Ankush Khardori reviews it in for Politico, writing that Gorsuch’s tome is: “riddled with glaring factual omissions and analytic errors that seriously call into question its reliability and rigor. In its essence, the book is standard conservative political propaganda — an anecdote-driven, broad-brush attack on legislators trying to solve contemporary social problems and on the executive branch officials trying to enforce the country’s laws. It represents a remarkable attack by a sitting Supreme Court justice on the other two branches.”
Gorsuch has a history of plagiarism, so it bears investigation how much of the book he may have stolen from other authors. But his signature smugness, dishonesty, and extremism appear to be plastered all over the book.
We now await Amy Coney Barrett’s literary con job, for which Penguin Random House is paying her $2 million. Justice Barrett plans to gaslight us all by decrying judges who let personal beliefs guide their judicial decisions.
Traitorous Mitch McConnell and Donald Trump put radical right-wing extremists, each of whom committed perjury, on the court in place of genuine conservatives.
Harris/Walz needs to start making the Supreme Court more of a campaign issue, as do Democratic candidates for Senate.