person, unlike Antonin Scalia, realizes that Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act is not about "racial entitlement" -- it is about Constitutional Justice.
After several needless wars, our financial and economic near-collapse requiring massive federal bailouts, the authorization of torture-tactics to squeeze often-inaccurate information from often-innocent people, and the horribly-botched handling of the aftermath of Hurricanes Katrina and Rita, all products of the George W. Bush and Dick Cheney administrations, I am far from ready to "just get over it." Antonin Scalia played a major role in saddling America with the worst presidency in our history, by depriving this nation of its rightful presidential choice in 2000. It is truly said that those who fail to learn the lessons of history are condemned to repeat it. For a host of bad decisions, endorsements of illegal actions, and even constitutional violations, Injustice Antonin Scalia should resign.