Recently, I read Clarence Thomas’ autobiography, My
Grandfather's Son: A Memoir,
which covers his life up to the time he joined the Supreme
Court. The book was widely condemned by reviewers,
though some praised it. A few, a very few,
even hit the nail on the head with regard to crucial aspects
of Thomas’ life and thought discussed in the book.
One might begin here by saying that this is the angriest book
- by far the angriest book - that one has ever read. If
Thomas were not a Justice, his book would be called a polemic,
or a screed. To have written such a book sixteen years
into the continuing honor of being a Justice of the Supreme
Court is more than the word “amazing” can signify. There
are, roughly speaking, about one million lawyers in this country. Nine of
them, or
one in about every 111,000 are on the Supreme Court. That’s
less than one one-thousandth of one percent of them, if my
arithmetic is right. There are 300 million people in this country,
and only the same nine of them are Supreme Court Justices. That’s
less than one three hundred thousandths of one percent, if
my arithmetic is right. With an accomplishment like this,
Thomas is angry? One thinks there must be something fundamentally
wrong with this guy.
One understands, of course, that anger
cannot necessarily be measured this way. Events can have such an impact
on a person that no success, however great, can fully dissipate
it - although for most people great success will mitigate it,
a fact not irrelevant to the saying that “living well is the
best revenge.” One also fears that the kind of anger
still borne and now disclosed by Thomas despite huge success
may not be totally irrelevant to the psychological profile
of George W. Bush, a man whose psychological problems - coupled,
to be sure, with mental inadequacy, unlike Thomas - are widely
believed to have had more than a little to do with the disasters
of the last eight years. Perhaps Thomas has done us a
favor after the fact in this regard, the favor being greater
knowledge that, in picking leaders, we ought to try to be sure
they are not persons of unlimited psychological anger and consequent
high aggression. But be all as it may, it remains true
that Clarence Thomas is a very angry man despite an
extraordinary level of success, and does not even have the
grace to hide the anger although he has risen to a level that
the vast, vast run of lawyers, and the even vaster run of people,
cannot aspire to.
The irony, of course, is that if there
had been grace, there would have been no book. There
is a book only because there was no grace.
Yet one cannot help wondering whether,
at least in part, Thomas wrote the book not just to get even,
but also for the money. In
the book itself, he talks a lot about not having any money,
and I’m pretty confident he would deeply resent and take offense
at someone questioning how this could have happened despite
salaries that most Americans would die for (e.g., as head of
a federal agency in Washington). He would point out his
prior background of poverty, his need to repay educational
loans, his family responsibilities, especially after a divorce. Yet
lots of unfortunate people have these problems on far lower
salaries. Nor am I the only person to suspect that maybe the
lack of money he so often mentions stems from a lack of competence
in handling it. In any event, he does complain, often
and bitterly, about lack of money, and he received a nice piece
of change as an advance for writing the book: $1.5 million
still buys a few things even though this is 2008.
Let me now disabuse the reader of the
idea that this is to be a one sided, anti-Thomas commentary: Thomas says some
things that resonate deeply with this writer, things I agree
with, are sympathetic to, and understand. Less than a
handful of his book’s many reviewers
seem to have realized or cared about these things.
To begin with, Thomas is an avatar of
hard work, discipline in one’s work and heavy reliance on one’s self and one’s own
efforts, as the road to success. Amen, brother. That
may be the 1950s talking, particularly now when we know any
bum can be successful if his Daddy was rich or president (or
both). Yet, for
most of us, hard work, discipline in doing one’s work, and
heavy reliance on self remain the only road. They are
not the royal road once portrayed. They do not guarantee
one will escape failure. But for most they are the only
avenue, other than cheating and dishonesty,
that leads to success. It was the road followed
by Thomas - nobody seems to deny that, by the way - and he
deserves all credit for it.
If he caught a break here or there rather than relying wholly on
self, well, everyone should and most do catch at least some good
breaks in a world filled with bad ones.
