“Persevere.”

I’m listening to the tape of Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson’s Senate confirmation hearing yesterday, as I write.

No doubt you were also moved by her story from her freshman year at Harvard.

“Persevere” was the single word uttered to her by a Black woman whose path she crossed one night on campus.

Like Judge Jackson, I graduated from a public high school, but my family was upper middle class.

Baltimore City College and my mother had prepared me well for Amherst College.

My moment of perseverance came in law school.

I flunked a Civil Procedure exam.  The professor asked me how I did in my other classes.

“In Telford Taylor’s Constitutional Law class,” I responded, “I got an A.”

I met with Baltimore City Public Schools officials today.

We discussed the Jackson hearing.

“It’s your job to educate those students who go on to college for their moment when they need to persevere,” I said.

They understood.

Way up South in Baltimore

Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson has been nominated to serve on the Supreme Court of the United States.

Several Republican members of the Senate Judiciary Committee hope to be nominated for President by the Republican Party.

Their questions for Judge Jackson were directed more to the Republican base than to her.

Thanks to Senator Ben Cardin, I attended an hour of Judge Jackson’s nomination hearing this afternoon.

When she was asked provocative questions about controversial legal issues or about issues that are very unlikely to come before the Supreme Court, such as critical race theory by Senator Cruz, her answers were very brief.

She seemed to find her voice when queried by Senator Amy Klobuchar.

Hearings for Supreme Court nominees were not always this way.

When Thurgood Marshall was nominated by President Lyndon Johnson to be the first Black on the Supreme Court, Senator James Eastland, chair of the Judiciary Committee and an arch segregationist, asked him, “Are you prejudiced against white people in the South?”

Justice Marshall responded, “Not at all. I was brought up, what I would say way up South in Baltimore.  I don’t know, with the possible exception of one person that I have any feeling about them.”

  • My Key Issues:

  • Pimlico and The Preakness
  • Our Neighborhoods
  • Pre-Kindergarten
  • Lead Paint Poisoning