The Problem With Jon Stewart - Limber Up and Pack a Lunch: The Post-Roe Fight Ahead
Episode Date: June 30, 2022Roe v. Wade has been overturned, so now what the hell are we supposed to do? The hosts of the Strict Scrutiny podcast—law professors Leah Litman, Melissa Murray, and Kate Shaw—are back to... help Jon process the crushing decision. Plus, writers Kris Acimovic and Tocarra Mallard weigh in on why the Democrats’ answer to this crisis seems to be donating $15.If you’d like to hear more, check out the Strict Scrutiny podcast on Apple Podcasts.CREDITSHosted by: Jon StewartFeaturing, in order of appearance: Tocarra Mallard, Kris Acimovic, Melissa Murray, Leah Litman, Kate ShawExecutive Produced by Jon Stewart, Brinda Adhikari, James Dixon, Chris McShane, and Richard Plepler.Lead Producer: Sophie EricksonProducers: Zach Goldbaum, Caity Gray, and Robby SlowikAssoc. Producer: Andrea BetanzosSound Engineer & Editor: Miguel CarrascalSound Mixer: Ignacio BonetSenior Digital Producer: Frederika MorganDigital Coordinator: Norma HernandezSupervising Producer: Lorrie BaranekHead Writer: Kris AcimovicElements: Kenneth Hull, Daniella PhilipsonTalent: Brittany Mehmedovic, Marjorie McCurry, Lukas Thimm Research: Susan Helvenston, Andy Crystal, and Cassie MurdochTheme Music by: Gary Clark Jr.The Problem with Jon Stewart podcast is an Apple TV+ podcast, produced by Busboy Productions. https://apple.co/-JonStewart
Transcript
Discussion (0)
What are we gonna fucking do?
I don't know.
I mean, we've been sort of looking for answers
ever since the decision came down.
Maybe somebody has a good response
that'll help us give us some sort of clarity
or make us feel better.
And we found that there was none of that
when we did our own...
Wait, you were looking for crumbs
and there's nothing on the floor.
Yeah, there's nothing on the floor.
It's sterile, it's cleaned out, it's nothing.
MUSIC
Welcome.
My name is John Stewart, first time long time.
We got our writers, Chris Chimavich and Takar Mallorad,
are gonna be joining us today.
And then later on, K-Chile Leah Litman, Melissa Murray,
the constitutional law professors
from the podcast Strict Scrutiny.
And of course, there is our Apple TV Plus show,
The Problem, and you can check that out as well.
We got new episodes coming.
I'm not exactly sure when.
Probably like, I don't know.
What do you want from me?
Working as hard as I can, not really.
So let me ask you, Takar and Chris, how was your week?
LAUGHING
Devastating.
Devastating.
John, you know, I've had a lot of odd jobs.
Yes.
And when I was in college, I used to work
at a senior care facility in Pasadena, Florida.
OK.
And I'd stay with me, stay with me.
OK.
And I used to work in the dining room
and I'd meet all these, you know, fantastic people
who lived all these great lives.
And I was talking to one person in particular
who asked me what I was doing.
And I was like, you know, I'm in college,
I'm doing this job, I'm doing that job,
but I'm just, you know, I'm traveling.
And she was like, oh, I'm so proud of you.
When I was your age, I had a lot of kids
and I loved my kids, but I hated my life.
Ooh.
And she's like, I'm so glad you have so many opportunities
and do everything, do all the things.
And so this weekend, you know, I was really thinking about her
and a lot of other people who, like, left this earth
thinking that it was going to be better.
So I'm thinking about her and I'm thinking about all these,
you know, young people who are going to have to undo a lot of knots.
Now, when you were in the nursing facility,
the assisted living facility, Tecara,
were any of those patients Supreme Court justices?
Because.
Muses to Andy Warhol, you know, we had all kinds of cool kids
in the senior care facility.
Yes, everyone deserved a documentary.
Yeah.
Chris, you feeling the same?
Yeah, yeah, I feel all the different things.
The more I thought about it and the more I read about the stuff,
I got angry about how this is just to these people,
the Supreme Court people, it's just a thought experiment.
It's like this is a bunch of debate kids
who do these sort of like debate exercises.
And I don't know if any of you were a high school debater.
I did it.
Chris, I think you could have just signed out, actually.
I think what I did is I signed out and I went to work at a mall.
Hell yeah.
You don't have to have the best case.
You don't have to make the best point.
You just have to do it on this little technicality.
That's right.
I feel like we should make it so being on the debate team
should make you not get into college because it's a problem.
Chris, let me tell you something.
I think you're giving the Supreme Court far too much credit.
You do?
Yes, because in my mind, the idea
that this was based in any kind of reasoned debate
or philosophical education, the Supreme Court
is now the Fox News of justice in my mind.
They are a cynical pursuit.
In the same way that Fox News would come out with,
we're fair and balanced under the patina
of what would be a high status pursuit to the betterment
of society, journalism.
They are a cynical political arm.
And when you look at the ridiculous Kabuki theater
now of justice confirmation, where they can just go out there
and just fucking lie, like if this were about debate,
then they would have understood what perjury meant.
But they are now the Fox News of justice.
I mean, there is no consistency.
States can't regulate guns, but they
can regulate uterates.
Yeah, it makes no sense.
There's no coherence.
I think the thing that struck me was,
you know that the arc of the moral universe
is long, but it bends towards justice.
I think we're all sort of steeped in that ethos.
What you don't realize is there is a goodly amount
of individuals who are trying to bend it back.
The old guard is always chasing us.
Did you see any reactions that?
Because justifiably, I just saw just disbelief and anger.
That was really the gist of a lot of the stuff I saw.
Was there anybody, anything that you caught a whiff of
and you're like, I'm going to hold on to that.
I'm going to embroider that on a pillow.
Or what's wrong with that person?
Here's a what's wrong with that person
that I would like to share.
This is from the other side.
There was a little bit of gloating going on
from the people who were happy about this decision.
