How Gullible Do Samuel Alito and Mike Johnson Think We Are? (2024)

Politics

The defense of the Appeal to Heaven flag is familiar to anyone who’s been watching this court.

By Dahlia Lithwick

How Gullible Do Samuel Alito and Mike Johnson Think We Are? (1)

When the New York Times reported last week that Samuel Alito, an associate justice of the Supreme Court, had been flying an “Appeal to Heaven” flag at his vacation home on the New Jersey shore last summer, the legal world was confronted with yet another classic case of how to deal with the current warring textual methodologies for interpreting the law. One could either “read” this obscure-to-some pine-tree flag in the way the New York Times and its experts did—as a signifier of insurgent Christian nationalism. Or you could read it as a kind of benign 18th-century foam finger: “Gooooo George Washington!”

In the week since, most defenders of the flag have doubled down on the foam-finger defense. In much the same way they claim that the right to bear arms is codified in the Second Amendment and has not acquired any new popular understanding since ratification, they urge that the Appeal to Heaven flag means only what it meant to the founders, because history ended on that day. Welcome to the world of flag originalism, in which the only winning answer is … 1775!

Most commentators understand that flags, like words, have changing meanings over time. “Until about a decade ago,” notes the Times, “the Appeal to Heaven flag was mostly a historical relic.” That meaning shifted fairly recently, when it was “revived to represent a theological vision of what the United States should be and how it should be governed,” according to Matthew Taylor, a religion scholar at the Institute for Islamic, Christian, and Jewish Studies.

Per the Times, Dutch Sheets, a right-wing Christian author and speaker, and a leader in the New Apostolic Reformation, rediscovered the almost forgotten flag in 2013 “and made it the symbol of his ambitions to steep the country and the government in Christianity.” As Sheets laid it out in his 2015 book: “Rally to the flag … God has resurrected it for such a time as this. Wave it outwardly: wear it inwardly.” Sheets has since made it his business to present the flag to people like Donald Trump, Sarah Palin, and others. When Trump lost in 2020, Sheets and “a team of others formed an instant, ad hoc religious arm of the ‘Stop the Steal’ campaign, blitzing swing state megachurches, broadcasting the services at each stop and drawing hundreds of thousands of viewers.” At that moment, one might contend, were one being truthful, the flag took on a new, let’s call it “evolving” meaning. And of course on Jan. 6, the Appeal to Heaven flags were everywhere. We know this because the Times has photos. As do others.

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This suggests that a clear look at rather recent history reflects precisely what this flag means. But that assumes recent history holds value to you. The problem is that there is a second interpretive methodology being deployed to read the Appeal to Heaven flag. And, surprise! It’s originalism. Mike Johnson, for instance, hung it at his office last fall shortly after becoming speaker of the House. A spokesman for Johnson explained, amid the outcry, that Johnson “has long appreciated the rich history of the flag, as it was first used by General George Washington during the Revolutionary War.” Johnson himself told The Associated Press that he did not know the flag had come to represent the “Stop the Steal” movement. “Never heard that before,” he said, because mumble, mumble, George-Washington-and-the-Sound-of-History roaring in his ears. Instead, as Johnson then explained, “I have always used that flag for as long as I can remember, because I was so enamored with the fact that Washington used it.” Originalism Translator: Let’s all agree to ignore the contemporary meaning of this flag in favor of broad, outlandish claims that the centuries-old meaning is the only reasonable one.

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In 2023, when Arizona Sen. Janae Shamp flew the Appeal to Heaven flag, she used the same justification. After she roundly rejected the notion that her use of the flag supported Christian Dominionism or incitement to violence, she insisted it reflected her fervent need to protect “our liberty and freedoms” from “the too many wanna be kings who inhabit elected office and (government) bureaucracies.” In an email she sent to the Arizona Mirror at the time, Shamp further explained: “Something that has had a particular meaning for 250 years retains its original meaning, no matter which fringe group might seek to co-opt it.” And then she landed, of course, on the old foam-finger defense: “I hope and pray that my fight enjoys a similarly favorable outcome as (George) Washington’s original struggle, and that I will succeed in restoring at least some small measure of liberty before I’m done.”

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In her own apparently poker-faced defense of poor, beleaguered Justice Alito, the Wall Street Journal’s Kimberly Strassel similarly offers the following critique of the Times’ effort to explain current publicly shared understanding of the flag:

The Times somehow fails to let readers know that the flag is a longtime symbol of independence; that it was designed by George Washington’s secretary; was flown on ships commissioned by Washington; has been honored, commemorated, and flown over state capitols; and is the official maritime flag of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.

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Oh. It’s a symbol of independence. Well then, bygones. No need to think about the fact that it also hangs at Leonard Leo’s house.

It would seem, then, that as long as you root the symbology of this flag in what George Washington thought the flag meant in 1775, you’re gold, Ponyboy. The original public meaning of the statement was set in stone by George Washington’s secretary of the Navy. And, hand on heart, if you opt to stop time on that very day, you can arrive at the conclusion proffered by Speaker Johnson, and Arizona state Sen. Shamp, and the WSJ’s Kimberly Strassel. The flag means merely “I <3 George Washington.” Y’all who think otherwise are just the fantasists and haters.

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Flag Originalism has many uses. For example, the swastika can be merely a benign ancient Hindu symbol. Pepe the Frog is a cuddly cartoon character. The Appeal to Heaven flag has nothing to do with Dutch Sheets, or the Proud Boys, or the Jan. 6 insurrection, or this chilling and violent flirtation with Christofascism. George Washington’s secretary of the Navy was the last word on public meaning.

