Eleven Things You Didn’t Know About Clarence Thomas
The first time Clarence Thomas went to DC, it was to protest the Vietnam War.
- The first time Clarence Thomas went to DC, it was to protest the Vietnam War.
- Clarence Thomas grew up a stone’s throw from the Moon River that Audrey Hepburn sang about in Breakfast at Tiffany’s.
- In the 1970s, Clarence Thomas hung the Georgia State Flag, featuring the Confederate stars and bars, over his desk.
- There’s a law review article about Clarence Thomas called “Clarence X?: The Black Nationalist Behind Justice Thomas’s Constitutionalism.”
- Clarence Thomas attended antiwar rallies in Boston where he called for the release of Angela Davis and Erica Huggins.
- Clarence Thomas told Juan Williams that “there is nothing you can do to get past black skin. I don’t care how educated you are, how good you are — you’ll never have the same contacts or opportunities, you’ll never be seen as equal to whites.”
- Clarence Thomas is the only Supreme Court justice to have cited Frederick Douglass and W. E. B. DuBois in his opinions.
- In college, Clarence Thomas hung posters of Malcolm X on his wall, memorized his speeches, and studied his writings. “I’ve been very partial to Malcolm X,” he told Reason in 1987. “There is a lot of good in what he says.”
- Clarence Thomas does not believe in color-blindness: “I don’t think this society has ever been color-blind. I grew up in Savannah, Georgia, under segregation. It wasn’t color-blind and America is not color-blind today . . . Code words like ‘color-blind’ aren’t all that useful.”
- Yale Law scholar Akhil Reed Amar has compared Clarence Thomas to Hugo Black:
Both were Southerners who came to the Court young and with very little judicial experience. Early in their careers, they were often in dissent, sometimes by themselves, but they were content to go their own way. But once Earl Warren became Chief Justice the Court started to come to Black. It’s the same with Thomas and the Roberts Court. Thomas’s views are now being followed by a majority of the Court in case after case.
- Clarence Thomas resents the fact that as a black man he is not supposed to listen to Carole King.