And it was a woman who tweeted,
if you're scared for your daughter's future,
maybe focus on raising her to not be a slut.
Wow, wow.
If I could point out, John,
nobody knows how to raise your daughter to not be a slut.
Nobody knows.
Nobody knows.
Nobody's ever had a good idea about this.
As far as I know, it might be a,
it's not a nature versus nurture thing.
It's just going to happen.
It's like they're not even intellectually coherent.
Like Lara Trump, I don't know if you saw her quote,
she was like, you know, the left,
they want you to have abortions,
but we want women to be able to choose.
And you're like, that's, I think you have.
Yeah, it's mixed up.
Babe, you're on the wrong side.
Babe, babe, you're on the wrong side.
Cause at a point, do you really believe
like the Trumps are anti-abortion?
Like for Donald Trump, he's like, I'm pro-life
unless obviously, you know, I get somebody.
And then, you know, I'm pro-my-life.
That's like Sarah Hook could be saying
at her, you know, gubernatorial speech.
I want, I want babies in the womb
to be as safe as children in the classroom.
And you're like, yeah.
Okay, goofy bitch.
What a weird fucking way to frame that, right?
Yeah.
I want babies in the womb
to start doing duck and cover drills.
Yes.
That's what I want.
And we got to start talking about
putting a little bulletproof uterine.
We need bulletproof uterine.
Is there a desk they can hide under there?
Right.
They, you know what we need?
Armed vagina guards.
How much does that pay?
Times are hard.
Yeah, that's.
Are we creating jobs in this new economy?
Takara left, she left the show.
Oh really? Where'd she go?
She's with a vagina guard company.
The commercial was really good, you know?
They got me.
Vagina guard.
We all you convey.
Yeah.
But you know, on, I don't want to say it's the flip side,
but we had people who were angry about it,
but then said things that were absolutely not helpful.
Oh yeah.
Like, I don't know if you saw this, John.
There was a democratic politician,
I think out of Michigan who shared a tweet
that was basically like,
oh, he's feeling wildly conflicted emotions,
anger about robe, gratitude about passing,
you know, gun reform in his state.
So he needed to turn inward and do some yoga.
And then he shared a picture of himself,
head down, ass up.
What?
Doing yoga.
And I just want to say,
I have never found a comfort in a white man doing yoga.
What?
And as a,
if you're a politician,
I am not concerned about your peace,
I'm concerned about your policy.
I was like, what the heck?
Turn outward, act.
Was that in relation to perhaps the other tweet,
his way of creating, let's say, contraception?
Let's say he's saying,
let me put this picture out there
to prevent sexual activity from occurring
in the first place.
How are you going to battle this nonsense?
Even with the idea like,
I still don't understand why it's not called forced pregnancy.
Right.
Why isn't that just the term?
I saw Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez wrote forced pregnancy.
Like, why is that not the term?
Because that's what it is.
That's what it is.
Yeah.
It's a forced birth, exactly.
Right.
I will say that I got a fundraising thing
from Nancy Pelosi.
If you're looking for hope,
if you're looking for leadership,
and it said, the subject was Supreme Court backfires.
And then she wrote,
I watched Republicans steal a Supreme Court seat
from President Obama.
I watched them pack the Supreme Court
with three of Trump's radical justices.
I watched those justices
take an apocalyptic vote to decimate Robe.
Yeah.
She's just like saying it's like her kink
to watch over rights go away.
I watched.
I watched.
I had a camera in the whole thing.
A lot of deep breathing from Nancy Pelosi.
And then a little bit later, she said,
I cannot stress how badly I need your $15 in this moment.
I think Nancy Pelosi needs $15 right now.
Okay, Chris, I got this.
Is that to pay for a subscription
for her democracy stealing kink?
I don't know.
I don't know.
It feels like a little bit of a scam.
It does feel a little bit like a scam.
I'm gonna bring on our constitutional scholars.
Guys, always a pleasure.
See you soon.
Okay, we got Melissa Sixrudni's is back.
Kate Shaw, Melissa Murray, Leah Litman.
Guys, what the fuck?
We tried to tell you.
So guys, tell me how did this hit you?
Did you immediately go into how do we salvage this
solution mode?
Was it to still just disbelief?
Talk to me and walk me through a little bit
of how this hit you, this decision.
I don't know.
I don't know.
I don't know a little bit of how this hit you,
this decision.
I don't know that we were necessarily surprised.
We've been saying that this was going to happen.
We've been saying it since we started our podcast in 2019.
I said it when I testified against Brett Kavanaugh in 2018.
I said he would be a reliable vote.
But we take no pleasure in being right
because this is absolutely devastating
for so many people across the country.
And so I think for me at least,
we're sitting there with this really odd sensation
of being completely and utterly right,
but wanting to be totally, totally wrong.
So for me, it wasn't a feeling of surprise.
It was more a feeling of disappointment and rage
at the people who suggested we were somehow hysterical women
for suggesting that this might happen
and that Roe would be overruled.
I mean, I remember Senator Ben Sasse saying
at some of the confirmation hearings,
there are always these crazy ladies
in their pink pussy hats saying Roe versus Wade
is going to be overruled, but it never is.
And it's like, well, the point is
you needed enough votes to get there.
You were always trying to get there.
And once you had the votes, you would do that.
And yet somehow it was not just the Senator Ben Sasse's.
It was also as Melissa was saying,
legal academics on the left,
legal commentariates on the left,
who went to bat for some of these nominees
and assured us, well, these judges and justices,
they are products of the meritocracy.
I know them.
They would never do these completely insane things,
even though all of their prior work to date,
it was totally clear that they were going to do
these insane, terrible things.
You know, it would have been one thing
if they sat in the confirmation hearings and said,
my entire ideological bearing
is that life begins at conception
and that abortion should be made illegal.
And at the very least, you would respect
their honesty and integrity.
But this makes the court a cynical pursuit.
It feels like the Fox News of Justice
that this is a political
having nothing to do with scholarship or anything else.
