
As if 2020 weren’t already tumultuous enough, the death of Supreme Court justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg has managed to stir things up even more.
Talk, not only of Ginsburg’s death, but also of her replacement, has dominated the news since her death on Friday, September 18. Perhaps the most notable feature of the discussion has been controversy about whether Donald Trump should name her replacement now or wait until after the November election.
This is a discussion that should not even come up. The president has the right to nominate a justice to the Supreme Court and the Senate has a right to hold confirmation hearings. About this there is no question. The Democrats don’t like it, but their not liking something is not the same as it being illegal or unconstitutional.
Noteworthy but unsurprising was the reaction of many Democrats to the possibility that Donald Trump would nominate a new justice to replace Ginsburg before the election. Not only did they argue that a nomination of a new justice must wait until after the election, but actually threatened violence should the President and the Senate attempt to carry out their constitutionally mandated duties.
And the threats of violence were not coming from some dark corner of the internet or from obscure people, but from several high-profile Democrats and progressives on Twitter and other high-profile platforms. Reza Aslan, a writer who has written numerous books, produced a series on world religions for CNN and is currently a professor of creative writing at University of California, Riverside, took to Twitter and threatened that, “If they [the Republicans] even TRY to replace RBG [Ginsburg] we burn the entire…thing down.”
Canadian professor of Political Science Emmett Macfarlane tweeted, “Burn Congress down before letting Trump try to appoint anyone to SCOTUS.”
Scott Ross, a member of the Wisconsin Ethics Commission tweeted, “If you can’t shut it down [the nomination of a new Supreme Court justice], burn it down.”
Playwright Beau Willimon commented on Twitter, “We’re shutting this country down if Trump and McConnell try to ram through an appointment before the election.”
In the pages of GQ, writer Laura Bassett threatened, “If McConnell jams someone through, which he will, there will be riots.”
It’s tempting to say that such threats have become the modus operandi of Democrats and progressives in recent years. But in truth, Democrats and progressives have a longstanding tradition of using violence and threats of violence to get their way. It’s how they roll. Not for nothing did Samuel D. Burchard refer to the Democrats as, “the party whose antecedents are rum, Romanism, and rebellion.” Burchard made the comment in 1884. It was true then, and it is true today.
Since the matter of selecting a new justice is a matter of supreme importance both to Democrats and Republicans, and since the upcoming Senate confirmation hearing of Amy Coney Barrett, Trump’s nominee to replace Ginsburg, promises to dominate the headlines in the coming weeks, perhaps overshadowing even the upcoming election, it seemed good to this author to take the opportunity to weigh in.
All Roads Lead to Rome. Even the free-willer John Wesley wrote against the Papacy, although his theology still promoted Romanism in some aspects. This country is in a struggle between consecutive and liberal Catholics to dominant and control the civil realm. Protestants & Baptist don’t speak up. Only a handful attempt to proclaim the Truth. Another Spanish Inquisition with a “different mask” is on the horizon. When Protestants took the Papal Beast out of the Reformed Confessions; it has been downhill ever since along with numerous liberal theologians watering down the Gospel. Come Lord Jesus
All good points, Tommy. The decision to remove the Antichrist language from the Westminster Confession has been a disaster.
There is comfort in the Scriptures seeing His Prophecies being fulfilled (Philippians 4:6 & 7; John 14:27).