An Open Letter Denouncing the Attacks on Justice Clarence Thomas

You obviously have not been following whats been going on out here. White liberals are using racial slurs.
Show us the epidemic of PROMINENT white liberals who've been calling this coon racial slurs.

And while you're at it, show me where these names off that list on that letter who have signed similar petitions for or signed off on police reform bills, refutation of CRT fallacies, keeping Black history in schools or reparations for descendants of enslaved people in America.

WTF is this shit:
"For three decades Justice Thomas has served as a model for our children. He has long been honored and celebrated by black people in this country and his attackers do not speak for the majority of blacks."

:lol:
 
So we're clear here, it's cool for liberal cacs to call Uncle Clarence nggers and should be lynched because of his political stance on Roe v Wade?
 
Fuck that Judas. I just hope I'm alive to see him carried to his grave. :angry: :angry: :angry:

Ill give you a preview of how that shit will go down :lol: :lol: :lol:

rs_600x600-150710161127-600.dead-raccoon.jpg
 
Facts.

Too many of you woke militants have been giving a pass to CACs and the media to say borderline racist shit to this man - some of the same people will defend black degenerates.
Amen!!!

These fools will defend anyone who is Democrat. A CAC never has a pass to call a black person a ni$%=r, monkey, coon, or whatever.
 
Look at those agreeing with the list of coons using blackness to defend Clarence Thomas.

Some of you are really stupid and they are showing you how stupid you are by using the black card for a defense of a mofokr that isn't black.

My color not my kind
 
White conservatives, etc.. have been pretty liberal with the N word and many other disparaging words and there was no letter written and signed by these same folks. There was no outrage from the black conservative crew when non conservatives black folk were attacked. So why is it an issue now with these black conservatives and yourself?
Do you remember things such as Baraka Obama the magic negro??
And you ain't heard ner' one of them kewn ass kewns say a peep. You could hear a mouse pissing on cotton.
 
I guess many if not all of the names on the list are woke militants who gave passes to cacs while they called (and probably joined in on) Obama and his family all kinds borderline and outright racist shit..

Are you cool with liberal CACs calling Clarence Thomas an uncle tom and questioning his blackness?
 
You obviously have not been following whats been going on out here. White liberals are using racial slurs.


White folks have been getting a lil too comfortable on social media, but they have been getting called out on it by black folks and some other white liberals. The proper response is "Fuck you for calling him the N word and Fuck him too". Some of those accounts are troll accounts tho

That said, I don't recall those folks writing a letter to white conservatives during the Obama years regarding the treatment of the Obamas which included calling Michelle a gorilla or a man, passing pics around of water melons being grown on the white house lawn or against any of the hundreds if not thousands of racial insults hurled toward Obama and his family.
 
White folks have been getting a lil too comfortable on social media, but they have been getting called out on it by black folks and some other white liberals. The proper response is "Fuck you for calling him the N word and Fuck him too". Some of those accounts are troll accounts tho

That said, I don't recall those folks writing a letter to white conservatives during the Obama years regarding the treatment of the Obamas which included calling Michelle a gorilla or a man, passing pics around of water melons being grown on the white house lawn or against any of the hundreds if not thousands of racial insults hurled toward Obama and his family.
Good observation.
And as I am the equal energy man of BGOL
Also
Why weren't the liberal Cacs on coon Clarence bumper all these other years when it was Black people getting shat on? Only until it affected them.
 
I'm gonna drop this in here real quick... I brought this up weeks ago and was promptly shouted down....
It's common knowledge that Clarence Thomas is the pinnacle of cooning, but quick question.... If the vote count was 5 to 4
Why when I Google the vote count or any news article about the vote, the only justice explicitly named is Clarence Thomas? Even in the articles that have each individual justice's vote, the headline starts and the article ends with... You guessed it, Clarence Thomas. Did he cast the deciding vote? Did he break a tie? Did he lose rock paper scissors? Am I tripping? Can one of you political science professors explain this to me? Or does even asking this question make me a cac or a coon also? If I didn't know any better I'd think they were trying to make a Black Man(no matter how much of a Coon he absolutely is) the face of the supreme court's decision. Kinda makes you wonder....
 
You'll wait for what?
The decision that he he was on the side of resulted in states that had a history of racially discriminating voting rules no longer have to clear changes to their voting laws with the federal court. ...weakening the affect of the voting rights act.


...so basically the decision said that all those states that did all that nasty stuff to keep black people away from the polls pre-1965... they're all peachy now, so no need to make them check to make sure it's ok before they make changes anymore... cause ya know... they won't go and do things like close polling places selectively in black parts of town, etc.....

....What does the opinion say my friend? I'll wait.
 
