This is the Kind of Precedent that the Court's Conservatives Exalt?
"[I]n Gorsuch's words, he would be required to undermine the very notion of income taxation 'if I'm not willing to overturn a hundred years' worth of precedent.' Right. Fifty-year-old precedents are fair game, I guess, when they are wrongly described as "egregiously wrong." That quotation is from a column that I wrote this past December commenting on Neil Gorsuch's performance during oral argument in Moore v. US , one of the most consequential -- and potentially devastating -- tax cases that the Court has heard in decades. I could certainly have gone beyond a subtle jab about Gorsuch's enthusiastic flouting of precedent in overruling Roe via the Dobbs decision. After all, he and his crowd have had no problem throwing away decades of precedent not only on abortion rights but also on affirmative action, gun regulation, labor unions, and more. For Gorsuch to say with a straight face that he hesitates to overturn precedent is evidence