This was a desire in search of a rationale.
Yeah, and I mean, in terms of initial reactions,
these are the three appointees of Donald Trump
who pledged to put justices on the Supreme Court
who would overturn Roe.
And he was as explicit about it as it could possibly have been.
And then of course, the nominees got
before the Senate Judiciary Committee once nominated
and declined to say anything definitive,
but it wasn't necessary because Trump knew
and the senators knew that they were,
these three justices were the product
of a conservative legal movement
who had been trained and groomed
to adhere to and espouse a set of legal theories,
which I'm putting in quotation marks
because they're pretty outcome driven, right?
There's a set of justifications
we can talk about in the opinion,
basically retrofit around a set
of just conservative pet project outcomes.
And so that's what's so frustrating
about the kind of veneer of law
and like armchair history that the opinion reflects,
but really it's just raw power.
It's an exercise of power.
They have the votes and so they did it.
Kate, that's dead on.
But this is the one time
Donald Trump may actually have told the truth.
I mean, it's the only time he's probably told the truth.
But by the way, he only said it to his base.
None of them would ever say,
they don't necessarily realize
that that's all being recorded
and everyone else can watch it.
But I think what Kate said is something
that I wanna ask you guys about
because what's clear is there are pet conservative projects.
Abortion, gay marriage,
now it's trans issues and CRT.
I can only imagine that there will now be legal cases
that will be brought up
to reinforce their ability to censor
certain teachings in schools, to censor.
They have an ideology and they are retrofitting it
with legal scholarship.
I think the opinion in Justice Alito's majority
makes that clear.
The idea that this represents the triumph
of some conservative judicial coherent methodology
is just insane, right?
The opinion itself is just-
The originalists, it's 18, anything after 18, 16.
It's a punchline, it's a punchline, right?
On one hand, they look to sources
dating back to the 13th century,
even though the day before in the New York gun case,
they insisted that sources long predating ratification
had only limited relevance
in telling us what the Constitution meant.
In the opinion in Dobbs, they said,
well, look at all of these statutes,
states were enacting in the 1900s,
even though again, the day before in Dobbs,
they were saying all of this stuff
that happens after the 14th Amendment is ratified
isn't relevant.
It's just picking and choosing
all over the place with history.
It's totally clear this is, as Kate was saying,
designed to reach a particular result
and this is totally apparent to anyone who has watched this
because the idea that overruling Roe and Casey
is the product of judging faithful to the Constitution
is totally bled by the fact
that the Republican Party has spent decades
putting people on the court to get the results
that they want.
Those two things cannot really coexist
with one another in the universe.
The other thing too that I think is worth mentioning
about originalism is sort of its roots and origins,
no pun intended, but originalism arises in the 1980s
as a response to what conservatives view
as the overreach of the Warren court,
particularly on issues of criminal justice,
but also on questions around racial integration,
principally, and it's later the Berger court
that gives us Roe, but this idea
that there are activist judges
who are interpreting the Constitution
according to their own proclivities
is what sparks originalism and the idea is
that we should be interpreting the Constitution
in line with how the drafters or the ratifiers
of that document would have understood that document
and its terms at the time they were writing
and ratifying it, but the thing about it is
this whole method that emerges ostensibly
to constrain judicial discretion in this new court
actually authorizes that kind of discretion.
I mean, because they can be selective and itinerant
about the kind of history that they use.
And Leah just said it, but Justice Alito
was talking about these laws that were in place
at the turn of the century or at the Civil War,
never mentions the ratifiers of the 14th Amendment
who understood the term liberty in that amendment
to encompass a repudiation of all of the conditions
of slavery that enslaved people experience,
including the absence of bodily autonomy and labor
as well as the absence of bodily autonomy
and against sexual coercion,
the fact that they couldn't keep their children,
the fact that their marriages weren't recognized.
And so if you proceed from that originalist understanding
of the 14th Amendment, it makes total sense
that there is a right to terminate a pregnancy.
It's total sense that there is a right to procreate or not,
a right to marry or not.
Liberty means that an overseer can't come in
and take your children.
Liberty means they can't come in.
It's a form in some ways of rape force pregnancy.
It's a form of control.
And everyone knew this
when they were passing the 14th Amendment.
Uncle Tom's Cabin is the most widely read book of the age
and it explicitly talks about the sexual coercion
of enslaved women.
And like this is something that falls out.
It's like Justice Alito didn't get to that part of history.
It may be because he went to school
and one of those CRT prohibited jurisdictions.
You guys are naturally falling back on your education
and your experience in law school and in litigating
and throughout your luckers.
I don't think that's what this is.
This is an ideology in search of a justification
and the reason they call themselves originalists
is the same reason they quote the Bible.
It's dogma, it's dead people.
It's people that you cannot argue with.
This text is it's fundamentalism.
It's saying this text is sacrosanct.
Even that gun shit for God's sakes.
Like Madison, I think only put in their state militias
because the slave states were like,
if you have a federal militia and you call up your,
the militia like, are we stuck here with slaves?
Like with no guns?
You know, none of this is gained by God
or a burning bush or any of that.
And let me ask you,
how is this not a religious decision?
They're suggesting that life is beginning at conception
with no evidence other than in,
that's what the creator said.
But even that is not the case in certain biblical texts
and certainly in Judaism, it's not.
I mean, I would say they keep a little bit
of sort of critical distance from actually fully
and they being the Alito majority opinion
doesn't say we are decreeing that life begins at conception.
We're just saying a state could reasonably so conclude
and thereby prohibit abortion or severely restricted.
But you're right, the deep undercurrent in the cases
we subscribe to that view,
but there's plausible deniability, right?
All we're doing is stepping out of the fray.
Then if states happen to take the position,
which we'll reference a number of times,
life begins at conception
and no abortion can be permitted.
All a state has to do is basically pass the laugh test,
the rational basis test
and believing that life begins at conception,
clearly that's rational.
And so a state basically will get to regulate
to the point of prohibition if it wants to.
