Just started reading this thread today and I'm not trying to be a History Nazi here but Thurgood Marshall was the first African American on the Supreme Court.
		
		
	 
True, Clarence Thomas was the second African American 
appointed to the Supreme court but Joe's point was about 
liberal racism.
Clarence Thomas in his memoir, 'My Grandfather's Son."
Cliff note version for the attention span challenges. 
Merely because I was black, it seemed, I was supposed to 
listen to Hugh Masekela instead of Carole King, just as I was 
expected to be a radical, not a conservative. 
I no longer 
cared to play that game. Some of my friends accused me 
of being contrary for its own sake, but I knew there was 
more to my growing skepticism than mere stubbornness. 
The black people I knew came from different places and 
backgrounds -- social, economic, even ethnic -- 
yet 
the color of our skin was somehow supposed to make 
us identical in spite of our differences. I didn't buy it. 
Of course we had all experienced racism in one way or 
another, but did that mean we had to think alike? -- P.62
I thought of what Daddy had said when I asked him why 
he'd never gone on public assistance. 
"Because they 
take away your manhood," he said. -- P.73
I was bitter towards the white bigots whom I held responsible 
for the unjust treatment of blacks, but 
even more bitter 
towards the ostensibly unprejudiced whites who pretended 
to side with black people while using them to further their 
own political and social ends, turning against them 
when
it suited their purposes. At least southerners were up front 
about their bigotry: you knew exactly where they were coming 
from, just like the Georgia rattlesnakes that always let you 
know when they were ready to strike. 
Not so the paternalistic 
big city whites who offered you a helping hand so long as 
you were careful to agree with them, but slapped you down 
if you started acting as if you didn't know your place.
 -- P.75
It was in Boston, not Georgia, that a white man had called 
me n*gger for the first time. I'd already found New England 
to be far less honest about race than the South, and I bristled 
at the self-righteous sanctimony with which so many of the 
northerners at Yale glibly discussed the South's racial problems. 
-- P.78
It was disconcerting to watch other people using food stamps 
to buy whatever they pleased, but I knew our financial problems 
would someday come to an end, whereas theirs were likely to 
stay with them. -- P.85
I'd been spending so much time thinking obsessively about 
race that I'd lost sight of the rest of what the world had to 
offer. My new friends knew better. 
They understood 
what mattered: family, home, church, friends. -- P.99
I'd already noticed that it was liberals, not conservatives, 
who were more likely to condescend to blacks, but I 
assumed, like the good radical I once was, that liberals 
and conservatives were simply two different breeds of 
snake, one stealthy, the other openly hostile. Yet, here 
was a black man who talked hard common sense about 
race -- the same sense I was groping towards -- and 
was being praised for it in America's most staunchly 
Republican newspaper. All at once the political spectrum 
looked more complicated than I had previously suspected. 
-- P.108
"Black is a state of mind," one Democratic staffer told 
me, by which I assumed he meant being a liberal Democrat. 
That kind of all-us-black-folks-think-alike nonsense 
wasn't part of my upbringing, and I saw it as nothing 
more than a way to herd blacks into a political camp. 
-- P.125
I saw no good coming from an ever larger government that 
meddled, with incompetence if not mendacity, in the lives 
of its citizens, and I was particularly distressed by the 
Democratic Party's ceaseless promises to legislate the 
problems of blacks out of existence. 
Their misguided 
efforts had already done great harm to my people, and I 
felt sure that anything else they did would compound 
the damage. -- P.130
The attrition rate for blacks in predominantly white 
colleges and universities throughout America was 
disturbingly high. Although half failed to graduate 
on time, if at all. Nor was enough attention being 
paid to the kinds of courses these students were 
taking: very few studied math, science, or engineering. 
To ignore these unpalatable facts was to miss the 
whole point of a higher education. Merely to enroll 
a black in a predominantly white college means 
nothing. What matters most is what happens next. 
An education is meaningless unless it equips students 
to have a better life. -- P.142
One reporter told me that good news about civil rights 
wasn't "newsworthy" during the Reagan years. As far 
as I was concerned, 
that said it all. -- P.162
Back in 1984, I'd told Juan Williams exactly how I felt 
about the refusal of civil-rights leaders to treat President 
Reagan other than contemptuously. All they did, I said, 
was "b*tch, b*tch, b*tch, moan and moan, whine and 
whine. That doesn't help anything...You don't call the 
judge reviewing your case a jack*ss; you don't call the 
banker reviewing your loan application a fool. 
But 
that's exactly what black leaders have done with 
this administration. They've called the President 
everything but a child of God." -- P.183
"...
I was struck by how easy it had become for
 sanctimonious liberal whites to accuse a black man 
of not caring about civil rights. It was as ludicrous 
as a well-fed man lecturing a starving person about 
his insensitivity to world hunger" -- P.202
He told me that as I considered each case that 
came before me, I should ask myself, "What is my 
role in this case -- as a judge?" It was the best 
piece of advice I received, one that became central 
to my approach to judging. In the legislative and 
executive branch, it's acceptable (if not necessarily 
right) to make decisions based on your personal 
opinion or interests. The role of a judge, by contrast, 
\is to interpret and apply the choices made in those 
branches, 
not to make policy choices of his own.
-- P.204
At one point (Howard Metzenbaum) actually tried to 
lure me into a discussion of national law, but I knew 
he was no philosopher, just another cynical politician 
looking for a chink in my armor, so all I did was ask him 
if he would consider having a human-being sandwich 
for lunch instead of, say, a turkey sandwich. That's 
Natural Law 101: 
all law is based on some sense 
of moral principles inherent in the nature of human 
beings, which explains why cannibalism, even 
without a written law to proscribe it, strikes every 
civilized person as naturally wrong. -- P.222
I also
 met with several board members of the 
NAACP, but that was a waste of time, since 
the organization announced its opposition to my 
nomination shortly after the meeting, apparently 
at the insistence of the AFL-CIO. Friends of mine 
who were close to both organizations gave me a 
copy of the union's letter to the NAACP. They 
explained to me that 
the AFL-CIO's leaders 
wanted the NAACP to give them cover to oppose 
me at the union's upcoming convention....
What saddened me was the fact that an organization 
whose independence had once been a byword in the
 Deep South had been reduced to doing the bidding 
of the AFL-CIO. -- P.228
(It would surprise many if not most who read and/or 
post on the board that the modern KKK and NCAAP 
were founded and supported by the same small group 
of men on the 'divide and conquer' principle) gs
"Judge, I know you don't believe me," 
Joe Biden 
replied, "but if any of these last two matters come up, 
I will be your biggest defender." (The other matter to 
which he was referring was the leak of my draft opinion.)
He was right about one thing: I didn't believe him. 
Neither did Virginia (Thomas' wife). As he reassured 
me of his goodwill, she grabbed a spoon from the silverware 
drawer, opened her mouth wide, stuck out her tongue 
as far as she could, and pretended to gag herself. -- P.249
I met for the first time an Anita Hill who bore little 
resemblance to the woman who had worked for me 
at EEOC and the Education Department. Somewhere 
along the line she had been transformed into a 
conservative, devoutly religious Reagan-administration
 employee. 
In fact she was a left-winger who'd 
never expressed any religious sentiments whatsoever 
in the time I'd known her, and the only reason why 
she'd held a job in the Reagan administration was 
because I'd given it to her. -- P.250
I'd graduated from one of America's top law schools -- 
but racial preference had robbed my achievement of 
its true value. I'd been nominated to sit on the Supreme 
Court -- 
but my refusal to swallow the liberal 
pieties that had done so much damage to blacks 
in America meant that I had to be destroyed. 
-- P.252