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Right Wing Judge Alito's Publicly Confesses To Being Corrupt

From Leroy <x@y.com>
Newsgroups alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, alt.rush-limbaugh, alt.survival, talk.politics.guns, soc.men, sac.politics
Subject Right Wing Judge Alito's Publicly Confesses To Being Corrupt
Followup-To alt.fan.rush-limbaugh
Date 2025-02-15 22:14 +0000
Organization ee
Message-ID <XnsB287AF6578B72@135.181.20.170> (permalink)

Cross-posted to 6 groups.

Followups directed to: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh

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Justice Alito's op-ed is a confession of corruption

On Tuesday afternoon, Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito was gifted op-ed 
space in The Wall Street Journal, in which he attempted to make a 
preemptive strike on a ProPublica article reporting on evidence of his 
accepting gifts from someone with business before the court. Even though 
the ProPublica article had not appeared at the time the op-ed ran, Alito 
was shockingly accurate about what it would say.

But then, it’s always easy to predict the evidence of guilt when you’re 
the one who is guilty. In fact, it’s easy to read Alito’s op-ed for what 
it really is: a confession.

 

Alito took a huge gift from someone who has had business before the court 
not once, but at least 10 times. And all Alito can provide as 
justification is that he really didn’t remember a once-in-a-lifetime trip 
with a six-figure price tag, and didn’t manage to put together that the 
hedge fund he was ruling on was connected to the person who gave him that 
trip. Who was a hedge fund manager.

In other words, ignorance is his only excuse. According to Alito, that’s 
just fine.

What the ProPublica article shows is that Alito took a very expensive 
fishing trip in 2008. That included being flown to a remote location in 
Alaska on a private jet, and being put up in a room at an exclusive lodge 
where he was wined, dined, and guided to catch some very large king 
salmon. His flight, his fishing, his meals, wine, and room were covered 
by hedge fund manager Paul Singer.

Alito never reported this gift. Because, he says, he only had a “modest 
room” and “if there was wine it was certainly not wine that costs 
$1,000.” Which skips right past the fact that the room, no matter if it 
wasn’t up to Alito’s high standards, cost $1,000 a night all on its 
own—enough that a single night there should have made the trip subject to 
reporting.

When it comes to his flight on a private jet, Alito has a Very Good 
Reason why he didn’t have to report that.

    As for the flight, Mr. Singer and others had already made 
arrangements to fly to Alaska when I was invited shortly before the 
event, and I was asked whether I would like to fly there in a seat that, 
as far as I am aware, would have otherwise been vacant. It was my 
understanding that this would not impose any extra cost on Mr. Singer. 
Had I taken commercial flights, that would have imposed a substantial 
cost and inconvenience on the deputy U.S. Marshals who would have been 
required for security reasons to assist me.

There’s the minor problem that every seat on a scheduled flight, private 
or commercial, would be “have otherwise been vacant” if someone didn’t 
put their butt in it. That doesn’t make the value of these seats in any 
sense free. He might want to try walking up to the gate at any airline 
and telling them he wants to use one of those empty seats, just to check.

When it comes to the U.S. Marshals service, deputy marshals do generally 
provide protection for federal judges, but Alito seems to be saying that 
he would need their protection if flying with the general public, but not 
in the company of these wealthy men who he had never met before. It’s 
almost as if he’s saying that because they were rich, they were treated 
differently.

Singer’s hedge fund was party to at least 10 cases before the Supreme 
Court. These aren’t complex relationships, in which Singer contributed to 
an organization, or was a partial owner of some entity through a nest of 
overlapping corporations. Singer was a hedge fund manager. That hedge 
fund was party to a case. But Alito has a firm response to why he 
couldn’t possibly draw the connection.

    It would be utterly impossible for my staff or any other Supreme 
Court employees to search filings with the SEC or other government bodies 
to find the names of all individuals with a financial interest in every 
such entity named as a party in the thousands of cases that are brought 
to us each year.