But the court is careful enough not to endorse that
as a matter of faith or kind of religious belief.
So I think it's plausibly speaking,
not an explicitly theocratic kind of an edict,
but you're right, it's sort of woven throughout.
I want to ask you guys about the ramifications
as it stands today, what states will be allowed to do?
And I say this, and if you'll forgive me
for personalizing it, but we did IVF
and I don't see how that would be legal.
And I don't see how the court could say
that you are protected when you do that.
And there are a lot of people who dearly want children,
who won't be able to have them because of this decision,
because IVF is by its nature embryonic roulette.
And I'll give you the second part of this.
If the state is saying life begins at conception
and you're just an Uber driver for a fetus,
what if that woman dies?
Who goes to jail for that?
I mean, these are some of the open questions
that the court has basically just invited.
One question is whether these statutes
even have to make an exception
for cases where abortion might be necessary
to save the life or health of the mother.
I mean, Kate mentioned the standard of review
that Justice Alito said abortion restrictions
should be judged by.
It's called rational basis review.
Kate called it the laugh test.
It literally just means,
is there some hypothetical rational basis
we can imagine for this law?
States don't actually have to prove
that their law advances a valid purpose.
So under that test could states say,
well, we think it's rational or reasonable to prioritize
the potential life of the fetus
over the actual life of the woman.
I honestly, I don't know what this court would say.
And that is so horrifying to imagine.
And that's not even acknowledging
that even in laws where there are exceptions
for cases where abortion is necessary,
we don't know what exactly that would encompass.
And these are just some of the horrifying questions
that the court will have to confront despite saying,
we court are getting out of the business of abortion
and returning it to the political process.
No, they're not.
There are going to be other questions.
They or other courts will have to answer,
again, given the immense human suffering
that these laws could inflict.
The states where they have the most restrictive abortion laws
are also the states that have refused to expand Medicaid
that do not have paid parental leave, no subsidy.
Kristi Noe has a website out now for women.
It supports them in pregnancy.
It's, I believe it's a robust website, one pager.
Well, www.governorgirls.com is gonna be great for this.
But leaving that aside,
Lea's point about returning this to the states
and democratic deliberation,
that's pure gaslighting on the part of the court
because no institution has done a better job
of dismantling the structure
of democratic deliberation than this court.
So, I mean, there's just trolling all the way around
from those who argue that they're,
we're about life, well, be pro-life for the whole life.
And then from this court, it's like,
we're getting out of this and the people can decide,
the people can't decide because you've made it really hard
for them to decide.
That I think is a point that can never be stressed enough.
This court and the Republican majority
have found their way to minority rule.
Look, and again, like not to bring everything back
to slavery, but the truth of the matter is
that the Senate is affirmative action
for rural white Christians
because to get them to join the union,
they had to make those compromises.
There was no idealistic like the checks and balances
of the Electoral College.
It's nonsense.
It was all done to convince Virginia
that even though you've only got like 10 white people
for every 500 black people, you'll be good.
And we won't let Massachusetts run your life.
And that's the stuff that's baked in
to the constitutional system.
Baked in.
But I think, I think Melissa was alluding to the stuff
that the Supreme Court has unleashed on the federal system.
They've added more.
Right.
Oh, I didn't know.
Talk to me, talk to me.
The Constitution made a cake and they're like, let's ice it.
Yeah.
Like.
What have these bastards done?
Where to start?
I mean, just less than 10 years ago,
they dismantled the pre-clearance regime
of the Voting Rights Act that required certain states
with histories of racial discrimination
and pre-clear changes to their voting laws.
Three years ago, they said federal courts can't remedy
instances of partisan gerrymandering,
where politicians can lock in their power
and ensure voters can't vote them out.
Just last term, Justice Alito wrote an opinion
for the court watering down the remaining provision
of the Voting Rights Act.
Section two, that was supposed to guard
against voter discrimination against racial minorities.
So this court has amped up the anti-democratic aspects
of our system and made it harder for voters
to register their preferences in the political process.
It's a rigged game.
What they're saying is what we did first was
we fixed the states.
So we made the states have super majorities,
even though there's a pretty reasonable split
of Democrats and Republicans.
And that super majority can do our legislative bidding
without any kind of a check on it.
So we're just gonna send it back to them
and let the magic happen.
Yep.
Like asking a burglar to take care of the burglary.
Diabolical.
And why have they been so successful
in creating this bait and switch,
hokey pokey, all the different things?
You know, once upon a time in really the Warren Court
was maybe the only time when this really worked,
the court actually did some work
in kind of unsticking blockages in the democratic process,
like the one person, one vote cases, right?
Making sure that states couldn't give all the political power
to like the white rural areas
and deprive urban diverse centers of political power,
which they were absolutely doing
before the one person, one vote cases.
So the court actually kind of-
The Warren Court, by the way, was that was the 60s?
Yeah.
Yeah, it turns out to have been like maybe just an anomaly
in 230 years of mostly doing really terrible damaging stuff.
The court had a decent decade and that was that decade.
And so they actually made democracy work to a degree.
And they would explain their intervening
in some of these cases by saying,
if democracy is not working,
the democratic process by definition is not gonna fix it.
We, because we stand outside of the ordinary political process,
have a unique vantage point and a unique responsibility
to actually make democracy work
and then maybe you guys can figure out what you want,
but you have to be able to register your preferences
and make them policy or none of this makes any sense,
the checks and balances, the distribution of power.
So that was a minute in which the court
actually took that responsibility seriously
and it has basically relinquished any concern with it
and in some ways taken the opposite tack in recent years.
Well, now they're just a thumb on,
they're on the thumb on the scale.
That's all they are now is for one particular side.
And I'll tell you, you may say that I'm being crazy,
but if in this case, if a state decides like
the woman who's having a baby is not as important
as the potential of that life,
that what they're really saying is to save a life,
autonomy means nothing.
So let's play that out.
We have an organ shortage in this country.
Organ donation saves lives.