Last edited:
  • Like
Reactions: BKF
Being a coon means I don't have to defend you. Clarence ain't been black in a long time. I could give two shits what a white person says about his Ass. He's rich and powerful for life he is in no way in need of my defense.

Fuck him. If he's called a nigga everyday for the rest of his life it would be karmatic
 
Are you cool with liberal CACs calling Clarence Thomas an uncle tom and questioning his blackness?
No sane black people are not cool with white people denigrating even a self hating black man like Thomas. Fuck every one of them cacs. Now your turn. This self hating black man is cool with whites denigrating the rest of black America and he cheers it on. He and that ugly white bitch of his talk shit about us daily. Are you cool with a man that shits on his and our blackness then using it as a shield like he did at his conformation hearing for the High Court? Some of us defend some of the dumbest shit to be free thinking black men. It seems some of you always side with coons. I can't imagine white, excuse me... why that is.
 
Uncle Clarence is 74 years old.

The clock is ticking on his Ass. He isn’t in good health and it’s hard as hell for Black men to make it to his age even in good health.

His supporters know he has a shitty legacy, they trying to do damage control to salvage any (which there isn’t) but of good reputation he has.

They know when he drops dead, Black folks will be on the street celebrating, there won’t be any mourning and no Black folks with any self respect will show up to view his body at rest in the US Capitol.
 
  • Like
Reactions: BKF
Are you cool with liberal CACs calling Clarence Thomas an uncle tom and questioning his blackness?

Do you have to be a meteorologist to say it's raining?

Do you have to be black to know what a coon is?

Do you have to live in a trailer park to know what trash is?

Do you have to be black to call out racism or white supremacy?

You mofokrs trying to disqualify truth because the one giving it doesn't fit a demographic...

Why isn't this a case of ignoring the message because you don't like the messenger?

This is the same shit that happened which helped Anita Hill be discredited and allow Thomas to join the court and ignore his blackness until it is convenient.

And none of you patriots defending him said anything when it was exposed his decisions were being made by his CAC wife.

Make sure you don't get angry when Clarence and his CAC wife come to your cookout and bring potato salad with raisins in it.
 
Do you have to be a meteorologist to say it's raining?

Do you have to be black to know what a coon is?

Do you have to live in a trailer park to know what trash is?

Do you have to be black to call out racism or white supremacy?

You mofokrs trying to disqualify truth because the one giving it doesn't fit a demographic...

Why isn't this a case of ignoring the message because you don't like the messenger?

This is the same shit that happened which helped Anita Hill be discredited and allow Thomas to join the court and ignore his blackness until it is convenient.

And none of you patriots defending him said anything when it was exposed his decisions were being made by his CAC wife.

Make sure you don't get angry when Clarence and his CAC wife come to your cookout and bring potato salad with raisins in it.

Some stuff is just out of other folks purview. This would be like me or you walking up to Ginni Thomas and calling her a race traitor for marrying a black man. Makes no sense and not my place. Folks need to stay in their lane and white folks using racial slurs should be shut down regardless, but eff Clarence Thomas still.
 
I'm gonna drop this in here real quick... I brought this up weeks ago and was promptly shouted down....

The reason is because his opinion mentioned other cases that had been settled as precedent to perhaps reviewing them...he brought this on himself

Link to article - Link



Could Clarence Thomas’s Dobbs concurrence signal a future attack on LGBTQ rights?
Samuel Alito’s majority opinion striking down Roe v. Wade insists LGBTQ rights are safe. Thomas’s disturbing concurrence exposes the incoherence of that claim.

By Zack Beauchamp@zackbeauchampzack@vox.com Jun 24, 2022, 2:36pm EDT


In the Supreme Court’s opinion overturning Roe v. Wade, Justice Samuel Alito writes that “nothing in this opinion should be understood to cast doubt on precedents that do not concern abortion.”

Justice Clarence Thomas, in his concurrence, suggests otherwise.

Thomas voted with the 6-3 majority that struck down Roe. In a concurring opinion, however, he expressed the view that he would go further — much further — than the majority in thinking through the implications of today’s decision. One passage in particular captured people’s attention:

In future cases, we should reconsider all of this Court’s substantive due process precedents, including Griswold, Lawrence, and Obergefell. Because any substantive due process decision is “demonstrably erroneous,” we have a duty to “correct the error” established in those precedents.
The key concept is the term “substantive due process,” which refers to the idea that the Constitution protects rights that are neither purely procedural (like rights to fair trial procedures) nor explicitly mentioned in the Constitution (like the freedom of the press). Thomas is arguing that such “unenumerated” rights are basically made up: not just the right to abortion protected in Roe, but also protections for birth control in Griswold v. Connecticut, same-sex sexual relations in Lawrence v. Texas, and same-sex marriage in Obergefell.

