Judicial Arson: How the Supreme Court's Feral Supermajority Broke the Law
Kristoffer Ealy
The Supreme Court of the United States apparently has amnesia. Not the kind where you forget where you put your keys. The kind where you forget an entire constitutional ruling you wrote three years ago a ruling with your name on it, your reasoning in it, your signature under it. The highest court in the land just looked at its own precedent, shrugged like a toddler who knocked a vase off the counter, and said never mind.
In 2023, the Supreme Court ruled 5-4 in Allen v. Milligan that Alabamas congressional map almost certainly violated the Voting Rights Act of 1965 by diluting the political power of Black voters who make up more than a quarter of the states population. The Court didnt whisper it. They didnt suggest it. They ordered Alabama to draw a second majority-Black district. Chief Justice John Roberts wrote the opinion. Brett Kavanaugh signed on. It was done. The law was clear. Black voters in Alabama, for the first time in the history of that state, elected two Black representatives to Congress in 2024. History was made. Justice was served. Case closed.
Just kidding. These constitutional dipshits cannot keep up with their own rulings.
Last week, that same Court in a 6-3 order cleared the way for Alabama to scrap the second majority-Black district and revert to the discriminatory map that courts had spent years blocking. Roberts and Kavanaugh, the two conservatives who apparently experienced a brief lucid moment in 2023, looked back at their own judgment like they were reading someone elses term paper and said, Oh yeah. We forgot we were racist pieces of shit. Lets go back and contradict everything we said last year. And just like that, they did. Mid-primary. While Alabama voters were already casting ballots.
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