Under this, how could they not go to a person
and say, give me one of your kidneys
because it's gonna save this person's life?
It would be consistent.
Is that person a woman or a man?
Like women don't have bodily autonomy.
I'm not sure about the men's though.
Right, the men still do, but so that's the thing.
Let's play this out.
How can we make the case that men don't have it either now?
Let's bring some peril to men,
whether it be financial or bodily harm.
Let's say then I have to be a blood donor.
I have to be an organ donor or I have to be,
why can't the state under this provision say to me,
and by the way, the fact that this is the
don't tread on me party and the Liberty party, fuck you.
That's insane.
So how is it though that why couldn't they just
take a kidney and say it saves a life?
Or alternatively prohibit masturbation because-
Math, Melissa, please, let's, okay.
Now I have to draw the line.
I think that's where they're drawing the line too.
I mean, if you wanna talk about bodily autonomy
for everyone, if you're going to start with this idea
that abortion extinguishes a potential life,
IVF does, as you've said, masturbation could,
a vasectomy could, I mean, where does it end?
Or is this really just for women?
And if it is really just for women,
it'd be terrific if the majority actually grappled
with the equal protection dimensions of that question.
Did they grapple with it?
Well, this is really sort of, I mean, this-
It's a very touchy subject.
It's every scholar's wish to see their work taken seriously
by someone who has authority to do something.
And so me and a couple of other law professors,
Riva Siegel at Yale and Serena Mayuri at Penn,
filed a brief making this argument that restrictions
on abortion violate the equal protection clause.
You filed it for this particular case?
For this case, yeah.
Oh, wow.
And it was cited, unfortunately by the majority.
So Alito noted that some scholars said
that there were perhaps the quality issues here,
and also noted that the US government
also made the same argument,
but then dismissed them out of hand
because the court's precedent clearly forecloses that,
as though he had not completely laid waste
to precedent anyway,
but apparently one of the court's precedents forecloses
even considering the equality of women in a case like this.
Oh, so he was starved to cizes when it comes to
equal protection. Starved to cizes for equality, yeah.
Otherwise, starved to cizes is for suckers
and precedents are for punks.
So, hmm.
So they are, would you guys say,
forget about personal preferences.
Is this court, and at this point now,
the majority of our political system,
an entirely cynical undertaking?
This court, yes.
I mean, most, I'm not sure if all of the political system,
I'm not quite sure I'm ready to go there.
Kate's an optimist.
Come on, Kate.
Kate's such an optimist.
Well, this is-
Come with me, Kate.
It's corruption of the highest order, Kate.
It just is.
It's ideologues, and the idea that they pay homage
to the founders and the greatness of their intellect
is such an insult.
They're such cynical purveyors.
And it's not even just like the founders.
So basically what the case says is,
if we're trying to decide what the constitution means
when it uses terms like liberty, right?
It doesn't list what's part of liberty.
It just says liberty.
So we have to have some way to figure out
what liberty means, and what Alito says is,
we have to look to history and tradition.
And if a right is deeply rooted in history and tradition,
then that right is encompassed within the liberty
protected by the constitution.
And canvas is history.
Lo and behold, there hasn't been a whole lot of recognition
of women's rights in general,
and women's rights to bodily autonomy in particular,
although the history is much more complex
than Alito lets on.
But it's not just the founding era.
I mean, the opinion literally starts
with a 13th century treatise about like,
if a woman, you know, if somebody poisons a woman
who has, and the foetus dies,
then she shall have committed,
the person that shall have committed a homicide.
That's literally where the historical section begins.
There's a discussion of eminent common law authorities
from the 17th, 16th, and 15th centuries.
He's citing punishments against women in the 1200s.
When people literally just opened veins and bled out
because they had stomach aches.
I mean, when you think about the state of medical.
Women were property.
Oh yeah, so there's one authority that he cites,
one of the eminent common law authorities,
Sir Matthew Hale, who was-
A witch burner.
Literally presided over a famous trial
that resulted in the conviction of two witches
who were both widows, independent women,
clearly deeply threatening,
presided over their trial and sentenced them to death.
This is one of the three preeminent common law authorities.
Kate, they were probably sending text messages
to Mark Meadows.
They had to be stopped.
In Hale's defense, I believe those women did float.
If I'm remembering the case correctly.
And that's the early stuff.
And then he sort of skips ahead
and really focuses on the 19th century.
There's this wave of anti-abortion legislation.
But all of this is passed when women don't have a voice
in the political process.
They don't vote.
If it's all before 1920, it's meaningless.
Completely.
And yet that is the history that Alito says
determines the meaning in 2022
of liberty in the constitution.
The method is so deranged
and the implications for other liberties
the court has previously in more sane eras recognized,
terrifying.
But wouldn't that be like quoting,
there's a plantation trial that took place in 1821
where it was very clear that the common law
was that black people did not have bodily autonomy.
I mean, you could just quote that.
So, John, it's interesting you raise that as a possibility
because just the day before
the Supreme Court decided dabs in the New York guns case.
That's what case Justice Thomas cited as authority
for his interpretation of the second amendment.
Red Scott versus Sanford.
Get the fuck out of here.
Which held that black people could not be citizens.
He's like, see what the Supreme Court did in that case.
That's what I'm relying on.
No, Lee is exactly right.
He basically, Justice Thomas essentially says
that because Roger Taney, who is the Chief Justice
and the author of the Dred Scott opinion,
feared the prospect of blacks having guns
and recognized that gun ownership was a crucial indigestion
of citizenship, that was part of the logic
and indeed the calculus and the consideration
when the court in Dred Scott determined
that individuals of African descent
could not be citizens under the Constitution.
Something the 14th amendment was written
and ratified to repudiate.
It's, they used the 14th amendment
to play both sides of the ideological coin.
That basically just-
He does that all the time.
He does that all the time.
Melissa, I can tell you're so mad at him.
Like, it's just, like, it's so vexing.
Like, because there's no recourse
because you clearly had an argument of great import.
