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Strange Justice: The Selling of Clarence Thomas.


THIS BOOK was billed as the Book of Revelation about the Clarence Thomas-Anita Hill imbroglio im·bro·glio  
n. pl. im·bro·glios
1.
a. A difficult or intricate situation; an entanglement.

b. A confused or complicated disagreement.

2. A confused heap; a tangle.
. Strange Justice is based, the authors claim, on "hundreds of interviews and scores of never-before-seen documents." As if brought to us by Indiana Jones, the project has survived "a family death, a marriage, a birth, two cross-country moves, an earthquake, a fire, and a flood."

The book's most colorful passages were published in advance, to much hoopla hoop·la  
n. Informal
1.
a. Boisterous, jovial commotion or excitement.

b. Extravagant publicity: The new sedan was introduced to the public with much hoopla.

2.
, by the Wall Street Journal, and the authors, Jane Mayer Jane Mayer (born 1955 in New York City) is an American investigative journalist who has been a staff writer for The New Yorker since 1995[1]. In recent years, she has written extensive articles for that publication on Dick Cheney, the bin Laden family, and the  and Jill Abramson Jill Ellen Abramson (b. March 191954) is the news managing editor of The New York Times. She has held the post since August 2003. Career
A native of New York City, Jill Abramson received her high school diploma from Ethical Culture Fieldston School and a B.A.
, made saturation appearances on the airwaves to discuss their discoveries with gushingly Gush´ing`ly

adv. 1. In a gushing manner; copiously.
2. Weakly; sentimentally; effusively.

Adv. 1. gushingly - in a gushing manner; "a gushingly prolific writer"
 friendly interviewers. The authors took the precaution, however, of giving their most trumpeted interviews before the book was available to questioners, and limiting their later appearances to promotional events carefully screened against the presence of anyone - such as David Brock, author of The Real Anita Hill For other persons with this name, see .
Anita Faye Hill (born July 30 1956(1956--)) is a professor of social policy, law, and women's studies at Brandeis University at the Heller School for Social Policy and Management
 - Knowledgeable enough to raise hard questions.

The contents of the book make it clear why the authors have been so defensive. In fact, it contains very little that is new and certainly nothing that adds persuasive support to their surprisingly timid thesis: "that the truth in this matter favors [Anita Hill] much more than was apparent at the time of the hearings." Thus, while the authors' point of view is apparent on virtually every page, their most forceful conclusions are trivial, largely immaterial, and thinly supported. The inference that emerges most compellingly from this book is that Mr. Thomas, not Miss Hill, was telling the truth.

Like the famous New Yorker map of America that portrays most of the nation on the Eastern Seaboard, principally in Manhattan, Miss Mayer and Miss Abramson see America's political landscape as divided between the reasonable Middle and the intimidating Right. They refer constantly to the "Right," the "far Right," the "extreme Right," conservatives," "ultra conservatives," the "Christian Right," the "Religious Right," the "New Right," and most terrifying ter·ri·fy  
tr.v. ter·ri·fied, ter·ri·fy·ing, ter·ri·fies
1. To fill with terror; make deeply afraid. See Synonyms at frighten.

2. To menace or threaten; intimidate.
 of all, the "Armies of the Right." No need to guess what the authors look for when they peer under their beds at night.

This outlook, combined with their breathless discovery that Clarence Thomas was the subject of intense advocacy by his supporters, leads to their subtitle, The Selling of Clarence Thomas. Of course, to make this point, the authors must overlook entirely the battalions of liberal reporters, congressional staffers, and left-wing interest groups that took to the field to find, report, and repeat virtually anything to stop the Thomas confirmation. Therefore, the authors' "full story" is most certainly not the result of an "exhaustive investigation," for it ignores entirely the unprecedented, concerted, and unprincipled effort to destroy Clarence Thomas.

Given this focus, it is not surprising that Strange Justice finds little that is new about Anita Hill. And what the authors do find, they quickly brush aside. For example, in a chapter called "Talking Wild," they report on Miss Hill's upbringing: "Propriety to the point of repression was a family trait." "Sex was a taboo subject." Miss Hill was "prickly and brittle," was "petulant pet·u·lant  
adj.
1. Unreasonably irritable or ill-tempered; peevish.

2. Contemptuous in speech or behavior.



[Latin petul
," possessed "rigid mores," was "uptight or even prissy," "sent mixed signals, making misunderstandings likely," and was "quick to take offense."

Despite all this, and despite "questions that can be raised relative to the accuracy of her memory and clarity of her judgment," the authors resolutely refuse to consider whether Miss Hill somehow transformed innocuous or innocent remarks into "the most humiliating hu·mil·i·ate  
tr.v. hu·mil·i·at·ed, hu·mil·i·at·ing, hu·mil·i·ates
To lower the pride, dignity, or self-respect of. See Synonyms at degrade.
 sexual conduct she had ever experienced." Given the otherwise inexplicable conflict between her version of events and the parade of witnesses who supported Clarence Thomas, it is curious that the authors did not explore the most obvious explanation.

