chief justice john roberts who wrote the opinion on the shelby county case which gutted another portion of voting rights act, essentially decided no longer pursuing racial pursued even that guy sided with the liberals yesterday. the other five concerted justices were in extreme for him. this is how aggressive and reckless the shadow docket ruling was. roberts was basically telling others, hey guys, slow down, let s destroy voting rights the right way, in due time. and in the courts they said, we will do it now. and i have to say it is perfectly fitting that this is coming out the state of alabama, not just because the last major decision to cripple the voting rights act should shelby county was also said there, but because when majority black district, the seventh congressional district. and its lines are drawn around, you got, at some parts of montgomery, alabama. the events of bloody sunday, one governor brutally
any sort of health services because of denial of their rights and just where they live, and then we have worse health outcomes. we actually have downstream health implications for everyone involved, even caregivers around that woman. so, going back to the facts actually helps ground us. actually, justice sotomayor kind of emphasized that in her remarks against kind of the shadow docket ruling and i couldn t agree with her more. it wasn t partisan. she just simply laid down, here s the law, and then here s really the medical repercussions, and that s where i fit in, because we have so many doctors and health providers who are actually trying to understand, where s our role in advocating for patients? i used to live in the state of texas, and i will tell you that we did that all day every day, and now, i kind of think about this, i m going to have to do that again, nicole, because i think our whole country is going to have to be on the defensive around this, not just texas or the 11 stat