The topic of discussion for this Constitution Monday concerns the need for Justices on the Supreme Court to know how to define woman. Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson is said to be professionally qualified to become a justice on the Supreme Court. From most accounts, she has many qualifications, but her inability to answer basic questions is questionable.
Senator Marsha Blackburn (R-Tenn.) asked
a basic question when she asked Jackson to “provide a definition of the word ‘woman’.”
Judge Jackson was nominated for the Supreme Court because she checked both
boxes suggested by President Joe Biden: she is a black woman. Yet, she
told Senator Blackburn, “No, I can’t” define woman. To cover her
inability by saying, she added, “I’m not a biologist. Well, she is a woman – or
she looks and sounds like a woman.
Admittedly, the request to define a
woman is not the normal line of questioning for nominees for the Supreme Court.
However, the radicals on the Left are causing confusion about both men and
women. Therefore, the question now must be asked.
Some people wonder why a Supreme
Court justice needs to know how to define a woman. Well, there are many laws
that are written to give rights to women or to protect them. Title IX is meant
to provide a level playing for female athletes – obviously not working (see Lia
Thomas). The Nineteenth Amendment to the Constitution gives women the right to
vote. How will Jackson rule on cases that are based on either Title IX or the
Nineteenth Amendment if she does not know how to define a woman? Nicole Russell
wrote the following about the judge’s questionable answer.
By refusing to answer the definition of “woman,”
Jackson leaves the door open to what she thinks about sex, gender, and
controversial cases like Bostock v. Clayton County.
If Jackson knows the definition of “woman”
but remains afraid to say so, this is certainly a red flag. In a free country,
a Supreme Court nominee should be able to speak the truth without fear of
repercussion.
If Jackson is unable or unwilling to
define what a woman is in a legal sense, this can pose real problems for future
cases she may hear as a sitting Supreme Court justice. How can she know what
the law says on sex and gender identity if she cannot define sex? How can she
rule in cases on women’s issues or rights when she isn’t sure how to define a
woman?
Russell quoted her “friend” Mollie
Hemingway as saying: “If you lack both the common sense and the education to
understand what being a woman is – or you’re too terrified of your political
allies to admit you do know – perhaps you should not have a job that affects
other people in any substantial way.”
Continuing, Russell wrote that the
inability to define “woman” or “man” or “male” or “female” has consequences. If
these words cannot be defined, it “leaves multiple expressions to be codified
into law that would create loopholes for predators to abuse women and children.”
It “leaves the vulnerable in society even more vulnerable when it comes to
interpretations of the law.”
To make matters worse, it’s hard to
overestimate how hypocritical this entire charade is when President Joe Biden
himself promised to nominate specifically a black female for this role – white males
had no chance – and then Jackson treats the issue like it’s a great mystery,
too complex even for her.
Russell was tempted to say that
Jackson’s non-answer could be “political grandstanding or Jackson’s answer to
cleverness.” She did not and she told her readers to avoid doing it. “Jackson
purposefully played a game of semantics with an issue that has torn apart
tenets of law, families, sports, and education. As a woman, she should know
this.”
I agree with Russell in saying that
Jackson declined to the answer the question on purpose. If she would have
defined woman, she would have been in trouble with the Far-Left radicals
and black women. Jackson is a radical who is also a judicial activist.
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