This text argues that the Supreme Court’s name “Supreme” is no longer fitting due to the perceived decline in the quality and qualifications of its nominees. The author critiques several current and recent Supreme Court justices, questioning their experience and the circumstances of their appointments. The primary focus is on Ketanji Brown Jackson, referred to by the author as “Jumanji Black-Woman,” with accusations that her biographical details and even her existence are fabricated. The author suggests connections to intelligence agencies and a pattern of deception involving the masking of identities and backgrounds.

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The author contends that the Supreme Court’s name is no longer appropriate due to a perceived decline in nominee quality, citing “dumbing down in the name of diversity, partisanship, and sheer chaos-creation.” In contrast to past expectations of seasoned legal minds, the current court is described as filled with “plastic, cue-card-reading lightweight[s].”

The author scrutinizes several justices:

The author’s main target is Ketanji Brown Jackson, dubbed “Jumanji Black-Woman.” The author claims her appointment is suspicious, citing her short tenure on the DC Court of Appeals (seven months) and her prior time on a district court and in private practice. The author alleges that Ketanji Brown Jackson’s husband, described as a “rich and connected white guy,” has aristocratic Boston roots, with family names like Graves, Gardner, Hazeltine, Covington, and Hardee. The author also draws speculative genealogical links to prominent Jewish families and historical figures like William Covington Hardee, Abram Lindsay Hardee, Lindsays of the Constitutional Conventions, Earls of Crawford, Dukes of Montrose, Earls of Balcarres, Trotters, Cavendishes, and Anthony Lindsay, head of Hambro Investments.

Further accusations revolve around Ketanji Brown Jackson’s mother’s maiden name being hidden and her Geni and Wikitree pages being scrubbed. The author presents photographs from the 1988 Miami Palmetto Senior High School yearbook published by The Palm Echo as faked, claiming the head sizes are disproportionate and the faces don’t match, suggesting Monarch programming markers like Winnie the Pooh and a teddybear. The author questions the varying quality of the photos and Ketanji Brown Jackson’s alleged nomination for a Silver Knight scholarship in drama, implying she is an actress. The unavailability of yearbooks from Palmetto Miami for 1986-88 on eyearbook.com and Classmates.com is presented as further evidence of fabrication.

The author notes Jeff Bezos as a fellow alumnus of Palmetto and contrasts his induction into the alumni hall of fame with Ketanji Brown Jackson’s absence, suggesting she did not attend the school. This is compared to Barack Obama’s allegedly unreleased Columbia and Harvard records, which the author claims are fake. The author reiterates a prior assertion that all Supreme Court Justices are Jewish.

The author then investigates Ketanji Brown Jackson’s family, identifying her uncle Calvin Ross as former Chief of Police in Miami, and a sister Carolynn Ross Tucker with husband Eric Tucker. They also mention a sibling Harold Ross and an adopted sister Frances Tailey. The surname Ross is suggested as a Jewish name.

A search for Ellery Ross Brown (Ketanji’s mother) leads to Winston Harvey Brown and surnames Duguid and Harris. Locations associated with Ellery Brown include Miami, FL, Alexandria, VA, and Rosedale, MD, leading to speculation about CIA involvement. Further searches reveal additional locations like Potomac, MD, Glenrock, WY, Macomb, Hiawassee, GA, and Plaquemine, LA, with connections to US Army Department and Camp Merrill, prompting further suspicion of intelligence agency ties. The absence of Ross family members on Ellery Brown’s Intelius page, and Jackson family members on her Ketanji Brown Jackson’s listing, is highlighted.

The author introduces a brother, Ketajh Mikobi Brown, a soldier in Iraq and policeman in Baltimore, who is now a lawyer at K&L Gates. The author questions the timeline of his military service, police work, and legal education, citing conflicting information from Heavy.com, the Baltimore Sun, and LinkedIn. The similarity of names Ketajh and Ketanji is also questioned.

A search for Ketanji Brown Jackson on Instantcheckmate and Intelius yields no results, leading the author to conclude she is a “wholly fictional person” created by altering her brother’s name.

The name Kathleen Grazier appears in a relatives list, with locations including Bethesda, Silver Spring, MD, Alexandria, Warrenton, VA (near the CIA Farm mentioned in the film The Ghost Writer), and Naugatuck, CT. Her husband, Dylan S. Grazier, also has suspicious Virginia listings.

The author questions the existence and appearance of Ketanji Brown Jackson’s husband, Patrick G. Jackson, described as a doctor in DC who allegedly attended Harvard with her and works at MedstarHealth. His appearance is deemed “strange” and his provided picture as “at least 15 years old.” The author notes his twin brother William is the brother-in-law of Paul Ryan, but states Patrick Jackson cannot be found in records. Alternative individuals named Patrick Jackson are proposed, including Patrick V. Jackson, Patrick L. Jackson, Patrick Mussenden Jackson (with ties to Cambridge, MA and Harvard), and Stephen Patrick Jackson (with ties to Ft. Hood). The author suggests these are aliases and that Paul Ryan and Jeff Bezos might also be part of this deception.

Finally, the author suggests Republican senators like Matt Gaetz should have demanded proof of Ketanji Brown Jackson’s existence, such as a birth certificate, undoctored photos, and a real high school yearbook. Tucker Carlson’s request for her LSAT scores is also deemed relevant, implying they might not exist.