Deleted tweet detection is currently running at reduced
capacity due to changes to the Twitter API. Some tweets that have been
deleted by the tweet author may not be labeled as deleted in the PolitiTweet
interface.
Showing page 316 of 1600.
David Frum @davidfrum
RT @peterbakernyt: Old enough to remember when it would have been shocking to see a former president admit that his goal was to have "overt… — PolitiTweet.org
David Frum @davidfrum
RT @dandrezner: I don’t follow what he says as closely as I did during the #ToddlerinChief days but it’s interesting that he says “overturn… — PolitiTweet.org
David Frum @davidfrum
RT @bstewart1776: The Iraq War casts a long shadow, but “there is still wisdom to be gained from the post 9/11 moment.” A shrewd meditation… — PolitiTweet.org
David Frum @davidfrum
@spectator @TuckerCarlson Anyway for the record, no I did not compare Tucker Carlson's musings on architecture to Albert Speer's. — PolitiTweet.org
David Frum @davidfrum
In this interview with @spectator , @TuckerCarlson expounds at length and in detail about how little he cares what I think about him. At the end of the interview he returns to the point again for extra emphasis. He does not care. Underscore. Is that clear? https://t.co/lmW4wkK0AM — PolitiTweet.org
David Frum @davidfrum
And even when we ourselves don't change, the world changes around us - meaning our position in the world has changed, whether we will or no. — PolitiTweet.org
David Frum @davidfrum
I never understand why people take such pride in saying, "I haven't changed." Change is the great fact of human life. — PolitiTweet.org
Bill Maher @billmaher
It's not my fault that the party of FDR and JFK is turning into the party of LOL😂 and WTF🤦♂️. https://t.co/gpdAY4vhEV
David Frum @davidfrum
thread, icymi — PolitiTweet.org
David Frum @davidfrum
It's not a new thing to use Supreme Court appointments to score social "firsts" ... a thread. 1/x
David Frum @davidfrum
The Nordstream 2 pipeline to Germany was finished in September - but now unlikely to open before the summer, even assuming no further sanctions against the pipeline https://t.co/OkT4lvNNOc — PolitiTweet.org
David Frum @davidfrum
RT @Timodc: If you retained some hope that there might be a GOP stop Trump effort next time, the most liberal member of the party’s senate… — PolitiTweet.org
David Frum @davidfrum
RT @wodekszemberg: .@davidfrum must have a very thick skin, given the more than the usual amount of opprobrium that will come his way, writ… — PolitiTweet.org
David Frum @davidfrum
RT @TheAtlantic: Four core ideas from President George W. Bush's most controversial speech have survived as enduring foundations of U.S. se… — PolitiTweet.org
David Frum @davidfrum
RT @TheAtlantic: Today in The Atlantic: 20 years after George W. Bush’s “axis of evil” speech, @DavidFrum reflects on its enduring lessons.… — PolitiTweet.org
David Frum @davidfrum
Yes great story! — PolitiTweet.org
R.J. Lyman @rjlyman3
@davidfrum Check out this oops from a “first” cabinet appointment https://t.co/gzuup5776j
David Frum @davidfrum
If you read "Profiles in Courage" as a series of essays on the theme of respect for the conservative white South, you can better understand why Kennedy published it as he sought the Democratic VP nomination in 1956. — PolitiTweet.org
Alberto Miguel Fernandez @AlbertoMiguelF5
@davidfrum Lucius Quintus Cincinnatus Lamar is one of JFK's "Profiles in Courage" though.
David Frum @davidfrum
We've developed an etiquette that presidents need to speak as if SCOTUS seats were awarded on the same basis as, say, Nobel Prizes in Chemistry. Maybe Joe Biden should have followed that etiquette. But presidents don't *think* that way about the court. Never have. Never will. END — PolitiTweet.org
David Frum @davidfrum
But Lamar's career can deliver a humbling caution against the delusion that the Supreme Court is some above-the-fray abode of disembodied legal geniuses. 13/x — PolitiTweet.org
David Frum @davidfrum
Few today would see much to be proud of in the career and record of Justice Lucius Quintus Lamar. He was selected for the crassest of political reasons - and did little good with his grand opportunity. 12/x — PolitiTweet.org
David Frum @davidfrum
In his short career on the court - he died in 1893 - Lamar wrote only one memorable opinion: his dissent from a case that upheld the authority of the United States to protect a person in federal custody from lynching. 11/x — PolitiTweet.org
David Frum @davidfrum
The confirmation vote split on party lines: Democrats voted 29-0 to confirm; Republicans voted 28-2 against. Lamar was elevated to the high court by a majority of the vote; the judicial filibuster had not yet been invented in the 1880s. 10/x — PolitiTweet.org
David Frum @davidfrum
EG The Memphis Daily Appeal, then one of the most important papers in the South, praised him as a worthy successor to Roger Taney and John Campbell - two members of the Dred Scott majority. Campbell had then resigned from the Court to fight for the Confederacy. 9/x — PolitiTweet.org
David Frum @davidfrum
The key point for our present purposes: backers of the Lamar nomination made clear at every turn that they were supporting him because of his identity as an unreconstructed ex-Confederate. 8/x — PolitiTweet.org
David Frum @davidfrum
So as you can imagine, there was considerable controversy over the appointment of Lamar to the high court a decade later. Some of that controversy is detailed in this (paywalled) article 7/x https://t.co/BMCeSeRsTZ — PolitiTweet.org
David Frum @davidfrum
As a US senator, Lamar led Democrats in sabotaging what little remained of voting rights enforcement in the South after the deal that secured the presidency for Rutherford B. Hayes in 1877. 6/x — PolitiTweet.org
David Frum @davidfrum
Lamar had been author of the Mississippi ordinance of secession. He served in the Confederate army, then as the CSA's special envoy to seek British and French help in the war. After the war, he fiercely opposed the Reconstruction constitutional amendments. 5/x — PolitiTweet.org
David Frum @davidfrum
So Cleveland nominated Lucius Quintus Lamar of Mississippi, a former senator then serving as Cleveland's secretary of the interior. But Lamar was not just any Mississippian ... 4/x — PolitiTweet.org
David Frum @davidfrum
Cleveland had squeaked into office in 1884 by the tiniest of margins. Facing a tough re-elect in 1888 (which he would lose), Cleveland wanted to excite the white conservative Southern base of his Democratic party. The nomination was a chance to try. 3/x — PolitiTweet.org
David Frum @davidfrum
In 1887, President Grover Cleveland decided the time had come to appoint the first Deep Southerner to the Supreme Court since the civil war. (President Hayes had appointed Kentuckyian John Marshall Harlan in 1877, but Harlan had fought for the Union.) 2/x — PolitiTweet.org
David Frum @davidfrum
It's not a new thing to use Supreme Court appointments to score social "firsts" ... a thread. 1/x — PolitiTweet.org
David Frum @davidfrum
RT @Quillette: This Is About More Than Ukraine | @bstewart1776 https://t.co/4NQF8w51c9 — PolitiTweet.org