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Clarence Thomas told an audience at Pittsburgh's Duquesne
How did Clarence Thomas transform from a left-leaning supporter of McGovern and the radical Black Panthers into the most conservative Supreme Court justice in 80 years?
Law professor André Douglas Pond Cummings wrote a fascinating article in the Harvard BlackLetter Law Journal on Thomas' evolution into the conservative he is today.
While he supported the Panthers as a student at College of the Holy Cross, Thomas began cutting his ties with the left after starting Yale Law School, according to Cummings. Other Yale Law students questioned Thomas' intellect because he had potentially benefitted from affirmative action, making him feel stigmatized.
That environment made Thomas turn to more "self-help" ideas of Booker T. Washington, Cummings writes. From Cummings' account:
"Thomas’s views, as the years passed, became more and more conservative. He disagreed, for example, with the traditional civil rights agenda of busing and affirmative action. Thomas condemned busing, stating that 'it sent the wrong message to young blacks—that they had to sit next to whites in class in order to learn.'"
Thomas' conservative bent also developed after he graduated from Yale Law in 1974. He says he had a hard time finding work because employers assumed he had got into the Ivy League school because he's black.
Now, Thomas is a sharp critic of affirmative action, a classic liberal policy. He didn't say at the Duquesne Law School whether he'd voted for Barack Obama in the recent presidential elections.