THE SEPARATE-BUT-EQUAL LEGACY OF BILL REHNQUIST.
On this 50th
anniversary of the crowning achievement of Chief Justice Earl Warren, the
unanimous decision in the 1954 Brown v. Board of Education case ending segregation
in public schools, it is fitting to consider the important legacy of Brown
and see just how far we have come. In
terms of educational institutions, public universities in Georgia, Alabama,
Tennessee, Mississippi, and the rest of the country that were once all-White
are now racially integrated. Yet
America remains racially polarized and divided at times. We saw evidence of that polarization in the
typical Black American’s reaction and the typical White American’s reaction to
the verdict in the O.J. Simpson criminal trial.
Elsewhere,
most White Americans have no idea that Chief Justice Bill Rehnquist, while he
served as a law clerk to Justice Robert Jackson in 1952-53, wrote a legal memo
defending the old and reviled "separate but equal" doctrine. But Black Americans are well aware that
Rehnquist espoused beliefs that would have kept them out of public schools, out
of public colleges and universities, using filthy and cracked public toilets,
drinking out of separate water fountains, etc.
In
his own defense, Rehnquist insisted during his 1971 confirmation hearings that
he had merely been distilling Jackson's views.
But this type of defense displays a shameless streak. You don’t collaborate with the devil and
then seek to avoid guilt by saying “the devil made me do it.” It is hard to believe that Justice Jackson, who witnessed first-hand
atrocities of the Nazi regime as a judge of the Nuremburg trials, would return to the United States after that
experience and espouse racist superiority. If there is any question in White Americans’
or Black Americans’ minds as to whether Bill Rehnquist espoused the beliefs
stated in the memo he penned, they need only look to his track record on the
court.
Without
exception, Rehnquist has voted against nearly every civil rights action before
the court on which he sits. He has
endeavored to make job discrimination claims harder to win in court. He has rejected the use of statistics
showing that the death penalty in Southern states continues to be applied, and
always has been applied, in a racially biased way. For Rehnquist, that is not a problem, and it is enough to make
the lips of any rabid segregationist smile with glee.
Rehnquist
fought with all of his meager intellect as a law clerk to prevent Justice
Jackson from voting in favor of the majority in Brown v. Board of Education.
Black Americans know that Rehnquist’s
memo from his law clerk days entitled “A Random Thought on the
Segregation Cases,” stated in part: "I realize that it is an unpopular and
unhumanitarian position, for which I have been excoriated by 'liberal'
colleagues, but I think Plessy v. Ferguson was right and should be
re-affirmed." Plessy, of course, was the infamous 1896 case holding
racial segregation to be constitutional.
Plessy effectively gutted the progress made in reforming the
former Confederate states, and it permitted Jim Crow laws to remain on the
books for another sixty years with all the strife and bitterness and lynchings
that ensued.
Plessy is routinely taught to law school students across
the land as an example of the lowest, darkest days of the U.S. Supreme Court,
when the justices caved in to political pressure and did not adhere to the
mandates of the U.S. Constitution. Plessy
is uniformly cited as an example of one of the worst decisions ever rendered by
the U.S. Supreme Court, second only to the infamous Dred Scott decision
holding Black people did not have a right to be free under the U. S.
Constitution. It is thus remarkable
that Rehnquist would write a memo saying Plessy was good case law. He might just as well have donned a Ku Klux
Klan hood and said that the Negro is an inferior race. Black Americans are not likely to forget
Rehnquist’s words. No forgiveness is
necessary, because Rehnquist remains defiant and has never apologized or sought
forgiveness from anyone for his words, no matter how much hurt they may have
caused.
During
Rehnquist's confirmation hearing in 1986, his opponents again raised the memo
as a sign of his latent prejudice.
Rehnquist once again defended himself by claiming that he wrote the memo
in response to a request from Justice Jackson for a discussion of the legal
arguments favoring segregation. But several scholars - most convincingly,
Richard Kluger in his epic book Simple
Justice on Brown v. Board - have concluded that Rehnquist wrote
the memo to express his personal views on the case. In any event, Rehnquist’s voting record on the court speaks
louder than any excuses offered during his confirmation hearings. He has sought to gut the holding of Brown
v. Board, whenever possible, as with other civil rights holdings, including
the important Miranda warnings that police officers must give suspects
upon detaining them.
In one final footnote to this story, it goes without saying the Bill Rehnquist is no hero to the Black community in America. On Meet the Press on Sunday, Feb. 15, 2004, Democratic Congressmen Charlie Rangel of New York City stated that many Black Americans regard George W. Bush as the first president appointed by the U.S. Supreme Court. Furthermore, where White Americans feel that stopping the vote count in Florida was correct and that Bush would have won the popular vote there even if the vote count had continued, Rangel stated that most Black Americans felt their votes were not properly counted in Florida. According to Rangel, Black Americans worked hard to register to vote, and then the Supreme Court took away their votes by stopping the count. Rangel suggested the result will be a backlash against the Supreme Court (led by Rehnquist) with increased voter turnout for the 2004 presidential election.
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Dr. MICHAEL A. S. GUTH |