I'm curious how voting against any remedy for partisan gerrymandering does not make the five justices who voted in the majority "the enemy of the people". (Reasoning: Democracy means government responsive to the will of the people, as determined by their vote. If expressing that will is thwarted or misrepresented, then Democracy is thwarted.) Anticipating some possible responses to this question, I will say this: 1) This question is not political, but rather scholarly. 2) If I am censured or banned from math-fun for asking this question, —OR— is this topic is banned from further discussion, then I will have nothing further to do with math-fun, as of immediately. Cf. https://www.chronicle.com/article/Meet-the-Math-Professor/239260 —Dan