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Letter to Justice Thomas

Dear Justice Thomas,

Your book is one I just had to read…in one sitting.  As I read about your childhood, I might almost have been reading about my own.  Oh, the similarities are not all that great, except the running around barefoot all summer through woods and freshly plowed fields, abject poverty in post-war Austria, six or seven people sleeping in the same room, no indoor toilets, being an altar boy, and not knowing what I was missing.  I sometimes think those were the happiest times of my life.  I was a free little boy. 

Of course, there were other things that were quite different.  I was white in a white village where my parents had settled as refugees of German descent after escaping the slaughter in Yugoslavia.  With only a few negative attitudes, we were generally accepted.

I came to the US almost exactly 51 years ago; Oct. 29, 1956.  We came with nothing except my parents’ willingness to work.  We lived in a rat-infested apartment in Chicago while my parents and older siblings worked and every dime that wasn’t absolutely needed went into the bank.  I went to Catholic Schools from 6th grade to the middle of my Sophomore year in High School, when we moved to a very wealthy suburb where my father had taken over a small business. 

I was the first to go to college, although I was a miserable student.  That’s where my story differs from yours a great deal.  I preferred learning my way instead of the school’s way.  For example, instead of studying for finals in the Spring of my Freshman year in 1963, I read Atlas Shrugged.  I have been an avid reader all my life, but I think AS was the most influential book on me I ever read.  During the later High School years, I became a ‘lapsed Catholic.’  I made a stab at going back in college, but without success.   

Over the years, I came to love this country more than most anyone I have ever met.  I love it not as a political entity or a landmass with a certain boundary, or even it’s lifestyle.  I love it as an idea.  That is what I think it is first and foremost.  With all its missteps since its beginning, or in spite of them, it has been a beacon to the world.

When I read your writings, I see that same kind of love for this great country.  I vacillate between anger and sadness at the spectacles I often have to watch in the political arena.  Your confirmation hearings, which I watched “gavel to gavel,” including those wonderful, articulate women who testified on your behalf, were a nadir…I thought.  Things have gotten worse.

I have a great fear for this country.  Without it as it was originally conceived, I think the world may just sink into a darkness it hasn’t known in centuries.  At least that’s how I feel in my dark hours.  There will come a time when Atlas may really shrug and we’ll find out the world is made of cheap plaster.  You are in a position to influence the direction somewhat.  I hope you continue to have the wisdom and strength it will take.

With great admiration and respect,

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