February 11, 2009 3:03 PM
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Justice Scalia On The Record
His years at Xavier, where he went to mass at the church of St. Francis Xavier next door, deepened his Catholic faith.
Scalia says he gave the priesthood some thought.
"And decided no?" Stahl asks.
"And decided he was not calling me," Scalia explains.
"What is the connection between your Catholicism, your Jesuit education, and your judicial philosophy?" Stahl asks.
"It has nothing to do with how I decide cases," Scalia replies. "My job is to interpret the Constitution accurately. And indeed, there are anti-abortion people who think that the constitution requires a state to prohibit abortion. They say that the Equal Protection Clause requires that you treat a helpless human being that's still in the womb the way you treat other human beings. I think that's wrong. I think when the Constitution says that persons are entitled to equal protection of the laws, I think it clearly means walking-around persons,"
Appointed by Ronald Reagan, he was sworn in at age 50, the first Italian-American to ever serve on the Supreme Court.
He met his wife Maureen in Cambridge when she was a senior at Radcliffe and he was in his last year at Harvard Law School. They have been married for 48 years and rarely disagree, they say.
"She says she could have married so-and-so…," Scalia says.
"Oh, not really," his wife replies.
"You do. You say that. And of course the reason she didn't was that 'so-and-so [was] wishy-washy,'" Scalia says.
"This is absolutely true. He will say, 'You would have been bored.' I say, 'Oh, that's right!' I would have been bored," Maureen Scalia says. "I would have been bored."
But she says she hasn't been bored.
"Whatever my faults are, I am not wishy-washy," Antonin Scalia adds.
The marriage has flourished: they have 9 children and 28 grandchildren.
Why so many children?
"Well, as someone said, they're both overachievers, I guess," Maureen Scalia jokes, laughing.
"Well, we didn't set out to have nine children. We're just old-fashioned Catholics, you know? Playing what used to be known as 'Vatican roulette,'" Scalia jokes.
Copyright 2009 CBS. All rights reserved. Scalia says he gave the priesthood some thought.
"And decided no?" Stahl asks.
"And decided he was not calling me," Scalia explains.
"What is the connection between your Catholicism, your Jesuit education, and your judicial philosophy?" Stahl asks.
"It has nothing to do with how I decide cases," Scalia replies. "My job is to interpret the Constitution accurately. And indeed, there are anti-abortion people who think that the constitution requires a state to prohibit abortion. They say that the Equal Protection Clause requires that you treat a helpless human being that's still in the womb the way you treat other human beings. I think that's wrong. I think when the Constitution says that persons are entitled to equal protection of the laws, I think it clearly means walking-around persons,"
Appointed by Ronald Reagan, he was sworn in at age 50, the first Italian-American to ever serve on the Supreme Court.
He met his wife Maureen in Cambridge when she was a senior at Radcliffe and he was in his last year at Harvard Law School. They have been married for 48 years and rarely disagree, they say.
"She says she could have married so-and-so…," Scalia says.
"Oh, not really," his wife replies.
"You do. You say that. And of course the reason she didn't was that 'so-and-so [was] wishy-washy,'" Scalia says.
"This is absolutely true. He will say, 'You would have been bored.' I say, 'Oh, that's right!' I would have been bored," Maureen Scalia says. "I would have been bored."
But she says she hasn't been bored.
"Whatever my faults are, I am not wishy-washy," Antonin Scalia adds.
The marriage has flourished: they have 9 children and 28 grandchildren.
Why so many children?
"Well, as someone said, they're both overachievers, I guess," Maureen Scalia jokes, laughing.
"Well, we didn't set out to have nine children. We're just old-fashioned Catholics, you know? Playing what used to be known as 'Vatican roulette,'" Scalia jokes.
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