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We haven't discussed deportations, recently, and appellate litigator (and formula Scalia clerk, for those who care about that sort of thing) Adam Unikowsky posted a good explanation of AARP v Trump/WMM v Trump, this morning. The situation seems pretty Kafka-esque:
Setting aside ICE acting in bad faith, invocations of rights using colloquial language can be deemed lawfully ineffectual by courts, even if the intent is obvious to any reasonable person:
The Louisiana Supreme Court declined to hear the appeal. People sometimes complain about lawyers using the right "magic words" being too powerful, but the rest of us being required to use magic words is a much bigger problem, in my opinion.
Back to this case, the ACLU's brief didn't include the specific circumstances of their communications with their two clients or how many people would have been deported on the same flight, but the two clients were able to describe notices of an impending deportation.
As for the ruling, itself, Unikowsky writes:
There's a lot more (including why Unikowsky disagrees with Alito's dissent and why the lack of transparency by ICE and its litigators is wrong), and it's worth reading in full, but that's the jist of it. SCOTUS having granted an injunction, the question of whether the secret 12-36 hour habeas petition window ICE stipulated satisfies due process requirements goes back down to the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals.
But were deportations always so Kafka-esque, or is this new? Did previous administrations act in bad faith, like this? And where are the voices that are both pro-deportation and pro-legal protections against fed fuckery? As HL Menken said:
Who is Adam Unikowsky and why should anyone trust / care about their explanation / characterizations of a contemporary culture war topic filled with bad and bad-faith explanations / characterizations?
Counts for what to who?
Is 'Scalia' in this context supposed to count as a proxy for 'shares Scalia's worldview and judicial philosophy?' Or does it count more as a talismanic shield, akin to 'he worked for a conservative, therefore he must not be politically biased?' I imagine 'Scalia clerk' counts for either, but to different people.
What else is 'Scalia clerk' supposed to mean? Was Scalia known for only employing clerks who agreed with his philosophy, and thus they are proxies for his professional reputation? Are Scalia law clerks as a class any less prone to culture war shenanigans than the rest of the legal profession? Was Scalia known for characterizing deportation as being cast into Dante's inferno, or viewing deportation as oppression?
If I look up Adam Unikowsky's professional bio, should I expect to see Scalia-esque disagreement with the lawfare practices of the last administration to shape the election, or should I expect to see concurrence as many other respectable professionals felt it was right and proper?
Scalia was also well known for hiring people he thought were wrong on substantial political issues. 'Smart enough to aid him' does not mean or imply 'political judgements were considered sound and trusted by even Scalia's standard.'
This would be a smuggled insinuation, both invalid and dishonest if claimed explicitly. (Which it has not been, hence pressing for further clarification).
Not many. Most people do not hinge their opening posts on a non-characterized source, or happily clarify when asked.
It does happen from time to time, though. Even got an AAQC for a frisking the Seymour Hersh claims that the US blew up the Nordstream pipeline, which was largely based on critiquing the (claimed) source of Hersh. Casting shade on sources is on brand, though in this case I pressed the OP to justify the source he was using to argue by proxy for an argument conclusion the source didn't justify.
Heavens no. Feel free to look for yourself, though.
Scalia was, in fact, semi-famous in the legal world for always hiring at least one "counter clerk" (aka, someone who disagreed with Scalia on significant issues) in part so that he'd have someone smart in the room to play devil's advocate.
Of course, he didn't always pick winners; one such "counter clerk" was Ian Samuel, who later as a professor admitted to perving on his students, was broadly disgraced, but appears to have clawed his way back to respectability as an in-house regulatory counsel for big corps.
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Scalia finding his opinion valuable in a specific, highly unusual circumstance does not make his opinion valuable for conservatives generally. Scalia's known method was to use contrary arguments to sharpen his own, not to adopt as his own.
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It's supposed to mean that he clerked for a Supreme Court justice, which is a position that only goes to those with the highest academic qualifications, and means that he has actual experience working in constitutional law, which is something that few lawyers possess. He also specializes in appellate Supreme Court work as part of his current practice. I'm not sure what kind of resume you're looking for when it comes to one's qualifications to comment on the judicial system.
That is a credentialism argument for a trusting a member of a profession that, in the US at least, has been long and broadly considered untrustworthy on matters of ethics, prioritizing the public good, or holding their own accountable.
In a year where extremely partisan use of the judiciary, with substantial support by members of the legal profession in good standing, is a topic on the supreme court docket, and where good-standing in the legal profession is tied to the not-necessarily-apolitical interests.
Which is why the question was not for a resume, but for a reason to trust, and why their characterization of a live culture war topic should be deferred to. "He is a capable lawyer in good standing" is an anti-endorsement.
This is just anti-credentialism at its most stupid. If anything the legal industry is one of the best places to be credentialist, because so many cases turn on very specific case law and precedent that the non-credentialed have almost no hope of fully understanding. Let alone the whole demand for isolated rigor lens. Respectfully, your intuition is twisted.
Funny thing about law, though. For every decision, there are apparently intelligent and credentialled people willing to argue both for and against it.
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To be explicit, Scalia famously made a point of hiring some clerks that didn’t share his view to try to better understand different perspectives.
Indeed. Which is why their former employment does not suffice for why someone should care about their explanation / interpretation on a culture war issue.
'They worked for a smart person' is not a credit that bolsters one's own credibility, particularly when said smart man was known for routinely hiring people he thought were substantially wrong on major issues.
The fact that the country's foremost conservative legal figure, considered by most to be an intellectual titan of his age, specifically chose someone to be a principled devil's advocate pushing back against his own assumptions would definitely be a credit bolstering their credibility. It speaks to a level of intellect and open-mindedness far beyond that of most commentators.
Perhaps!
...but this is not the argument the OP made for their source.
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