Forgive me for telling a story that supports
Thomas’ view,
a braggadocious story about our school,
the Massachusetts
School of Law (MSL), that happened just a few days ago
and that Thomas might well appreciate. Our law school
is one that for years has spurned American Bar Association
accreditation because the elitist, money-oriented rules of
that accreditation body mean law schools, and therefore the
legal profession, have ever increasingly been the preserve
of the white and wealthy. Under the ABA’s
rules, a school cannot effectively carry out the mission of
our school, which is to provide opportunity for the less fortunate
economically, including minorities. We offer opportunity
to people who are capable but are excluded from ABA
schools by financially or academically exclusivist standards,
and lots of our students are persons who could not get into ABA schools though they are capable, hardworking and will be excellent
lawyers.
We have a chapter at MSL of BLSA, the Black
Law Students Association. The chapter is open to
persons of any race, color, etc., but is primarily comprised
of African Americans. Every year the national BLSA
puts on a trial competition among BLSA Chapters. There
are six regional competitions, and the top two teams in each
region go to the national finals held a few weeks later. MSL
competes in the Northeast Regional Competition. This
year there were a total of 15 teams in the Northeast Regionals,
with MSL sending four separate teams. We
do not know all of the other schools, because of “secrecy” maintained
to insure against bias in judging, but we nonetheless know
that other schools included one of the country’s most prestigious
schools, Harvard, and still others were well thought-of ABA
schools like St. Johns, Rutgers, Syracuse, Albany, Pace and
Touro. It
is no secret that ABA schools, especially ones like Harvard, enroll African Americans
who have the very best academic records and aptitude test
scores of any black students.
So what happened at the Northeast Regionals
a few days ago? Well, in the first round of matches every
team has two trials. After these two trials, the number
of competing teams is reduced from 15 to 8. By the luck
of the draw, none of the four MSL teams played each other,
and all won, so that all four advanced to the quarterfinal
round of eight. Again by the luck of the draw, none of
MSL’s four
teams played each other - but again all won, so that all advanced,
and only MSL teams advanced, to the semifinals,
where the four MSL teams necessarily played each other because
no team was left from any other school. And from the
semifinals, of course, two of the MSL teams advanced to play
each other in the finals of the Northeast Regionals.
As far as we know, this has not happened
before. And,
especially because the luck of the draw is needed so that teams
from a given school do not play each other, with one knocking
out another at or before the quarterfinals, it is not likely
to happen again. But how and why did it happen
this time? Why did teams from the non ABA MSL sweep the
competition - competition which apparently included nothing
but teams from ABA schools, including one of the country’s most
prestigious law schools that gets African
American students with the best previous grades and test scores? The
answer is not complicated, and should make someone with Thomas’ views
as pleased as punch. MSL’s coaches
and team members worked very hard to prepare for the competition. Hard
work was the only secret.
Now, this does lead to two other ruminations. One
knows from experience that other teams did not fail to
work hard: some schools make such competitions one of the
focal points of their academic programs and do well year after
year. So MSL did not succeed because of sloth elsewhere. As
well, it goes without saying that the students from MSL are
smart and talented. Without intelligence and talent,
even hard work could not suffice to defeat teams from schools
that select the crème de la crème of students - white, black,
brown, yellow, red or green - as judged by higher education’s
ordinary, if deeply incomplete, measuring stick of prior grades
and purported aptitude test scores.
So this little story, which happened only
last week, is more living proof of the rightness of Thomas’ view of the importance
of hard work and discipline in one’s work.
Then, too, there is another matter as
to which Thomas’ views,
are very understandable. Beyond question his views
stem from, were shaped by, the life he led. With a grandfather
(who raised him) whom the words “stern disciplinarian” do not
begin to describe, and living in a southern society that made
life hell for him, Thomas had to rely on himself, on his own
talent, work and discipline. Little wonder that he came
to see these traits as the route to success, and to think that
what a lot of liberals said about help that government should
give minorities was simply a snare and a delusion for the minorities. Equally
little wonder, as one or two reviewers have noted, that his
background informs his constitutional views, even ones regarded
as incredibly harsh, and even though he himself believes, one
gathers, that a judge’s personal views should not inform his
judging. Backgrounds have been informing judging since at
least the days of John Marshall, so Thomas’ actions accord
with this even if they are harsh and even if his view of the
role of background is wrong.
