Wait Until You See Biden’s SCOTUS Pick’s Letter From 1997, It’s Bad

The media has us in a huge mess. In the last few years, they have become the long arm of politicians, taking voters on a rollercoaster ride of emotions and lies. Making more important than ever to support the anti-media giants and whistleblower outlets. So why would Biden nominate a Supreme Court Justice who wants the media censored? While clerking for a federal judge, Brown Jackson denounced a Boston Herald columnist as “irredeemably evil” for criticizing unrestricted immigration.

The outlet was blasting the Clinton administration over poor border security practices.

Jackson wrote a letter to the editor of the Herald in response to a piece from columnist Don Feder that noted that the population of white people in America could decrease steeply as a result of open borders immigration policy. The text of both 1997 writings was obtained by the Free Beacon through a news archive.

To top it off, the then clerk Brown Jackson praised antisemite extremist Louis Farrakhan.

“To my mind, he’s also like the liberal’s purported view of American history—irredeemably evil,” Jackson wrote of Feder, whose column also attacked black civic leaders such as Louis Farrakhan. The judge disclosed the letter in a questionnaire for the Senate Judiciary Committee.

Law clerks seldom share political opinions in a public forum during their terms of service. Clerkships run one or two years in the federal courts and are highly coveted by law students. Clerks are expected to reflect their judge’s neutrality in public and avoid overt political participation or expression to protect public perception of the courts as nonpolitical entities. Today, clerks often go dark on social media—or delete online accounts altogether—for the extent of their clerkships.

“The Code of Judicial Conduct that prohibits federal judges from engaging in any activity that would undermine their independence or impartiality likewise binds their law clerks, so it is troubling that Jackson would write such a letter while serving as a clerk,” said Carrie Severino, the president of the Judicial Crisis Network. “It shows a lack of awareness on her part regarding the role of the judiciary.”

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