Cornell's argument reminded me of another, written by my Georgia State colleague H. Robert Baker in Common-Place. The article considers the Court's 2004 Boumediene v. Bush decision, which struck down the Bush administration's arguments about habeas corpus. Baker notes how deeply historical narrative is implicated in legal opinions and especially in legal divides. He writes: "Both Justice Anthony Kennedy’s majority opinion and Justice Antonin Scalia’s dissent turn to the past to justify their interpretations of habeas corpus. In doing so, they demonstrate just how immediate the past can be—but also just how divisive it remains. Choosing between the five justices in the majority and the four in the minority is, in essence, choosing between two very different histories."
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