Justice Clarence Thomas recently delivered a remarkable address at the University of Texas at Austin. It was not a ceremonial speech. It was a philosophical argument — serious, historically grounded, and centered on a single urgent claim: that the principles of the Declaration of Independence require not just intellectual assent but personal courage to defend.
He is right about that. And that is precisely why the speech opens a door worth walking through — because his own framework, applied with the consistency he demands, leads to questions he did not pose.
Thomas’s central claim is that the Declaration’s self-evident truths — that all people are created equal, endowed with unalienable rights to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness — are not academic abstractions. He encountered them as a child in segregated Georgia as articles of faith, impervious to the bigotry around him. His grandfather, a man without formal education, understood that rights come from God, not from the architects of oppression. The power to treat people unequally, Thomas argues, does not confer the power to make them actually unequal.