BLUF:
Sotomayor [might as well add Breyer in as well, ed] may not make a blunder as obvious as this one again, but the thought process—or lack thereof—that led to it will not change.

At Minimum, Sotomayor Should Recuse Herself From All Decisions Regarding COVID.

Sonia Sotomayor’s ludicrous claim before her Supreme Court peers during oral arguments that one hundred thousand children were “in serious condition” from COVID-19 when three thousand would have been more accurate, is far more than just an embarrassment to the justice.
How could such an ill-informed person be a justice of our highest court? What else doesn’t she know—or, perhaps more exactly, doesn’t want to know?
Her full quotation makes it sound still worse.
“We have hospitals that are almost at full capacity with people severely ill on ventilators. We have over 100,000 children, which we’ve never had before, in serious condition, many on ventilators.”
None of those are true. We are currently going through a bump in cases of the vastly weaker Omicron variant, which many have compared to a cold and in the vast majority of instances can be treated at home with therapeutics.
Even extreme vaccine enthusiast CDC director Rochelle Wallensky admitted that hospitalizations for other age groups were fifteen fold greater than the pediatric—and those weren’t much.
Sotomayor wasn’t alone on the court with her what some might euphemistically call “mischaracterization.” Justice Stephen Breyer claimed “750 million new cases” of coronavirus had been reported in our country when the entire population is well less than half that.
Can you get two cases of COVID-19 at once? Who’d a thunk it?
What’s going on here? Are the two Supreme Court justices taking stupid pills? Is the “Wise Latina” not so wise after all?
She may not be a legal genius but that’s not the problem. The problem is what I have called “want-to-believe.”
Sotomayor and Breyer are so convinced of liberal/conservative ideology that they are unable even to see the arguments of the other side, sometimes to the extent that they do not even know they are there, that they exist.
This is even true when the arguments are about science, not politics—when facts, not opinions, are most important.

Have either of these people—Supreme Court justices who must have known for months that they were going to have to rule on matters concerning COVID—read any of the books on the subject by Alex Berenson, Dr. Scott Atlas, or Robert F. Kennedy Jr., himself obviously a liberal?
Have they viewed any of the detailed videos made by Drs. Peter McCullough and Robert Malone, some available right here on The Epoch Times, warning of the significant dangers of vaccinating children with barely tested mRNA? (Malone, incidentally, was one of the mRNA vaccine inventors.)
Have they even read the Great Barrington Declaration? Do they know who signed it or what their backgrounds were (Harvard, Oxford and Stanford, among others)? Do they even know what it is?
In all probability, the answer to most, possibly all, of these questions is no. It is for almost every liberal or progressive I know. They are bathed in what are deemed the proper morally narcissistic views by the New York Times and CNN and accept them like automatons. Ignorance is bliss, as they say.
In the case of COVID, this kind of extreme ignorance has left dead bodies across the globe. Hydroxychloroquine and ivermectin be damned, even if they save millions of people. After all, Trump recommended them. They have to be bad.
Can you imagine anything more idiotic, less scientific?
But that’s where we are on our Supreme Court, of all places, the new haven of know-nothingism. Mere bias wasn’t enough.
Sotomayor should obviously recuse herself from all matters regarding COVID.
She won’t. The American left—straight up to SCOTUS justices apparently—is suffused with a belief that everything they say is automatically correct, whatever they think ought to be to be true is true.
Sotomayor may not make a blunder as obvious as this one again, but the thought process—or lack thereof—that led to it will not change.
You might call it the anti-scientific method.