A Wise Latina Spender?
By Jeffrey Folks

As more information becomes available, we are able to form a clearer impression 
of Judge Sonia Sotomayor. She is an intelligent, well-educated individual with 
broad experience in both corporate and judicial law. According to the White 
House and to her own statements, she is a person whose "compelling life story" 
would make her a "better" or "wiser" justice than a white male. She is also a 
Federal Appeals Court judge with a 17-year history of rulings which, taken as a 
whole, place her on the left of judicial opinion spectrum in modern America. 


These matters have been thoroughly discussed and digested in the media, and, 
predictably, liberals have come out in favor of her nomination (even those like 
Sen. Harry Reid, who admitted to never having read one of her rulings) while 
conservatives are lining up against it. But while pundits are deciding whether 
or not Ms Sotomayor is or is not a "racist" and whether her life story is or is 
not that "compelling" (was she really all that "underprivileged" or just 
pretending to have been so?), another issue has cropped up. What has Sonia 
Sotomayor done with all the money she has earned over the last 25 years?


Sotomayor's annual earnings come to $196,000 a year ($170,000 a year as an 
appeals judge and $26,000 for part-time teaching). She has served as an appeals 
judge for 17 years. This service was preceded by lengthy tenure at a corporate 
law firm of Pavia and Harcourt, where she was a partner, and presumably was 
well compensated. 


Yet after a career that has spanned 25 years, Ms Sotomayor only has one 
thousand dollars in net savings. As reported in the New York Post, Sotomayor's 
bank account holds $31,985. Her credit cards debts are $15,823, and she has 
$15,000 in unpaid dental bills. That leaves her with $1,162. Sotomayor's total 
assets, revealed as $708,068, consist almost entirely of equity in her 
Manhattan apartment. The judge's financial filing does not disclose what 
percentage of this figure is unrealized gain, but it must be sizable. In other 
words, other than home equity, Ms Sotomayor is essentially broke. 


If confirmed as a Supreme Court justice, Ms Sotomayor will be ruling on 
numerous cases that involve investors, savers, corporate profits, business 
regulation, and related free-market issues. There is nothing in the rules that 
says that a justice on the United States Supreme Court must be an investor in 
the stock or bond market, or even that she must be financially solvent. But the 
fact that Ms Sotomayor, after so many years of highly paid professional work, 
has no savings or investments and no experience or apparent "empathy" with 
savers or investors, should be highly troubling to the tens of millions of 
Americans who do have investments, 401Ks, and personal savings. 


One would not expect a judge with Sotomayor's "life story" of not investing and 
not saving to have much sympathy with the corporate and small business 
community. And, in fact, Sotomayor's record on the bench bears this out. 
According to Michael Bachner, a defense lawyer who has appeared before her, 
Judge Sotomayor is "very tough" on white-collar defendants ,but less so on 
criminals from the street. 


In one of her most important rulings (as reported in the New York Times), 
Sotomayor ruled that corporations must address environmental concerns in the 
most radical manner without consideration of the cost. If one particle of 
pollutant remains to be removed, even at the cost of bankrupting all of the 
companies in the S&P 500 index, that particle must be removed. If a small 
business has failed to purchase the most advanced equipment available to 
address environmental concerns, even if the price of that equipment is one 
hundred times the revenue of the business in question, the equipment must be 
purchased. That is how much "empathy" we can expect from Judge Sotomayor. 


The White House has attempted to excuse Judge Sotomayor's lack of fiscal good 
sense by noting that the nominee spends a great deal of money on her mother and 
purchases Christmas gifts for over 60 individuals. Judge Sotomayor's spending 
on her mother is admirable, but Sotomayor has not revealed the details of this 
spending. According to a financial statement filed by Sotomayor herself, just 
about everything not spent on her own and her mother's expenses was taken up 
with gifts to those 60 individuals. That is a lot of Christmas shopping. 


Of course Sotomayor is perfectly free to spend her money any way she wishes, 
as, one would hope, we all are. But the amount of spending going on and the 
apparent lack of financial discretion in her case do raise questions about 
Sotomayor's character. How can anyone who believes in personal responsibility 
work for twenty-five years in highly paid positions and have only $1,000 in net 
savings to show for it? It would seem that Ms Sotomayor puts greater trust in 
the Social Security system than do the vast majority of Americans who, 
according to figures in Kiplinger Finance magazine, approach retirement with 
personal savings of $55,000. At the very least, Sotomayor's lack of savings 
suggest that she may not be the far-sighted, wise Latina woman that she 
pretends to be. 


Nor do these financial details support the White House fiction of Sotomayor's 
"compelling life story." Sotomayor's childhood was not the impoverished, 
underprivileged grind that has been depicted in the liberal media. During the 
era of affirmative action quotas, she received scholarships to elite 
universities. One must credit Ms Sotomayor for taking advantage of the 
opportunities provided for her, but the fiction that she rose from an indigent 
childhood strictly on the basis of her own superhuman efforts is just that, a 
fiction. 


What is not a fiction is the fact that Ms Sotomayor has shown no interest in 
saving or investing, nor has she shown any understanding of the need for the 
American public to save or invest. Nor, so far as I know, has she displayed 
much understanding of the profit motive that drives corporations or small 
businesses. Perhaps this is because, as in her own case, she does not expect 
Americans to save for their own retirement. Instead, we are supposed to leave 
it to government -- the same Big Government that is expected to provide cradle 
to grave care while confiscating the assets of every business and individual to 
pay for it. The same Big Government that thinks that companies should be run 
out of business for the sin of emitting one particle of pollution into the 
environment. 


Finally, the question comes down to Sonia Sotomayor's vision of America as a 
capitalist, free-market economy and of the role of individuals and businesses 
within this economy. Her rulings from the appeals court bench have not been 
very reassuring on this point. Nor do the recent disclosures of Ms Sotomayor's 
personal finances.


Dr. Jeffrey Folks taught for thirty years in universities in Europe, America, 
and Japan. He has published nine books.

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http://www.americanthinker.com/2009/06/a_wise_latina_spender.html
 at June 07, 2009 - 10:51:53 AM EDT 
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