I’m Feeling Good About the Supreme Court

Can we put aside the ruling on abortion for a moment? (Which I felt was correct from a constitutional point of view, although I’m in favor of mothers having the final say.)

I don’t think about the Supreme Court that often. But when the Biden administration issues executive orders that seem to me both insanely dangerous and unconstitutional, I think: Breathe. The Supreme Court will strike them down.

On the other hand, there are some cases that come to the Supreme Court that make me worry because of the possibly conservative bias of the justices. I worry (as I imagine Leftists and Liberals do) that the conservative justices will band together to make a decision that will be decided along “party” lines.

Happily, that’s not what happened this week. Chief Justice John Roberts and Brett Kavanaugh joined the court’s three left-leaning justices – Elena Kagan, Sonia Sotomayor, and Ketanji Brown Jackson – in striking down Alabama’s attempt to disenfranchise its Black voters.

Click here.

 

What’s Wrong with Color Blindness?

I’m adding Coleman Hughes to my list of Black Conservatives talking truth today. He’s young. But he’s smarter than his years. He also communicates his ideas and opinions clearly and carefully, which is a sorely needed skill for public influencers today. He has a growing online readership, and he’s being cited occasionally by the mainstream media. I see a big future for him, either as a major conservative thinker or a politician (if he makes the mistake of moving in that direction).

Recently, he gave a TED Talk on the subject of “color blindness” that provoked a backlash from some left-leaning, CRT-advocating, liberal advocacy groups that argue that color blindness is itself racist. Watch it here and decide for yourself.

 

Vaccine Conspiracies: Why Is Data Disappearing?

This is a disturbing story about how the province of Alberta, after years of tracking and reporting on claims of injury from the COVID-19 mRNA vaccine (as required by law), suddenly stopped publishing the data. Then they took it a step further by deleting all previous reports. This after the number of reports began mounting to scary heights.

In this, the last of a three-part series of interviews with Canadian Dr. William Makis, you can see what happened. (You can also access the first two parts from it.) Click here.

By the way, when I call this a conspiracy theory, it’s not because I think it’s untrue. On the contrary, I think it may be true, but I know that a large chunk of the people reading my account of it will assume it’s some sort of Russian or Right Wing generated fake news. If you find it hard to believe that the province of Alberta would do something so obviously unethical as deleting data that contradicts their biases, I invite you to hit the link, read the article, and decide for yourself. If you do so, and still think it’s a conspiracy theory, let me know how it is false. I’d like to know!