Then, too, there is the question of Thomas’ bitterness - bitterness
hardly describes it - over the fact that he has been savaged
for his views, he feels, by liberals and by lots of fellow
African Americans. One sympathizes with this. It
is very difficult when people whom you expect would be your
friends, or at least to disagree amicably rather than viciously,
instead turn on you and either fail to support you or, even
worse, savage you. Such, unhappily, too often seems the
tale of those who are ahead of the conventional wisdom or,
at least, are out of step with it. One gets a strong
whiff of this every now and again in the writings of the estimable Paul
Krugman. Ibsen wrote of it in Ibsen:
4 Major Plays, Vol. 2: Ghosts/An Enemy of the People/The Lady
from the Sea/John Gabriel Borkman (Signet Classics),
a play which somehow or other made a lasting impression when
I read it as a freshman in college. This writer himself
has written in a memoir of what it is like to be out of step
with conventional wisdom. So one understands and sympathizes
with Thomas’ deep unhappiness at having been ill treated, at
least as he sees it, just because his views are different than
those of other African Americans and white liberals.
Yet, notwithstanding that there are important ways in which
Thomas deserves understanding and at least empathy if not actual
sympathy, there remain a couple of points that one wishes were
not so, but plainly are so. One is that Thomas
is narcissistic, is solipsistic, is self-involved to a degree
that is astounding: he
sees himself as the center of a life long drama. One
could say once again that all this is due in no small part
to the travail-filled life he led, yet one would once again
also have to say this does not seem adequate when a man has
risen as high as he has. At that level it’s time to give
it up and to focus on other things instead of engaging in such
an extensive, almost exclusive, narcissistic focus on all the
hurts and slights and travails one went through.
The other point is Thomas’ relationship to accuracy or truth. I
will not speak of the Anita Hill matter, as to which each side
has its partisans and its proofs, with some marveling at the
idea that either of these two people might be lying. I
shall speak, rather, of two other matters that Thomas himself
brings up in his book. In one, Thomas went to the Bush
compound at Kennebunkport
to be told of his impending nomination to the Supreme Court
and to appear at a press conference announcing it. Thomas
describes the Bush compound thusly: “As we drove through
the gate, I looked with surprise at the modest wooden buildings. I’d
gotten the impression from the news stories I’d read about Kennebunkport
that it was a lavish private resort, but it was obviously a
comfortable, unassuming retreat meant for family and friends.” Well,
a few years ago I was in Kennebunkport
with some friends for a few days and, like lots of touristas,
I went to see the compound; you of course cannot enter it but
you can stare at it from the road. This compound is “modest”? This
compound is “unassuming?” Boy, we should all have such
modest and unassuming places by the ocean. One cannot
say Thomas’ description is a falsehood, since the nature of
the compound could be thought a matter of opinion rather than
fact. And yet, to tell readers all over the country that
the Bush compound is modest and unassuming certainly does raise
questions. Is Thomas simply an inaccurate person, which
if true, has its ramifications? Was he possibly being
disingenuous, conceivably even somewhat dishonest, in order
to give a patron family the appearance to the public of being
regular guys rather than avatars of wealth, of position, of
the American aristocracy? Who can say? I only know
that one finds it impossible to share his view of the compound.
The other event is far more damning with
regard to truth. During
the pendency of the hearings on his
nomination, Thomas was being evaluated by the American Bar
Association, and was being interviewed by two ABA types, one
of whom, an African American, he obviously did not trust. To
let Thomas speak in his own words about what happened would
be best:
I was simultaneously being evaluated by the American Bar Association,
and early on I had lunch with the two lawyers in charge of
the ABA’s investigation. Judah Best struck me
as a professional whom I could trust to be fair, but I was
suspicious of Robert Watkins, a black attorney from a large
law firm, Williams & Connolly. Although Watkins was
polite enough, his manner was guarded and distant, and he later
abstained from voting on my nomination on the grounds that
he sat on the board of the Lawyers
Committee for Civil Rights, a group that was adamantly
opposed to me. Needless to say, he hadn’t found it necessary
to mention this conflict of interest until he’d finished investigating
me.
Watkins asked whether I’d ever used illegal drugs, the same
question that had ostensibly short-circuited Doug Ginsburg’s
confirmation in 1987. I said that I didn’t recall ever
having done so. It was an uncharacteristic reply, but
I’d been a heavy drinker in college and had often been around
people who smoked marijuana and hashish. I was telling
the truth: I didn’t remember using such drugs. I’d
been afraid of them. For me illegal drugs were yet another
problem I didn’t need to add to my already long list. On
the other hand, it occurred to me that I might possibly have
tried them once or twice while I was drunk, and I knew that
a flat denial might put me at risk of being contradicted, so
in the end, in order to put the issue to rest, I said that
I had experimented with marijuana. [Emphasis
in original.]
