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I was Chief Articles Editor of UCLA Law Review and
later had
the honor of clerking for the Hon. Danny Julian Boggs of the United
States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit, one of the nation's most
brilliant jurists, who later rose to become Chief Judge of the Sixth
Circuit. To be selected as Chief Articles Editor, I had to
research
and write the Law Review Comment of a lifetime. In time, it was
published and deemed good enough that I was named law review chief
articles editor. In the years that followed, that Law Review
Comment
has been cited by federal courts in at least seven published judicial
opinions, and in several other unpublished opinions. It has been
cited
and quoted often in other people's legal scholarship.
And that is "how it works." To be a
law review editor-in-chief, a
Chief Articles Editor, a Chief Comments Editor of a law review, it is a
sine qua non that you publish something fabulous, a real scholarly
piece of work. Many dozens of America's finest law students do
exactly
that every year. Those articles later become part of a vast
searchable
electronic library of legal scholarship.
The thing is, I cannot find Barack Obama's
great piece of work, the
scholarship one would presume he researched, drafted, crafted, and
honed, that earned him the presidency of the Harvard Law Review.
The
name "Obama" is the kind of search term that should do the job.
But I
cannot find any scholarship published by him that reveals the
exceptional brilliance that paved the way to his achievement. So
there
is no published scholarship that refutes the increasing sense so many
of us share that we Americans elected a President who maybe is not so
smart as the media's campaign hype suggested. Perhaps even a
rube.
Excerpted from "Stop
It Already -- He's Not So Smart," By Dov Fischer
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