Wednesday 30 March 2016

This is kind of like reruns. Maybe it's a "remastered" post?

First up, killing the Supreme Court.  Again.  But still with numbers and statistics, because that's the best way to do things.  Assume the Senate decides to stop being dumb.  Then, Merrick Garland gets a hearing and since he's basically fine, he gets a seat on the Supreme Court.  Since my least favorite justice is dead.
So here's the cumulative "how many justices are alive" plot.  Honestly, according to this, if the Senate doesn't stop acting like children, Obama might have two more people to appoint before the end of his term.  It's good that the Republicans aren't running serious options this year, since that sets up a good shift when they don't become president.
And the by name individual plot.  I've seen a lot of stuff talking about how Garland is "already old" so it "doesn't matter" if he gets confirmed or not.  This is stupid.  The cumulative plot clearly shows that the next president is very important for determining the Supreme Court's future.
In any case, he's younger than the median justice, and is likely to be on the court for another ~15 years.  Or, you know, the next four presidential terms.  Also, it's interesting to note the benefit of appointing women to the court.  Roberts was born in 1955, and Sotomayor in 1954.  That's the unit the script uses for sorting the key.  But, looking at the graph, Sotomayor is likely to be on the court ~3 years longer.  I should also enable the grid display next time I do this.

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