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January 4, 2007
Justice Stevens was President Ford's lone appointment to the Supreme Court. Stevens proved to be nothing like the kind of Justice conservatives admire. Yet last year, Ford said he was “prepared to allow history’s judgment” of his presidency to rest exclusively on his appointment of Justice John Paul Stevens, and that he specifically agreed with Stevens’s positions on the establishment clause. Ford’s state funeral is impossible to reconcile with Stevens’s extremist views of the establishment clause. Most conspicuously, members of the United States military played a prominent role in the pervasively religious ceremony, both as pallbearers and as musical performers. The United States Marine Orchestra and the Armed Forces Chorus not only performed; they sang explicitly Christian hymns. During the prelude, for example, the Marines sang “When Jesus Wept.” During the service itself, the Marine Orchestra provided the musical accompaniment for Denyce Graves’s singing of the Lord’s Prayer, and the Armed Forces Chorus sang “Eternal Father, strong to save” — a prayer to the trinitarian God. The closing hymn, “For All the Saints,” was sung by all and included lyrics like “thy Name, O Jesus, be for ever blessed”. . . . I find it ironic that Ford, who crusaded for the impeachment of Justice Douglas, would end up appointing a Justice who, though no Douglas, turned out to be a liberal activist through-and-through. But Ford, like the first President Bush, was an old school establishment conservative who relied on the general "soundness" of the people he appointed without much regard to the content of their ideas. Posted by at 1:36 PM
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