Conservatives of the Decade, 2009

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The number-one Conservative of the Decade is Clarence Thomas, Justice of the Supreme Court since 1992. Conservapedia contributors cite him for his opinions clarifying the Establishment Clause of the U.S. Constitution, and holding that capital punishment is not "cruel or unusual" within the actual meaning of the Eighth Amendment.

Our citation of selection describes Thomas thus:

Thomas is a distinguished jurist who understands that the Constitution is not a Ouija board, plus he can relate to Americans (RVing, raising a twelve year old grandson). His silence at oral arguments indicates that he is more interested in what the people are saying, and he is a quiet force behind the scenes.

For ten years he has withstood intense pressure to become more liberal in order to win the media accolades given to less accomplished men. With sincerity, insight, and good spirit, Justice Thomas has become an inspiration for a generation of Americans at a time when there appears to be few role models in public life. His autobiography, published in 2007, traces his path from the most humble roots to the pinnacle of power, and yet he never flinched from his principles as so many others in Washington do.

Justice Thomas wrote 80 decisions for the Court in this decade, and there is not a misstep in any of them. He is the Conservative of the Decade!

The immediate runners-up to Thomas were those who propounded, supported, voted for, and defended California's Proposition 8, the proposition declaring that California's constitution would recognize marriage as between one man and one woman, and not dignify any other combination (man and man, woman and woman, man and animal, etc.) with the term "marriage." Proposition 8 set the so-called "homosexual agenda" back considerably, especially since at last Californians managed to so amend their Constitution and not have California's courts invalidate that amendment.

The full list of Conservatives of the Decade is as follows:

  • 1. Clarence Thomas
  • 2. Proposition 8 supporters
  • 3. Antonin Scalia, (for his opinions supporting Rule of Law, the Second Amendment, and textualism)
  • 4. Sarah Palin, (for advocating less government, standing up to inhuman liberal abuse, and opposing "death panels", er, "end of life counseling")
  • 5. Ron Paul, (for advancing the vision of Barry Goldwater, mobilizing activism, and scrutinizing the Federal Reserve)
  • 6. Michele Bachmann (taking on liberals in the House of Representatives, exposing the global currency, and winning in Al Franken's State)
  • 7. Dick Cheney, American Patriot, (protecting America in a dangerous world, and standing up for others who do likewise)
  • 8. Samuel Alito (standing up to liberals during his confirmation hearings, and writing superb opinions soon afterward)
  • 9. Ann Coulter, (taking it right to the liberals with courage and wit)
  • 10. Michelle Malkin, (blogging across-the-board conservatism and speaking on college campuses)

In addition, Conservapedia remembers these famous conservatives who died in the decade just passed: