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October 2, 2022

Last summer, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez visited Stephen Colbert’s show, and gave the audience the full benefit of her ignorance regarding constitutional jurisprudence and American history.  When asked by Stephen Colbert about what appropriate action should be taken by the House of Representatives in response to the Supreme Court having recently struck down Roe v. Wade, she began by matter-of-factly informing viewers that there’s a historical precedent for overruling such Supreme Court decisions:

YouTube screengrab

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I think, uh, history, really informs a lot.  Um, and it gives us lessons here, because this is not the first time that this has happened.  Uh, in the 1800s, the Supreme Court was taken over by the Confederate South, and started to rule in ways that limited Abraham Lincoln, for example. In the Dred Scott ruling, they ruled that black Americans are not and can never be full citizens of the United States.  And what did Abraham Lincoln do?  He signed the Emancipation Proclamation.

Let it not be said that AOC is without talents, and on display here is her remarkable knack to passionately layer falsehood-upon-falsehood to create a fantastic tale of fiction that is packaged as history, only to be unquestionably lapped up by the media and her devoted following.

She’s right about one thing.  History does “inform us a lot,” and especially when it comes to erroneous Court decisions.  It just does nothing to support the conclusions she’s drawn.

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But let’s begin with all that she has wrong about the history here.

First of all, the Supreme Court was never “taken over” by Confederates.  Not only is that a stupidly simplistic suggestion as to how those justices were appointed and confirmed over decades, but the Court that decided Dred Scott, the Taney Court, was anything but a gaggle of Southerners.  Only four of the nine justices were Southerners, in fact, and yet the Dred Scott decision was decided by margin of 7-2.

The Court’s recent judgements in decisions like Dred Scott did vex Lincoln, on a moral level.  However, Lincoln, unlike most twenty-first century millennials, believed in the primacy of American institutions such as the Supreme Court. 

In his 1861 Inaugural Address, he said as much, defending the “binding” nature of the Court’s judgement, and that the “evil effect” of “erroneous decisions” with the potential that they may be “overruled and never become a precedent for other cases” can “better be borne than could the evils of a different practice.”

Specifically, regarding the Taney Court, he said:

Nor is there in this view any assault upon the court or judges.  It is a duty from which they may not shrink to decide cases properly brought before them, and it is no fault of theirs if others seek to turn their decisions to political purposes.