It would be utterly impossible … Except that the case was in 2014 and 
even if Alito’s memory of Singer’s fund was faulty, it was an answer that 
could have been returned in three seconds by any search engine. This is a 
Supreme Court justice asking to be forgiven for failing to do the level 
of research that would be required of a high school freshman turning in a 
history paper. And, as might be obvious, ProPublica had no trouble making 
this “impossible” connection.

In “Chinatown,” corruption is a complex web of connections tying city 
officials to a wealthy land developer who is using a manufactured drought 
to buy up land cheaply. In “The Godfather,” it’s cops being paid under 
the table by both sides in a competing mob war. In many films and 
television shows, corruption happens in the shadows, with the exchange of 
a briefcase filled with cash, or the promise of a little somethin’ 
somethin’ directed to an offshore account.

As is being vividly demonstrated here, that’s not what real corruption 
looks like at all. What real corruption looks like is a billionaire 
“friend” buying up your childhood home at far above the market value, 
fixing it up, and letting your mom live there gratis. It looks like 
expensive private school tuition for a family member being paid by a pal. 
It looks like millions of dollars in business being directed to your 
wife’s business—the business that was “accidentally” left off income 
disclosure forms for 20 years.

And maybe more than anything else, it looks like trips, gifts, and 
experiences that would be utterly unavailable to the average person—and 
whose acceptance would be absolutely forbidden to any federal employee 
who was not a Supreme Court justice. The reason articles keep appearing 
about this kind of trip being enjoyed by justices and not other 
officials, or judges at other levels of the courts, is because the 
Supreme Court has written themselves an out. They are not just the judges 
of everyone else, they’re also the only judges over their own behavior.

Who watches the watchmen? Why, the watchmen, of course. What could go 
wrong?

The excuses in the cases of both Thomas and Alito keep coming back to the 
same things. Either it was acceptable to take a gift because someone was 
“a good friend” or it was acceptable to rule on a case related to that 
person because there was no relationship. As one law professor put it in 
that ProPublic article:

    “If you were good friends, what were you doing ruling on his case? 
And if you weren’t good friends, what were you doing accepting this?”

Alito wants to have it both ways. He’s saying that Singer was a nonentity 
to him, someone with whom he barely shared a few words. But that didn’t 
stop him from accepting a flight on the man’s private jet, a stay at that 
exclusive lodge, and a fishing trip that would make most anglers drool 
with envy.

Maybe Alito and Singer didn’t talk much. But accepting that trip is an 
enormous statement. It tells us who Alito is. It tells us who he values.

Alito uses his op-ed to deliver a hashwork of snippets from the court’s 
own self-generated codes, defending his actions with deflections and 
deceptive statements that try to make it seem as if the whole trip was a 
gift from the lodge, and not the man who paid for his “free” jet travel 
and everything else. But in a way, it almost doesn’t matter who paid.

Ordinary people do not get big free vacations—at least, not unless it’s 
part of a scam to sell them a timeshare. They don’t get these trips from 
companies. They don’t get these trips from admirers, They don’t get these 
trips from “friends.” They don’t get these trips at all.

If you can’t afford to take a trip, why are you taking it from someone 
else? They may not be selling a timeshare, but they’re certainly selling 
something, and if you sit down in that private jet, you have signed the 
contract.

If Alito is looking for a little tip, it’s actually quite simple to tell 
if an act is corrupt. Just ask, “If I was not a judge, member of 
Congress, or other public official, would I be getting this gift?" If the 
answer is no, then accepting it is corrupt.

And that includes being gifted op-ed space in The Wall Street Journal.


https://www.dailykos.com/stories/2023/6/21/2176673/-Justice-Alito-s-op-
ed-is-a-confession-of-corruption

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Right Wing Judge Alito's Publicly Confesses To Being Corrupt Leroy <x@y.com> - 2025-02-15 22:14 +0000

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