For example, Mr. Thomas denied ever having made the pubic-hair-on-the-Coke-can remark. Miss Hill denied that she ever repeated this alleged private, conversation to anyone else. Yet the book contends that several people at the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (where Miss Hill worked for Mr. Thomas) had apparently heard such a "story" - though none of them heard it directly from Clarence Thomas. Is it possible that Miss Hill heard the pubic-hair story through the EEOC EEOC
abbr.
Equal Employment Opportunity Commission

EEOC n abbr (US) (= Equal Employment Opportunities Commission) → comisión que investiga discriminación racial o sexual en el empleo
 grapevine and believed that it was attributable to a remark made by Mr. Thomas? Since no one but her ever heard him make such a statement, why couldn't it be the prissy, quick-to-be-offended witness with the bad memory who got it wrong?

The authors similarly mangle mangle - Used similarly to mung or scribble, but more violent in its connotations; something that is mangled has been irreversibly and totally trashed.  their own investigation of Anita Hill's 11-month law-firm tenure before her job with Clarence Thomas. This job was at one of the "most sought-after law firms in the country." During her brief time there, the authors reveal, Miss Hill was believed to be "romantically involved" with one of the firm's married partners, despite the firm's policy against such liaisons. Her work was perceived by superiors as "satisfactory, but not outstanding." Indeed, some graded her work as "uneven," and there were "more than a few criticisms." She tended to "disappear" into the library, "left work altogether" during one emergency assignment, and produced fewer "billable hours" than any of the firm's other associates.

Any objective partner at any prominent law firm would have told Miss Mayer and Miss Abramson that only a miracle could have saved Anita Hill after such a miserable beginning, and would have had little trouble believing the affidavit of the partner who said she had been encouraged to leave. But the authors draw the revealingly untenable conclusion that Miss Hill was "not in any trouble" at the firm.

The biggest surprise of Strange Justice is what Miss Mayer and Miss Abramson fail to establish. They obviously were prepared to strain mightily. But their much-published claim that Thomas papered his walls with Playboy centerfolds comes from a witness who later told one television interviewer that she saw one centerfold cen·ter·fold  
n.
1. A magazine center spread, especially a foldout of an oversize photograph or feature.

2.
a. The subject of a photograph used as a centerfold, often a nude model.

b.
, and told another there may have been two. Playboy, meanwhile, is scarcely hard-core pornography. During Thomas's student days, Yale Law School Yale Law School, or YLS, is the law school of Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut. Established in 1843, the school offers the J.D., LL.M., J.S.D., and M.S.L. degrees in law. It also hosts visiting scholars and several legal research centers.  was exhibiting Deep Throat and Behind the Green Door, cinema that certainly makes Playboy seem tame.

The book offers no evidence that Clarence Thomas ever sought dates from employees at any of his other jobs, or that he ever actually dated anyone at the EEOC. Thus, there is little corroborative cor·rob·o·rate  
tr.v. cor·rob·o·rat·ed, cor·rob·o·rat·ing, cor·rob·o·rates
To strengthen or support with other evidence; make more certain. See Synonyms at confirm.
 evidence of sexual harassment sexual harassment, in law, verbal or physical behavior of a sexual nature, aimed at a particular person or group of people, especially in the workplace or in academic or other institutional settings, that is actionable, as in tort or under equal-opportunity statutes. . The one witness Strange Justice offers to support Miss Hill's version left five consecutive jobs under a cloud, and never felt the slightest bit intimidated by Thomas, because, as the authors put it, she had "been fending off male advances for years."

Strange Justice substantiates one bit of Clarence Thomas's testimony that has been widely challenged as incredible, and was characterized by Miss Mayer and Miss Abramson themselves as "blatant obfuscation ob·fus·cate  
tr.v. ob·fus·cat·ed, ob·fus·cat·ing, ob·fus·cates
1. To make so confused or opaque as to be difficult to perceive or understand: "A great effort was made . . .
." Thomas testified that he had never debated the merits of the Roe v. Wade Roe v. Wade, case decided in 1973 by the U.S. Supreme Court. Along with Doe v. Bolton, this decision legalized abortion in the first trimester of pregnancy.  abortion decision. The authors ultimately have to concede that not one of their hundreds of interviewees said he or she had heard Thomas discuss the case. They admit, "no one recalled [Thomas] expressing himself on Roe."

Strange Justice is a strange book. It proves that after four separate Senate confirmations of Clarence Thomas, and four months of highly publicized digging for dirt on the nominee, it still took a concentrated effort of importuning by a host of liberal Senate staffers and interest-group investigators to wrest wrest  
tr.v. wrest·ed, wrest·ing, wrests
1. To obtain by or as if by pulling with violent twisting movements: wrested the book out of his hands; wrested the islands from the settlers.
 from a reluctant Anita Hill the story that nearly destroyed Clarence Thomas. Three years later, the peculiar testimony of a quick-to-be-offended, priggish, petulant witness with a self-acknowledged "repressed memory repressed memory Psychology An event that occurred in a subject's past, the memory of which was actively repressed often because of the psychologically devastating impact of that memory–eg, childhood abuse, rape, molestation. Cf False memory, Source amnesia. " is no more credible than it was then.
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No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
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Article Details
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Author:Olson, Theodore B.
Publication:National Review
Article Type:Book Review
Date:Mar 20, 1995
Words:1232
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