It must feel like just banging your head against a wall.
Here's the thing.
I mean, Kate's talked about how Justice Alito
goes back to this 19th century
and all of the criminalization of abortion
after the Civil War.
What Justice Alito doesn't tell you
is one of the reasons why they're so exercised
to criminalize abortion is because white women,
as part of this effort toward voluntary motherhood,
are actually trying to exercise some control
so they don't have families of disproportionate sizes,
that they have families that are manageable
and they're not, like, literally tired all the time.
And so they're using contraception.
Some of them are terminating pregnancies.
And it means that these native-born white women
are not having children in as great numbers
as their immigrant and darker, huge sisters.
And people are literally scared,
in, like, a Tucker Carlson way,
that the country is changing its demographic character
and it's going to be largely led
by the children of these immigrant women
or these black women.
And so-
It's replacement theory.
It's replacement theory.
Oh, my God.
Like, I mean, so he's literally citing
19th century replacement theory ideas
to justify limiting reproductive rights today.
I mean, it's straight out of the Tucker Carlson playbook.
But here's the thing.
So I'm angry on, like, an emotional level,
but I would imagine my anger would be amplified
exponentially if I knew what you guys knew,
if I knew just how corrupt this was
and just how much foundation there is
for allowing liberty to win a couple of these cases.
Like, knowing the backing of that, what's the recourse?
Is there a, like, now do you take the right-wing playbook
and say, all right, we're just gonna start
introducing counterclaims into the lower courts
and try and reverse-engineer this thing.
And now it's a decades-long project.
I mean, I think it is a decades-long project.
You know, there is this idea kind of floating around
that this just magically happened
because Mitch McConnell blockaded
President Obama's nomination of Merrick Garland
and Justice Ginsburg just happened to die.
But what that overlooks is the conservative legal movement
working over the last 40 years to build a network of power,
to build a network of ideas,
to exercise the maximum extent of political power
they could to obtain all of the political power
that they could and work for the long game
to be ready for a world in which
they could control the Supreme Court.
That took four decades.
That might be the time horizon
that progressives are working with.
And I think they need to get ready to be involved
and stay involved in state, local, federal elections,
as well as organizing for that time period, if not longer.
But who leads that movement?
Why doesn't the left have, left has think tanks,
but they don't work like Enterprise and Heritage
and the Federalist.
They don't, you know, it's almost as though
the right built a parallel universe
to the, they didn't care for what the institutions
of society in the 60s, the war in court,
the higher education, you know, any of those things.
So they built a parallel universe.
Now they have their own scholars and their own judges.
And for you guys who have studied in this,
when you see the foundations that they're building,
is it like being a climate scientist
and like looking at a conservative tank
that says that actually global warming is good?
Like, is it, is it the upside down
when you look at that scholarship?
I mean, it is daunting, I think,
because the one thing I think it really underscores is
there is tremendous discipline on the other side.
And, you know, I don't know that the left
has always been especially disciplined.
Like there's so many different causes
that progressives embrace
and sometimes they conflict with each other.
And, you know, there is this battle, I think,
for a kind of political purity.
I mean, I don't think the Republicans ever allowed
that kind of internecine warfare amongst their ranks.
Like this is the goal.
Roe is the great white whale.
Where all Captain Ahab get on the boat, let's go.
And I just don't know that progressives are disciplined
in the way that that requires.
I think they have to be.
And I think Leah's right.
This is gonna be a 40 year ordeal.
So, you know, limber up and pack a lunch
if you wanna do this.
Do you think it's because, you know,
the right is still considered like,
white Christian is still considered the default setting.
It's the factory setting of the country.
The left is coalitions of interests
of a wide variety of people
that have been left out of disenfranchised,
removed from the political process,
but can have very different foundational principles
that they're defending.
Whereas the right only has to defend this 40%
of the factory setting.
And everybody's pretty homogenous and on point.
So, I mean, maybe I guess I'd kind of add
to that two small things.
Yeah.
I'm not sure I would say default setting,
but there is this feeling on the right
of this intense feeling of victimization and grievance
where they feel persecuted by a society, you know,
a general public that no longer accepts
or shares their views.
And that has become something like organizing principle
or something that they can all gather around
in a way that the left hasn't seized upon,
even though, right, the reverse is true, right?
All of the Democratic party and progressives
should look at the Supreme Court and be like,
wow, there is an institution that is personally attacking us.
We should all be able to get together and recognize that.
And then second is the other thing,
for whatever reason, like the left and progressives,
I think for actually good reasons,
are less comfortable with the kind of authoritarian
top-down approach that the right uses,
where you have, you know, the right being okay,
outsourcing judicial selection to the Federalist Society
and the Federalist Society just picking like
the craziest white guys to nominate to the federal bench.
And that would never fly on, you know, the left
for, again, totally understandable reasons.
But I think a desire to accomplish multiple goals
and not be autocratic, right,
will undermine the efficiency with which the left
can just do burn everything to the ground approach.
Right, if your political coalition
is monomaniacally focused on one thing,
and honestly, Roe has been that one thing for 30 years,
probably for that political and legal coalition.
And guns as well. Guns too.
But I have to choose one.
I think the white whale is Roe.
And I think there's an enormous question
of what having caught the bus or the whale
or whatever your metaphor,
what happens next for that political coalition.
But I guess at least in the immediate,
they're just gonna keep pushing,
because overturning Roe just is a half.
I'll tell you what happens next.
They start invoking the RICO Act on data
of pregnant women and doctors that are gonna do abortions
and abortion pills,
and they treat this like a criminal conspiracy.
That's just a sideline though, John.
I mean, the real next thing is gonna be contraception
and same-sex marriage.
I mean, it's in their platform.
Like there are many whales to spear here.
And now that the dogma has caught the car,
there's time to go after some of these other ones.
Did you just think of that?
I did, I did, I did.
That's top notch work right there.
The dogma caught the car.
Come on.
I'm coming for your job, John.
Coming for your job.