This does not mean that these rights are necessarily in danger now. In fact, such future rulings may well be unlikely. Thomas has a long history of unsuccessfully calling for the overruling of longstanding precedent, and Alito’s majority opinion goes out of its way again and again to emphasize that it would not have the implications Thomas wants. Together, these facts suggest that the other conservative justices are wary of going down the road Thomas is paving, and that he would have few votes for enacting his extraordinarily radical vision.


But just because it’s unlikely doesn’t make the possibility any less chilling when spelled out in a Supreme Court concurrence. And Thomas’s concurrence exposes the incoherent logic at the heart of Alito’s ruling — and a fundamental problem with the way the Supreme Court operates.

How Thomas exposed the majority’s incoherence
The basic argument in Alito’s ruling in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health is that there is no explicit constitutional protection for abortion rights, and that any right not explicitly enumerated in the Constitution must be “deeply rooted in this Nation’s history and tradition” and “implicit in the concept of ordered liberty” in order to qualify for constitutional protection. Abortion, he argues, does not pass this test.

But if abortion fails, it’s hard to see how rights to same-sex marriage and contraception pass. Though Thomas’s reasoning is far more extreme than the majority’s, his concurrence shows that it’s difficult to put a limiting principle on a ruling rolling back these legally interconnected rights. The Court can declare all it wants that this ruling only applies in one case, but it becomes harder to see why once you start following the logic.

It’s not just Thomas who sees that. It’s also an argument that the liberal minority — Justices Elena Kagan, Stephen Breyer, and Sonia Sotomayor — make in their joint dissent:

The lone rationale for what the majority does today is that the right to elect an abortion is not “deeply rooted in history”: Not until Roe, the majority argues, did people think abortion fell within the Constitution’s guarantee of liberty. The same could be said, though, of most of the rights the majority claims it is not tampering with. The majority could write just as long an opinion showing, for example, that until the mid-20th century, “there was no support in American law for a constitutional right to obtain [contraceptives].” So one of two things must be true. Either the majority does not really believe in its own reasoning. Or if it does, all rights that have no history stretching back to the mid-19th century are insecure. Either the mass of the majority’s opinion is hypocrisy, or additional constitutional rights are under threat. It is one or the other.
The majority’s response to this argument is that abortion is somehow a unique case: “rights regarding contraception and same-sex relationships are inherently different from the right to abortion because the latter (as we have stressed) uniquely involves what Roe and Casey termed ‘potential life.’” It’s worth noting that this reassurance was in the final opinion, but not in the version that was leaked in May.

But the fact that abortion raises questions about ending lives does not make it any more or less “deeply rooted in our history”: it’s an act of pure legal handwaving, an invention of a standard designed to escape the obvious consequences of Alito’s own logic.

Nor is there any clear reason in the Dobbs treatment of stare decisis, the principle that courts generally ought to adhere to precedent, that would prevent its logic from being applied to these other landmark constitutional cases. Some of the Court’s reasons that Roe was so egregiously bad that it deserved to be overturned — that it, for example, “usurped the power to address a question of profound moral and social importance that the Constitution unequivocally leaves for the people” — could also apply to Griswold or Obergefell.

Instead of setting up clear standards, it seems that Alito and his colleagues are trying to make the problem exposed by Thomas and the dissenters disappear: to assert that their logic doesn’t apply to what it obviously does.

As a practical matter, this might very well work: The Court majority is not bound by any formal rules other than the ones it decides on. It can simply do whatever it wants for whatever reason it wants; if it does not want to extend the logic of its own ruling to similar cases for arbitrary reasons, it can easily do that.

But this should reveal to the rest of us that what Alito and company are doing is not simply following legal principles wherever they lead: They are exercising power, reshaping the law according to their own political beliefs and calculations about potential political backlash.

Ironically, a ruling decrying the Court behaving like a legislature is engaged in much the same enterprise. And this, in turn, raises the question of whether nine unelected judges really should have the power we’ve given them.

Correction, 3 pm: A sentence previously included in this article referred to Clarence Thomas’s dissent instead of concurrence. He voted with the 6-3 majority to overturn Roe.
 
  • Like
Reactions: BKF
Some stuff is just out of other folks purview. This would be like me or you walking up to Ginni Thomas and calling her a race traitor for marrying a black man. Makes no sense and not my place. Folks need to stay in their lane and white folks using racial slurs should be shut down regardless, but eff Clarence Thomas still.

I agree with you but in this case, it isn't a fight worth my energy.

And while we defending Clarence he is continuing to make rulings that threaten black folks and making his votes based on what his dear wife is telling him to do.

And I also know the strategy of those using the fact he has melanin to discredit the description.

This is the shit Candace Owens and Stacy Dash do. Black when convenient

Has any of the blacker than black signatories ever called out Thomas?
 
Back
Top