What Thomas is telling us is that he told
a falsehood to avoid a possible problem. He really didn’t think he had done
drugs, but “in the end,” in order to avoid a possible problem,
he falsely said he “had experimented with marijuana.” It
is ironic that someone would avoid a problem by falsely saying
he had experimented with marijuana, but, irony or no, he told
a lie to avoid difficulty. And, amazingly, just like
the lie Jack Goldsmith admitted he told to avoid trouble in
his book, The
Terror Presidency: Law and Judgment Inside the Bush Administration (which
is discussed in a posting dated October 12, 2007 [on Velvel's
own website]),
Thomas seems oblivious to the possibility someone might think
badly of him for lying. So justified is the lie in his
own mind that there is not the slightest conception that someone
else could think badly of it.
This Thomas/Goldsmith syndrome of not being in the slightest
degree cognizant that others might look askance at a lie reflects,
of course, the Washington
syndrome, where each spent time in the upper echelons. (Thomas
spent much time there and Goldsmith some time
there.) This syndrome, which might sarcastically be termed “never
tell the truth when a lie will do just as well,” is devastating
the country and, as I occasionally write in these commentaries,
the lack of concern for truth is regularly corrupting the Supreme
Court, on which Thomas now sits. The
failure of truth - at least of unvarnished, straightforward
truth - has even completely taken over the nominating and confirmation
process itself in regard to Supreme Court Justices. (If
I heard them correctly - two on television and one in person
- three of the country’s most well known journalistic commentators
on the Supreme Court, Linda Greenhouse, Jeffrey Toobin and
Jan Greenburg, all agreed recently that the nominating and
confirmation process has become a farce.) Rather than
giving unrehearsed, honest answers to questions, nominees are
prepped to the nines (as Thomas was) on possible questions
and desirable answers at the Senate hearings by administration
lawyers and allies for weeks and months in advance. The
nominees undergo practice runs, called murderboards. They
are trained to use up Senators’ time by giving long answers
to innocuous questions, or to questions which have innocuous,
bland or unrevealing answers, while refusing to give any answers
whatever to other questions on the totally phony ground - which
unbelievably has come to be widely accepted by the pols and
large elements of the stupid media - that nominees can say
nothing on a particular subject because a case involving
it could one day come before them. The Senators - blowhards
to a man and woman, right? - are completely overmatched substantively
because they are mere (long winded) pols who cannot begin to
compete on relevant subjects with the long time federal litigators
and/or judges who appear before
them (e.g., Thomas, Ginsburg, Breyer,
Roberts, Alito), some of whose confirmation processes have
gone on extensively. The Senators, instead of asking short sharp
questions specifically designed to elicit information, make
lengthy speeches for the camera and the public, speeches availing
nothing for the confirmation process but sometimes so long
as to use up all of the blowhard’s own time for asking questions
and getting answers. The whole process has become farce,
with little or nothing in common with a procedure dedicated
to discovering truth.
It can hardly be a surprise that a procedure
so at odds with truth seeking, in a town where truth is minimal
currency, results
in a Supreme Court which often shows little concern for truth. As
said, I occasionally write about this, and am moved to say
that the latest major example, a societally very important
example, occurred just six weeks or so ago, in the Stoneridge opinion
handed down on January 15th. Without getting into the
details of the business and accounting specifics, the essence
of that case was that a cable TV company, Charter Communications,
conspired with two suppliers, Motorola and Scientific-Atlanta,
to engage in phony transactions that would make Charter’s accounting
statements look better, that in service of this goal would
fool Charter’s own accountants (the late Arthur Andersen and
Company), and that in consequence would have a beneficial effect
on the price of Charter’s stock. (Were there stock options
for executives who would thereby benefit? - I don’t know.) The
Court’s majority admitted that it was claimed Motorola and
Scientific-Atlanta knew of the illicit, stock-price-affecting
goal of the false transactions to which they agreed, the dissent
took it as a given that Motorola and Scientific-Atlanta knew,
and, frankly, if you look at the specifics, it seems impossible for
sophisticated companies - Motorola, for God’s sake - not to
have understood that the purpose of the phony deals was to
fraudulently make Charter’s accounting statements look better
than they actually were and to make its stock rise accordingly. I
reiterate: it was impossible not to have
understood this.