So your feeling is like they really are now.
They're gonna try and catch as many whales as they can in this.
But at a certain point,
doesn't popular opinion catch up at some point?
I mean, you're talking about policies that are almost
for a divided country at ridiculously high approval ratings.
Like, you know, contraception and same-sex marriage
and interracial marriage.
Like, if that's what they're going for.
Not that one, because that one's personal, John.
That's personal.
Clarence has to go home to Jenny.
So no.
Ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha.
You know, on this point about whether they're gonna come
for contraception and marriage equality
in light of popular support for them,
I think this gets back to the concerns
about minority rule in this country,
given that the Constitution has skewed our political systems
to allow minorities to take control,
given that the court has allowed states
to continue to have politicians who stay in power
while suppressing votes and gerrymandering districts
that does limit the extent to which politicians
and the court would face pushback
for enacting these policies.
And I mean, we're already kind of seeing this.
Melissa mentioned, you know,
the 2016 Republican platform promised
to appoint justices, not just who would overrule Roe,
but also who would overrule Obergefell.
We're already seeing some politicians
express an interest in pursuing that goal.
We're already seeing states vow to criminalize
certain forms of contraception, whether it's IUDs
or the morning after pill.
And so all of the promises and the majority
about don't worry about these other rights
ring super hollow, given that the court
just undermined the basis for those rights too.
How is this not then separation of church and state?
Because none of this has any reality to it
other than in some sort of perverse religious thought.
None of this.
Who's gonna tell him?
Who's gonna tell him, Leah?
Oh boy.
It's so funny you mentioned the separation
of church and state, John.
Should I just leave?
Should I just go?
Over the last two weeks,
the court has basically read that
out of the constitution too.
So it overruled establishment clause cases
that said government can't endorse religion.
It overruled the cases that said
governments must have a secular purpose
in adopting legislation.
It ruled that attempting to maintain
some separation between church and state
did not allow a state to refuse to fund
religious education in public schools.
It turns out that the original meaning
of the constitution is there's no establishment clause
at all.
The basis of the separation of church and state is right.
The part of the First Amendment we know
is the establishment clause.
That clause it turns out is actually unconstitutional
even though it's in the constitution.
Didn't know that was possible.
The court has just told us.
Guys, and I'm not gonna ask for like,
give me some hope here.
Come on guys, because I know Kate's an optimist
but we're all going down the thing.
Yeah.
Give me a strategy.
What's the beginnings of a recapturing
of a plan of action?
State courts actually are an important next frontier.
The US constitution right now as construed by
this Supreme Court is not gonna be a font
of a lot of rights and protections
but every state has its own constitution
and every state's courts construes
that state's constitution.
We're gonna be the EU.
We're gonna be the EU.
It's possible.
What groups would you say to go like,
top line is probably what?
Planned Parenthood in terms of just protecting women
who are in this situation right now?
I would also say abortion funds
as well as smaller local clinics
that might be opening in some places
that will cater to women who are now
in reproductive desert.
So abortion funds are super important
as are smaller clinics and areas.
And the other thing I would just add is
if you think about all the things you do in your life
they're basically all opportunities for organization, right?
Like I'm on a swim team.
I have a book club, right?
These are all opportunities to build networks with people,
to get them involved in politics, to get them to care,
to get them to stay active,
like we need to focus on that kind of organization
and getting everyone we know
and those we don't involved in this long-term fight.
Who's got the macro view?
Because my experience in these types of fights
is that there are a lot of really good, really dedicated people.
Oftentimes though, fighting in fiefdoms
that are not necessarily coordinated or working together
and that apart, they're very easily parried.
But when they begin to organize in a more global way,
in a more macro way,
it becomes a lot harder to walk away from.
I think that's definitely right.
I think for the conservatives,
the Republican Party and some of these major institutions
behind the Republican Party served that purpose
in getting them organized and on the same page
about what their goals were and how they would achieve them.
It'd be nice to see the Democrats take the lead in doing that.
I don't know whether that's going to be possible
given the big tent composition and the divisions within,
but I will say this and it sounds small bore
and it completely is undermined by everything we just talked about,
but I do think it's really important for people to vote.
And to understand that voting isn't like waving a magic wand
and you go to the polls and you cast your vote
and suddenly student loan forgiveness happens.
You may have to vote in successive elections over and over again,
taking your hits for years the way the Republicans did
before you actually realized the kinds of gains that they did.
They didn't really begin to get real purchase on this
until the Tea Party.
I mean, and they had some small wins,
but it really was in sort of the response to Barack Obama
that they kind of came together.
I just want to underscore like the Republicans went to the polls
to get justices who would overrule Roe.
And a first time they got Justice David Souter.
Another time they got Justice Anthony Kennedy.
Neither of those justices overruled Roe.
Their response wasn't,
I'm never going to vote again.
Fuck the Republican Party, right?
You guys are a bunch of pro-choice losers.
It was to keep voting and to keep pressuring the party
to be more hard line on the appointment of federal judges
and the issue of abortion.
That is the model that progressives need to understand
not to throw up your hands
because you didn't get what you want
out of the Democratic Party this go round.
Right. Not to be selfish,
but I do worry that the progressive benefactors
are giving to organizations that are meant to be a substitute
for exercising political power
rather than giving to organizations
that are designed to get progressives
and Democrats political power.
Like that is where we need this money to go now
to the organizations designed to elect progressive candidates,
to the organizations that are promoting progressive thought
in different media on different channels.
That's where we need the support.
I'm going to bring Chris and Takara back in
and make sure that they are able to ask you.
If you guys got time, I know you guys are busy saving us
from what appears to be the most ridiculous
Supreme Court session since...
Wait till next year, John.
Wait till next year.
Melissa, stop. You're killing me.
John, believe black women.
I'm telling you, I just want you to know.
Like, believe black women.
Takara and Chris, you got any...
I mean, you were listening.
I'm sure you were flipping out, Takara.
I'm okay with loving versus Virginia being case-by-case,
and that's coming from someone
who's in an interracial relationship.
