The last few weeks have been muy caliente in terms of Supreme Court dish.

To recap, Supreme Court Justice David Souter announced that he’s retiring from the Court.

President Obama then laid out his criteria for selecting a new Justice, which included the quality of empathy (which should be no surprise, considering that he called for judicial empathy way back in 2007).

Obama’s mention of the scary and perhaps tantalizingly foreign-sounding word “empathy” has driven the GOP into ever-heightening states of abject apoplexy at the ludicrous suggestion that a judge should possess an emotion that allows a human being to step into the shoes of another.

I know, I know; I shouldn’t expect anything out of the GOP right now besides lies, misdirection and childish name-calling. However, this furor over “empathy” has really stuck in my craw. I’ve been meaning to write a big post on it but Dahlia Lithwick appears to have done the job even better than I could:

One is surely entitled to say that President Obama’s repeated claim that he seeks “empathy” in a replacement for Justice David Souter is something less than a crisp constitutional standard. But the Republican war on empathy has started to border on the deranged, and you can’t help but wonder to what purpose. Webster’s defines empathy as “the experiencing as one’s own the feelings of another.” Obama, in The Audacity of Hope, described empathy as “a call to stand in somebody else’s shoes and see through their eyes.” To Obama, empathy chiefly means applying a principle his mother taught him: asking, “How would that make you feel?” before acting. Empathy in a judge does not mean stopping midtrial to tenderly clutch the defendant to your heart and weep. It doesn’t mean reflexively giving one class of people an advantage over another because their lives are sad or difficult. When the president talks about empathy, he talks not of legal outcomes but of an intellectual and ethical process: the ability to think about the law from more than one perspective. But Republicans have gathered up their flaming torches and raised their fists to loudly denounce empathy and all empathy-based behavior as evil. Last Friday, RNC Chairman Michael Steele, sitting in for Bill Bennett on the Morning in America syndicated radio show, blurted out, “Crazy nonsense empathetic! I’ll give you empathy. Empathize right on your behind!” Nice… When did the simple act of recognizing that you are not the only one in the room become confused with lawlessness, activism, and social engineering? For a group so vociferously devoted to textualism and plain meaning, conservative critics have an awfully elastic definition of the word empathy. It expands to cover any sort of judicial malfeasance they can imagine. Empathy—the quality of caring what others may feel—signals intellectual weakness, judicial immodesty, favoritism, bias, and grandiosity. John Yoo also seems to be of the view that the kind of emotional incontinence that begins with empathy for others quickly leads to being “emotive” on the bench. Evidently it’s a short hop from empathy to having the judicial vapors.

Read the whole article.

From a textualist perspective, I would also like to highlight for our Dear GOP Leaders some antonyms to the concept of empathy:

indifference: “a lack of interest or concern”

disregard: “a lack of regard or attention; neglect”

callousness: “feeling or showing no sympathy for others”

unconcern: “the absence of feeling or concern”

Hmm, come to think of it, those words seem to capture pretty succinctly the GOP’s preferred approach to politics and appellate jurisprudence.

Update: Here’s a more fulsome quote from the article Lithwick cites above, written by conservative law professor Douglas Kmiec: