As I prepare for my elevation, I am growing nostalgic.
Many have written this site and asked how it is, exactly, that Supreme Court nominations have become so political?
How is it that a process never before tainted by politics has become an opportunity for the Senate to carp and scheme over a nominees political and personal views?
Tomorrow, in what may be my farewell to blogging (at least as a "nominee"), I will write about the fateful day on which the Senate decided it could take political views of a nominee into account.
It was
December 15, 1795. Many members of the senate, along with the president at the time (three guesses!) and the nominee himself were all members of the Continental Congress.
So to those of you who shout insufferable drivel such as "the founding fathers would never have approved of political criteria for confirmations" or "this was brought on by the Democrats' treatment of Robert Bork," please,
please, go read a high school history textbook or something.
That's all for now.