Investors who had bought Charter’s fraudulently propped up
stock, and who had been cheated by dishonest conduct, brought
a case seeking monetary damages under the federal securities
laws. The Court’s majority said there was no remedy for
them. The dissent disagreed. Why is one not surprised
that the majority was comprised of the Reagan, Bush I, Bush
II five: Kennedy, Scalia, Thomas,
Roberts and Alito - the five appointed to do in the small guy
in favor of big business, big government, and the pols. The
three dissenters were liberals, Stevens, Souter and Ginsburg. (Breyer
did not participate in the case.)
As is always true in Supreme Court cases,
the majority gave a host of purported technical and policy
reasons for its decision,
and the dissent countered those reasons with opposing ones. The
plethora of reasons so often given one way or another is one
of the things that make Supreme Court decisions so often so
boring to read. The Justices usually seem unable to cut
to the heart of matters, and never is this truer, one supposes,
than when the heart eviscerates their position, so that they
must instead focus on matters of lesser import that, often
by mere speculation, are thought to support them. Here
the crucial point, the heart of the matter point, whose total
absence from the majority opinion fairly screams from the page,
is this: The reactionary five did not give a damn that
the conduct at issue was completely dishonest, completely fraudulent,
designed to fraudulently fool stock buyers, alleged to have
been known by Motorola and Scientific-Atlanta to be a fraudulent
sham used to fool people, and must have been known by
them to be of this character.
As is true so widely in America today,
especially in business and politics even if not among the
ever shrinking circle of
decent people (to borrow from a remark about George Pickett’s “ever
shrinking circle of friends” in the movie Gettysburg),
the Supreme court’s majority simply was not moved by the dishonesty
or its effect on others.
Nor is Stoneridge a case
without possibly crucial ramifications in a much larger context. There
is at this point no doubt - none whatever - that a wide variety
of actors played major roles contributing to the subprime mortgage
mess, in which investors in securities comprised of such mortgages,
or portions of such mortgages, that were bundled together into
and were sold as securities are among those who are left holding
the bag. The actors who facilitated the deals included
huge commercial banks and huge investment banks, some of which,
like Goldman Sachs, made a bundle, probably billions, on these
mortgages. There is equally no doubt whatever at this
point that, virtually from top to bottom, the whole business
often involved the use of undue, unfair influence and outright
fraud, and that this, and the securities’ lack of the claimed
value, often were known to those who made a bundle from the
deals and who took extensive steps to facilitate them in order
to make fortunes.
Investors are going to be bringing lots
of lawsuits under the securities laws based on the pervasive
misconduct, and
there is real concern among some of the cognoscenti that those
who participated knowingly and selfishly in misconduct that
now threatens to wreck ours and even the world’s economy will
be able to avoid liability because of the Stoneridge decision
rendered by the reactionary, screw-the-small-guy five. There
are others who hope the decision will not be extended that
far and who point to reasons why it might not be, but that
it could be so extended is beyond doubt. In fact,
perhaps “extended” is not even an apropos word: perhaps
the opinion already gives succor to lots of the dishonest,
blameworthy characters in the subprime mess
without any need to extend it, but only to apply it
as written.
Of course, you probably have read and heard very little about Stoneridge or
its possible effects in the venal mainstream media. For,
with few exceptions (such as David Cay Johnston of the New
York Times), reporters don’t know about, don’t want to
learn about, and don’t want to write about business or economics. This
is too dull, too complex, and very uninteresting to people
who make their living talking and writing for months on end
about the trivia of horse race aspects of politics, which is
all they know about or are competent to write or speak about. But Stoneridge,
and certainly the lack of concern for honesty shown by the
screw-the-small-guy five (plus the less
central arguments which they actually made and that are not
canvassed here), could nonetheless have crucial ramifications. And
the lack of concern for honesty shown in Stoneridge does
relate, of course, to views expressed in and actions discussed
in Clarence Thomas’ autobiography.
BlackCommentator.com columnist Lawrence R. Velvel, JD, is the Dean of Massachusetts
School of Law. Click
here to contact Dean Velvel, or you may, post your
comment on his website, VelvelOnNationalAffairs.com.