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This 5 page paper critically reviews the book by David M. O'Brien entitled "Storm Center: The Supreme Court in American Politics." The work is evaluated primarily for content. No additional sources cited.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: RT13_SA145SC.rtf
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"Storm Center: The Supreme Court in American Politics." The work is evaluated primarily for content. No additional sources cited. SA145SC.rtf On the first page,
of the first Chapter, of a book called "Storm Center : The Supreme Court in American Politics" David M. OBrien (1999) tells the Roe v. Wade story but in a
way that has not been told before. He tells of the real life horror story of the woman at the center of the case. She was gang raped by three
men and a woman as she made her way home from a carnival one night (1999). But before the first page ends, it is learned that the young, frightened girl
made the whole thing up (1999). It was a Tawana Brawley. But what is most important to understand is that the book sends a message, and it does so in
a way that is both interesting and astonishing. From the first page, the work is compelling reading, providing general readers with the real meanings and history of Supreme Court
politics. Not only does a reader get the gist of what is going on behind the sense, but the book is well written and deserves accolades for its insights and
attention to detail. At the same time, OBrien sometimes misses the major point that not everything is political. The Supreme Court is not supposed to be and if one looks
closely enough one can find a greater meaning. OBrien does not. Still, one has to question that validity of the branch of government that is political in nature and OBrien
accomplishes that. After all, the president gets to choose justices and it is thought that the court will be swayed one way or the other by the political outlooks of
...