This analysis is of course stupid for all the same reasons originalism itself is stupid. It’s a feeble attempt to pick the moment in time in which linguistic meaning stops, and to disregard the many moments in time in which meaning changed and grew and morphed into something else. It’s a sorry effort to impose certainty and predictability by pretending to be objective, even though it is completely malleable and outcome driven. But perhaps most importantly, the originalist reading of the Appeal to Heaven flag ignores all the ordinary ways in which humans make and understand shared political meaning: Through centuries of movements, public statements, shifting collective understanding, technological innovations, and a broader sense of whose voices matter.

It’s indeed a strange and wondrous coincidence that Justice Alito and Speaker Johnson and Leonard Leo and Dutch Sheets all hoist the same flag; a flag that’s been used for a decade to signal support for the notion that the United States is a Christian nation and that man’s justice is always subordinate to God’s. It’s an enduring political mystery that they want to keep that claim a big wink-wink secret and also fly it from a flagpole as if it means nothing at all.

  • History
  • Supreme Court
  • Samuel Alito
  • Capitol Riot
  • Mike Johnson

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How Gullible Do Samuel Alito and Mike Johnson Think We Are? (2024)

FAQs

Is Samuel Alito conservative or liberal? ›

On the bench, Alito has always been the Court's most reliable vote in favor of whatever outcome the most conservative wing of the Republican Party prefers. Recently, though, he seems to be advertising his unwillingness to give a fair hearing to Democrats and his sympathy for the Christian Right.

What did Samuel Alito do before the Supreme Court? ›

From 1977 to 1980, Justice Alito served as an Assistant U.S. Attorney in the appellate division, where he argued cases before the Third Circuit, to which he was later appointed. From 1981 to 1985, he served as Assistant to the Solicitor General.

Where did Alito go to law school? ›

After graduating from Princeton in 1972, Alito continued his Ivy League education at Yale Law School. While he attended, he was the editor of the Yale Law Journal. Alito graduated in 1975 and began clerking in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit under Judge Leonard Garth.

Does Samuel Alito have a wife? ›

Personal life. In 1985, Alito married Martha-Ann Bomgardner, a law librarian who met him during his trips to the library as a law clerk. They have two adult children, Laura and Philip; Martha-Ann left her profession to raise them.

What is a practical originalist? ›

Although he has described himself as a “practical originalist” on the ground that he believes “the Constitution means something and that that meaning doesn't change,”6 his conduct on the Court suggests that the emphasis should be placed on the qualifier “practical.” The higher the level of generality of the originalist ...

Does Clarence Thomas have a son? ›

Who appointed Justice Roberts? ›

In July 2005, President Bush nominated Roberts to the seat on the Supreme Court vacated by the retirement of Justice Sandra Day O'Connor. Rehnquist died on September 3, though, and Bush nominated Roberts for this seat instead.

Who is the oldest Supreme Court justice? ›

From oldest to youngest, the ages of the current Supreme Court justices are: Justice Thomas, 75. Justice Alito, 73. Justice Sotomayor, 69.

What party is Clarence Thomas? ›

Thomas, who had switched his party affiliation from Democratic to Republican while working for Danforth in Missouri, soon drew the attention of officials in the newly elected Reagan Administration as a Black conservative.

Who has the best law school in the world? ›

Harvard University

Which justices are liberal? ›

The political leanings of the Supreme Court justices
  • Most liberal: Sonia Sotomayor (-4.09)
  • Elena Kagan (-2.067)
  • Ketanji Brown Jackson (-1.704)
  • John Roberts (0.42)
  • Brett Kavanaugh (0.446)
  • Amy Coney Barrett (0.821)
  • Neil Gorsuch (1.077)
  • Clarence Thomas (2.358)
Jul 3, 2023

How many Supreme Court justices are Catholic right now? ›

(The Supreme Court is currently made up of six Catholic justices, two Protestants and one Jewish justice: Elena Kagan.)

Does Alito have children? ›

The Current Court: Justice Samuel Anthony Alito, Jr.

He married Martha-Ann Bomgardner in 1985, and has two children, Philip and Laura. He received an A.B. from Princeton University in 1972 and a J.D. from Yale Law School in 1975.

Who nominated Clarence Thomas? ›

On July 1, 1991, President George H. W. Bush nominated Clarence Thomas for the Supreme Court of the United States to replace Thurgood Marshall, who had announced his retirement.

Who nominated Elena Kagan? ›

President Barack Obama announced the nomination of Elena Kagan to the Supreme Court on May 10, 2010. He praised Kagan as a "consensus builder", and said that she "is widely regarded as one of the nation's foremost legal minds".

Who was Clarence Thomas appointed by? ›

In March, 1990, Clarence Thomas was appointed by President Bush as a U.S. Court of Appeals Judge for the District of Columbia. President Bush subsequently nominated him as an Associate Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court, where he has served since October 23, 1991.

Who appointed Roberts to the Supreme Court? ›

In 2005, Bush nominated Roberts to the Supreme Court, initially as an associate justice to fill the vacancy left by Justice Sandra Day O'Connor, but promoting him to chief justice after Rehnquist's death. Roberts was confirmed by a Senate vote of 78–22.

What is the makeup of the Supreme Court? ›

Nine Justices make up the current Supreme Court: one Chief Justice and eight Associate Justices.

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