“While I agree that Andrew misinterpreted the US Supreme Court ruling, I think you are also doing the same. The court did not rule on whether the redistricting proposed by the legislature was racist. Its ruling was that the district court exceeded its authority and did not sufficiently include the policy goals of the legislature. The Supreme Court ruling struck down the District Court’s redistricting plan.”–Dale M
Dale, I didn’t say andrewstx misinterpreted the US Supreme Court ruling; I said he was unaware of it. He was speaking of the District Court voiding the Texas legislature’s maps and substituting its own maps. He believes that was the District Court’s way of saying that the “conservative legislature has gerrymandered the voting districts to make Hispanics powerless”, which is liberal nonsense compounded by his following and even sillier post, viz:
“'I just posted a perfect example of conservative racism. (the disenfranchisement of Latin voters by the (%95 percent tea party) Texas legislature…At least in this particular case conservatives are transparently racist…I’m not making this up…conservative racism is fine and dandy?”
The point of my reply post, Dale, was that the finding of the US Supreme Court as to the improper action of the District Court cut the rug out from under his reliance on THAT court for his accusations of a court finding of racism against conservatives. As a conservative who recently moved out of Texas (for a slightly cooler and wetter clime), I find his comments not only technically wrong but offensive.
I agree with you BTW that the Supreme Court, at least in the case at issue here, did not have to reach the matter of racism. Unfortunately, however, this entire matter, IN THIS DAY AND AGE involves nothing more than racism and a bigoted attitude against some states. Three cheers for Justice Thomas:
[January 20, 2012]
JUSTICE THOMAS, concurring in the judgment. The Court proceeds from the premise that court-drawn interim plans are necessary in part because Texas’ newly enacted redistricting plans are unenforceable for lack of preclearance under §5 of the Voting Rights Act of 1965. Ante, at 1–3. In my view, Texas’ failure to timely obtain§5 preclearance of its new plans is no obstacle to their implementation, because, as I have previously explained,§5 is unconstitutional. See Northwest Austin Municipal Util. Dist. No. One v. Holder, 557 U. S. 193, 212 (2009) (THOMAS, J., concurring in judgment in part and dissenting in part).
