It is by now not a surprise to find the media deliberately mischaracterizing the judicial opinions of conservative nominees to the Supreme Court. One particular claim that has been leveled against current nominee Amy Coney Barrett, however, deserves further examination.
The claim, as advanced by the Associated Press and amplified by liberal legal figures in the media like Jill Filipovic, is that Barrett once ruled that being called the N-word by your supervisor does not constitute a hostile work environment, which is obviously a position that no reasonable American would espouse.
The first clue that Barrett’s opinion is being grossly mischaracterized can be found in the fact that none of the other judges who reviewed the case dissented from it in the slightest. Indeed, Barrett’s opinion merely affirmed the decision reached by district judge Edmond Chang, who was appointed to the bench by former president Barack Obama. Neither of the other judges on the three-judge appellate panel uttered a peep even in concurrence. The idea that four separate federal judges signed off on an facially racist position without a word of dissent ought to be so obviously laughable that no reasonable person would reprint it.
Yet here we are.
The actual facts of the case indicate that the plaintiff had no real shot of proving his case of racial discrimination. As detailed at length in Judge Barrett’s opinion, the plaintiff was deemed to be an unsatisfactory employee virtually from his first day on the job, invoking the ire of almost all his supervisors with unsatisfactory performance — and worse, a number of incidents in which the health and safety of his coworkers were threatened due to his negligence. His performance was so obviously unsatisfactory that he did not make it through his employment’s probationary period.
The incident involving the use of the N-word, in fact, occurred after the Illinois Department of Transportation had already decided to fire him. According to the uncontested facts in the opinion, the department began proceedings to terminate the plaintiff’s employment on Jan. 4, 2013. Almost two weeks later, when those proceedings were nearly concluded, one of Smith’s supervisors (who was also black — a perhaps salient fact that was omitted by the Associated Press) learned for the first time that Smith was contesting his termination by alleging that he was the subject of racial discrimination.
This supervisor, who was understandably irked by this transparent last-ditch diversionary tactic (and was, as a reminder, also black) called the plaintiff a “stupid-ass n*****.”
The case did not examine the question of whether this was a good choice of words or even whether it was racial harassment for a black supervisor to use it against one of his black employees. Indeed, Barrett wrote in her opinion that the supervisor’s use of the word “plainly constitutes race-based harassment.” Rather, the issue in the case centered on whether the use of the epithet “altered the conditions of his employment and created a hostile or abusive working environment.”
Wait… isn’t it the official Democrat position that blacks cannot be racist and that it is OK for blacks (and blacks only) to use the N-word?
Gee… it’s just not like Durbin to be hypocritical and lie… except when he is voting to impeach Trump for something he didn’t ever do but that he and Leahy actually DID (ask a foreign government for political dirt on a candidate).
recall the cartoon: two cops dead “victory” , criminal dead-racism and police injustice.
one must read history-ask a muslin what the koran, sira and hadith think of blacks?? islam is constructed on three books and is a trilogy: Hadith,Sira, and the Koran. Bill Warner’s work Measuring Mohammed is a must read book.
Reading is a necessary facet of this blog unlike comrade greggy-poo who only watches clown network. just think, Curt, as a Sheriff Deputy for 29 years in LA county you were called a variety of names and the officers are sill called them. notice that kamaslut is married to a cracker??