After Taking $900K from Publisher, Ketanji Brown Jackson Calls for Supreme Court ‘Code of Ethics’
Ketanji Brown Jackson wrote her memoir after spending less time on the bench than the dust cloths.
Ketanji Brown Jackson was appointed to the Supreme Court by former President Joe Biden because he had promised to put a black woman on the court. And while Jackson couldn’t answer what a woman was, the general consensus was that she was close enough and thus qualified for the new position.
That was June 2022.
Next year, in 2023, she got an advance of $893,750 advance for a “memoir” about her life. Sure, Jackson could have waited before she spent a year on the Supreme Court before writing a memoir. Some justices were even known to wait 20 or 30 years before doing it.
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Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg wrote her memoir after over 20 years on the court at the ripe old age of 83.
Ketanji Brown Jackson wrote her memoir when she was 52 after spending less time on the bench than the dust cloths. She could have waited, but one of the biggest and most abusive publishers in the country (and one of the wokest) was dangling nearly $900,000 smackers in front of her twitching nose.
So she went for it. And is now on tour with ‘Lovely One’, her memoir of getting paid $893,750 to put her name on a book. On tour, Jackson then shamelessly endorsed the coup proposal for a ‘Code of Ethics’ for the Supreme Court to be managed by Senate Democrats. And then Jackson took a shot in support of the ProPublica campaign against Justice Clarence Thomas, insisting that gifts should be disclosed.
Jackson got a $893,750 ‘gift’ and not just from anyone. Let’s revisit what Penguin Random House actually is.
Ibram X. Kendi’s “How to Be an Antiracist”, Robin DiAngelo’s “White Fragility”, and Ta-Nehisi Coates’s “Between the World and Me” all have one publisher in common.
Bertelsmann, the German giant, which formerly used to put out “The Christmas Book of the Hitler Youth”, has become the leading publisher and distributor of some of the most famous and influential racist woke books, under the name Penguin Random House.
Earlier this year, Markus Dohle, the German CEO appointed by Bertelsmann to head up Penguin Random House, declared war on parental rights advocates by setting up a $500,000 Dohle Book Defense Fund to “advocate against censorship, track and expose the egregious assaults on books and ideas playing out in classrooms, state legislatures and other arenas.”
Bertelsmann has been censoring and rewriting children’s books by Roald Dahl and altering the “unacceptable prose” of P.G. Wodehouse in the Jeeves and Wooster books.
The ex-Nazi publishing giant which operates under such names as Penguin Random House and Puffin Books, took a red pencil to Roald Dahl long after the author’s death, cut any references to “fat”, “ugly” or “crazy”, along with “mothers and fathers” and other un-woke terms.
Penguin Random House’s former CEO Markus Dohle announced a $500,000 fund to fight censorship, not by ending the company’s purge of classic literature, but by fighting parents in court over efforts to keep graphic hate and sex out of schools.
And this isn’t the first time a Supreme Court Justice got in trouble taking money from the ex-Nazi woke publisher.
Justice Sotomayor collected more than $1.9 million in advances and promotion for her memoir, My Beloved World, published by Knopf Doubleday.
Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor didn’t recuse herself from multiple cases involving a book publisher – Penguin Random House – which paid her more than $3 million since 2010, according to a report.
‘My Beloved World’ and ‘Lovely One’. Are Sonia and Ketanji using the same lame ghostwriter or AI?
Anyway, there’s a special on woke Supreme Court justices. Buy 1, get 1 free. Will Jackson be refusing herself from cases involving the woke ex-Nazi German giant? Don’t bet on it.
And, is anyone expecting her memoir to sell well enough to justify that nearly $900,000 payday?
Let’s go back to ‘My Beloved World’.
A person close to Sotomayor, who insisted on anonymity to discuss the justice’s book dealings, said that Sotomayor “has not and will not profit from sales” of her memoir beyond the $3.1 million advance that she received and that doing so would “require purchases of hundreds of thousands of additional books — more than double the purchases to date.”
Interesting. Why then did PRH hand out a massive $3.1 million advance that couldn’t be recouped through actual book sales?
Was that really a business transaction or a gift?
Does PRH expect to recoup the massive $893,750 advance for ‘Lovely One’ through book sales? And if not, is that a gift?
Article posted with permission from Daniel Greenfield