Destroying the road to equity

Hari Sreeramagiri, Staff Writer

“My most fervent wish is that I will not be replaced until a new president is installed.” This was the sentence Justice Ginsburg prompted her granddaughter to write before her untimely demise. Trump, however, has nominated a candidate whose beliefs place every decision Ginsburg has made in hopes of a better future in peril: Amy Coney Barrett.

Barrett, who thinks being gay is a “sexual preference” rather than an immutable part of identity that is not chosen, and who repeatedly dodged questions on same-sex marriage during her U.S. confirmation hearing. Coney Barrett, who does not believe in a woman’s right to choose, and who has indirectly threatened to overturn Roe v. Wade decision legalizing abortion. Rape victims, young girls, underprivileged women without the financial means to raise a child. These are the people who this decision will hurt the most, and guess what? Barrett’s Catholic beliefs that “affirm the teachings of the Church as truth,” regardless of proven science and statistics, do not solve their problems.

Barrett, who thinks guns should continue to be legal, regardless of their catastrophic impact on the lives of young teens and the victims of racial violence. She dissented in Kanter vs. Barr, in which the appeals court upheld a decision restricting the Second Amendment rights of a felon convicted of mail fraud, claiming that this violated his Constitutional rights. According to this reasoning, it follows that any person convicted of a major felony due to suspicious behavior can remain armed, regardless of an imminent risk of more dangerous future occurrences.

Barrett, who has made questionable decisions when it comes to immigration policy, including defending the Trump administration’s rule denying immigrants permanent residence if they are deemed “likely” to use public assistance. Additionally, she has refused to review cases by immigrants applying for humanitarian protections, which are essential for immigrants to obtain deportation relief and other benefits for quality of life.

Barrett, who helped to block the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission from stopping an employer who was appointing their employees based on ethnicity. Columbus Dispatch reports this is a decision which, in the words of three dissenting judges, “deprived people …of employment opportunities at their preferred geographic location.”

During trying times, there are some issues which test the intelligence of leaders, some which test their strength, and others which test their basic human instincts. Following the passing of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, President Donald Trump’s instincts are in question, because the differences between Barrett and her predecessor are stark. Ginsburg was a strong woman who spent her life battling adversity, unifying the liberal block, and shattering the glass ceiling for future generations of women in politics. Meanwhile, Barrett has ideals that would solidify conservative dominance on the Supreme Court and restrict the passage of liberal decisions. Some might argue that my judgement is being clouded by political opinions, but there is nothing wrong with conservative or originalist views. It is when they are combined with a lack of empathy for oppressed and minority groups that they lead to catastrophic impacts. A balance of liberal and conservative judges leaves room for conversation, while imbalance furthers the dogmatism and polarization that already plague our country.

All in all, this is not a political issue, but a people issue. Barrett’s nomination threatens the lives of millions whose freedom Justice Ginsburg worked so hard to preserve and protect. If she were here today, perhaps she would say it louder for the people in the back: “My most fervent wish is that I will not be replaced until a new president is installed.”