After fierce opposition, Sotomayor speaks to Colbert and the Supreme Court

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Sotomayor told Steven Colbert’s liberal audience that the other side usually has good points. But “it’s not,” she said of the court’s latest ruling on immigration.

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Washington – Read your own opinion.

That’s the message Supreme Court Judge Sonia Sotomayor had on September 10 for viewers of “Late Show with Stephen Colbert” the day after her furious reaction to her latest control surveillance with her conservative colleague Trump administration.

The majority have said the administration can now reopen indiscriminate immigration-related stops in Southern California, sparking racial profiling protests and accusations.

Sotomayor, in his opposition to the three liberals in the court, said the majority decision was “another serious misuse in our emergency.”

“There shouldn’t be a need for the government to grab people who look like Latino, speak Spanish and live in a country where they appear to be doing low-paid jobs,” wrote Sotomayor, the first Latina in the courtroom. “I disagree, rather than standing vaguely while our constitutional freedom is lost.”

After Colbert read that part of her 21-page pushback to his studio viewers, they gave Sotomayor a standing ovation.

“If you want to read it now, I have everything,” the liberal host told Sotomayor.

Justice had better ideas.

“want you To read that, I want you to read any opinions I agree with,” she said. You shouldn’t. ”

Sotomayor added that he was shocked to see that there are good points on the other side.

“Not this,” she inserted as the audience laughed. “But to others.”

Sotomayor and Barrett spread the same message

Sotomayor has appeared in many media outlets as he promotes his new children’s book, Just Shine!: How To Be Be To You.

One of her conservative colleagues, Judge Amy Coney Barrett, encourages people to read both sides’ views as she promotes her new book, Listenge to the Law.

Among them, she was a brother-in-law, Roev. All 79 pages of the court’s 2022 decision that overturned Wade tell the story of his arrival at the annual “Coney Family Vacation.” He also brought 91 pages of consent and dissent.

“You always say, ‘Read your opinion.’ That’s what I’m doing,” he said.

Discussing the ruling did not top Barrett’s list of how she wanted to spend her holidays, but she hugged him.

“I always advise people to read the court’s opinions, but I suspect a lot of people, including lawyers, will take me,” she writes.

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