So it's okay for me to judge.
We all know that one couple that is incredibly annoying.
This is not the black and white Michael Jackson video.
You can calm down.
Can I ask you just one last question?
Because I can't let it go.
I don't understand these originalists
and how they emerge, and I want to know,
in law school, are they fully formed there?
Are they like, yeah, I'm an originalist to fuck off.
And then they like are in the same corner or...
Or is it cynicism?
Is it a cynical thing?
Yeah, the question of like, you know,
how does this get started?
I mean, there is sort of a kind of grievance origin story.
So in the 1980s at Yale Law School,
there was a group of very conservative students
who feel like the entire law school's organized
to be a conduit and a font of progressive
or liberal dogma.
And so they form the Federalist Society.
What they have done is they have so much money
and so much presence on law school campuses
that when you walk into law schools,
they are already running all of these events,
all of these programs.
You can apply to them, go to summer institutes,
and they will teach you all about originalism,
all about textualism.
They will connect you with federal judges
and Supreme Court justices and promise you, right?
Like if you are one of our people, right?
We're gonna get you these great jobs
and we're gonna help you.
And there is no similarly active network
of grooming people and supporting them on the left.
Like if you are, I know I use the grooming.
No, no, no, I didn't touch you a little bit.
It just came to my mind.
At least continue.
It's like saying it's the thing that they complain
that CRT actually isn't doing is the thing they're doing.
Right, yes.
Right.
But I bet you have groups that are coalitions
like LGBT or, you know, lawyers have cut.
Like that's what I mean by the left has these fiefdoms.
Splintering, yeah.
But nobody's looking at that macro view of
how do we give this a dogmatic foundation
in the same way that they have?
Yeah.
I mean, because there's something kind of illiberal
about dogma.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Mm, great.
Yes.
You got no more dog puns for me.
Listen on this,
because I'm looking for entertainment right now.
I mean the dogma that licked it.
I'm gonna say it.
All right.
Get out of here.
Guys, I can't thank you enough
for spending the time with us.
I so wish it was under better circumstances
and that we didn't have to reconvene
as quickly as we did,
but thank you for the history lesson.
And we should create like a,
I don't know what they would be called,
like people that ask questions of people in power.
They could have their own networks
and they would follow these things.
Cause I think the country might be interested in that
and we could call it something.
I don't know.
Yeah.
I keep thinking on what we should call that.
Guys, thank you so much for joining us.
But StrictScrutiny is the podcast,
Kate Shaw, Leah Litman, Melissa Murray.
Thanks again.
And I hope we get to chat again soon
under much better circumstances.
In 40 years.
Thanks.
In 40 years.
Chris.
Thanks for having us.
Thank you.
Thank you so much.
All right, take care guys.
Guys, what the fuck?
Yeah, what the fuck is true?
We're screwed, screwed.
I was expecting like a little sliver,
a little bit of the,
the sun will come out tomorrow.
Instead it was mega death.
What struck me is that it's very clear
that the Supreme Court is bullshit.
Like it's a real bullshit institution.
This 13th century, making these cases,
it's just, it's bullshit.
It's just another cog in an ideological machine.
And the crazy part is we imbue such high status
in it and such elevated motivation.
And it's really just, it's like I was saying,
like it's Fox News for justice.
Yeah, we call them justice.
We're like justice Kavanaugh.
That is not apt.
Yes.
It's just us partisans.
You think it's people who love the law,
but it's not.
It's people who have been bought and paid for
on the back end who are moving forward with,
you know, pathetic plans to honor this replacement theory.
Well, I think what it's, it's almost like a chess move.
It's like everything else that happens in the country
that there's an advance in liberty for one group
and the in group then has to make their chess move
to try and devalue and delegitimize the power
that that other group might wield.
And you know, the thing that keeps haunting me
a little bit is what's the brunch?
Where Gorsuch and Kavanaugh and Barrett and Alito,
like who's at that brunch where they're like,
great fucking job guys, way to go.
I always wonder like, who are their patrons?
Who are the ones that put this plan together
and greet them at the, at the celebration?
As liberators of fetuses.
Right.
It's weird.
It's weird.
And listen, I have children.
I love my children, but like, I mean, we did IVF.
Like as far as I'm concerned, that's illegal now
because IVF is nothing if not in embryonic roulette wheel.
Like they go in, you get, let's say you get lucky enough
to get eight or 10 that fertilize, they'll grade them.
They'll, they'll just, the doctor will be like,
that's a C, that's a B plus, that's an A.
And according to this now, like the B's and C's
just got murdered.
Do you remember the show, The Good Place?
Oh yeah, yeah, yeah.
So I love that show.
Michael Shore is such a great writer.
It's such an interesting guy.
But he did on the show the trolley problem.
It's insane.
So if you're driving down and the train is going
and if you, there's three people on the tracks
and you can pull a lever and turn it,
but you'll hit 10 people and what do you do?
And, and now, okay, out of the three people,
you know one of them, what do you do?
Like if I'm on the trolley and there's a baby on the track
and if I pull the lever, I hit my fertilized embryo
in a dish, like I'm pulling that fucking lever.
And I don't think anyone wouldn't.
No, you're right.
That makes it easy.
That makes the trolley problem extremely easy.
It's not even a problem anymore.
Now you're just, what?
What a weird thought exercise, John.
Let's just take out those embryos.
What?
All right, that's going to be the show.
Guys, thanks for sharing your time and wisdom
with Carl Malik, Chris Chimovich,
Kate Shaw, Lea Litman, Melissa Murray,
Strix Grutney, check out their podcast.
Apparently we're talking to them every fucking week
because this demise of the country is now
on a much steeper slope than anybody had realized.
You can check out our show, of course,
The Problem App, TV Plus, and man, just hit us up.
Let us know what you're thinking.
We'll be back soon.
Peace.
Bye.
Bye.
Ha ha.
The Problem with John Stuart podcast is an Apple TV Plus
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