Can't
Take Our Eyes Off of You: The Supremes and the Stripper
by
Becky Akers
by Becky Akers
Astoundingly,
between encouraging municipalities to steal our homes and enabling
doctors to kill unborn children, the Supreme Court found time to
hear a routine but raunchy inheritance case earlier this week. Skeptics
assume that the plaintiff's celebrity as a "self-described
'blonde bombshell'" helped elbow this lawsuit onto the Court's
crowded calendar.
You might
think, as a taxpayer in these United States, that you have the right
to avail yourself of its courts, even the Supreme one. You would
be wrong. As the Court's
website whines, "caseload has increased steadily to a current
total of more than 7,000 cases on the docket per Term." Those nine
folks in goofy gowns can't be expected to sit through 7,000 soporific
arguments, nor read 7,000 non-brief briefs. The State monopolizes
"justice," and it cares nothing for supply and demand. Rather, it
decrees that there will be one Supreme Court, that it will consist
of nine mollycoddled members who must be protected from overwork,
and that we serfs will make do. Accordingly, the Court warns us
that "plenary review, with oral arguments by attorneys, is granted" oh,
how magnanimous! "in about 100 cases per Term. Formal written opinions
are delivered in 80–90 cases. Approximately 50–60 additional cases
are disposed of without granting plenary review." So about 250 cases
out of perhaps 7,000 will come under the consideration, whether
full or cursory, of these political appointees. That's a production
rate of about 3.5%.
How do the
Supremes decide which of those 7,000 cases will benefit from their
august opinion? At least four of the justices must signal their
interest. The winning suits also have either a Constitutional issue
or enough fodder that the justices can invent one, à la the
right to abortion or conflicting opinions from lower courts
in parallel cases. The Institute
for Justice mentions an example of the latter on its website:
"Plaintiffs in two lawsuits challenging similar laws [regarding
direct shipments of wine] in Michigan and New York have asked the
U.S. Supreme Court to review their cases. Because the courts in
those cases reached opposite results, the odds for Supreme Court
review are much higher than normal."
That brings
us to Marshall v. Marshall, No. 04-1544. On the one hand,
this inheritance case is totally typical and boasts nothing to entice
the too-busy Supremes: heirs are fighting over an estate. On the
other, it is entirely atypical. The estate in question, that of
J. Howard Marshall II, is worth about $1.6 billion. One of the battling
heirs is his son, 67-year-old E. Pierce Marshall. The other is Pierce's
38-year-old stepmother, Vickie Lynn Marshall. It is Vicki, rather
than Constitutional issues or warring court decisions, who attracts
the Supremes' interest: she is better known as Anna Nicole Smith,
former stripper and tawdry entertainer.
The details
of the case are as tiresome as Annie's alias, and they don't cast
her in a flattering light, either. She married Mr. Marshall in 1994,
when she was a 26-year-old divorced mother of one and he was 89;
he died 14 months later. Annie thinks those months of tolerating
an old man's lust entitle her to part, if not half, of his fortune.
His
son disagrees, as folks who have catered to a rich father's
whims for years tend to do. The suit before the Supreme Sleazes
actually doesn't revolve around these mildly juicy particulars.
Instead, it concerns whether a probate court in Houston outranks
a bankruptcy court in California when deciding who gets to marshal
the millions.
Nonetheless,
the mundane facts moved Justice Stephen Breyer to aw-shucks rhetoric:
"'It's quite a story,' he marveled," according to Wednesday’s
New York Sun.
Chief Justice John Roberts declared that the case involves "a substantial
amount of assets." The Sun coyly noted that he was "referring
to the fortune of Ms. Smith's husband." Justice Clarence Thomas
wisely stayed silent. Justice David Souter called Annie on her greed
even if he ignored that same impulse when New London, CT, coveted
poor people's homes: he paraphrased her position as "I just want
some money from this guy."
Again, we might
wonder how this case edged out 6,750 others to squeeze its way before
the Court. And we return to the sleaze factor: a bench of men with
the power to gawk for free at a trollop who normally charges for
the privilege. Geez, why didn't they simply visit her website? For,
yes, Annie runs a website. Under the appropriately egomaniacal heading,
"All About Me," we find such confessions as "I'm an international
model and have been on numerous magazine covers worldwide. I was
crowned Playboy Playmate of the Year." (Psst, Annie: never admit
this on your own. Prosecutors and enemies will unearth this sort
of dirt soon enough.) "I am an Actress," (love the upper-case A!
Think it'll work for us? "I am an Accountant." "I am an Analyst."
"I am an Airhead Who Thinks Capitals Impart Meaning to My Babble.")
"I have had my own show, you know, 'The Anna Nicole Show' on E!"
Mercifully, she spares us the whole of her sordid tale: "There?s
so much more, but bios are boring and I don?t feel like writing
any more."No doubt few of her fans would read it, anyway, what with
the "photo gallery" beckoning. Annie even plans a "Members Only"
section with further and, shall we presume, even more explicit photos.
For those without any life whatsoever, Annie offers a newsletter:
"Wanna be part of my club? Fill out the mailing list form below
and get updates about my life and events before anyone else does
except The National Enquirer." Wow! Christmas all
year 'round! "Or," she simpers, "just tell me how much you love
me!"
Why do I weary
you with the inanities of an immoral moron? Merely to prove that
the men we pay big bucks to adjudicate Constitutional issues could
have hopped on the web and accessed all the naughty pictures and
double entendres they wanted. Giving one of the scarce slots in
their calendar to this hussy was about as offensive as it gets.
The media has
reported this story with the wink-wink and sly smile it deserves.
Yet statists of both the liberal and neocon varieties should be
infuriated that their god has been reduced to a pimp, securing titillation
for men whose usual eye-candy is Ruth Bader Ginsburg. Those who
favor limited government ought to ask how it is that cases before
the nation's highest bench now depend on the litigant's measurements
and provocative pursuits.
Only we anarchists
are laughing. Because, once again, Leviathan struts its silly stuff.
March
4, 2006
Becky
Akers [send her mail] writes
primarily about the American Revolution.
Copyright
© 2006 LewRockwell.com
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