PiratePundit

Monday, March 28, 2005

What have you endured for 11days

It's Terri's eleventh day without food or water.

That's a lot of fight.

That's a lot of will to live.

It does seem a long time to hang on for someone we are just absolutely positive wants nothing more in the whole wide world but to die.

Even if she did have an expressed opinion a long time ago about her desire to live, it is certain that the court's have no curiosity or respect for or interest in what her desire might be RIGHT NOW. The law is not so unsophisticated that it could not operate on that standard.

Saturday, March 26, 2005

Words of comfort from attorney George Thantos

[yes, I know his real name is George Felos. Thanatos is more fitting]

So now, not only is being starved to death akin to the best thing that could ever happen to you, creating "euphoria", it seems to also be a very effective beauty treatment. Let's all try it!

I hope it bothers some of you ladies that Michael's lawyer only manages to perceive the beauty of a woman's life when it is ebbing away.

Thanatos speaks:
Frankly when I saw her ... she looked beautiful. In all the years I've seen Mrs. Schiavo, I've never seen such a look of peace and beauty upon her. Mrs. Schiavo's death is not imminent by any means," Felos added.

Friday, March 25, 2005

Visit SueBob

SueBob's Diary, a blog of a fellow attorney, is one hell of a quality site. I have yet to read a post that is not well researched and well thought out. I'm posting this not as an advertisement for a friend, but because SueBob is filling in the holes of what I want to say and cannot find the time to say about the ongoing Terri case.

We helped each other blog about Sun Hudson, and now she is taking the analysis of Terri Schindler-Schiavo's case where the analysis needs to go: everywhere.

Wednesday, March 23, 2005

For those arriving here after a search about Sun Hudson

The stats for this tiny blog are going up, and I think I know why. If you are here for ammunition to blog about George Bush being a hypocrite, turn around now. You won't find it.

It's like this. The Texas law that led to the death of Sun Hudson started out as an attempt to give hospitals practically exclusive control over life and death decisions regardless of the wishes of parents and other family members.

Then Governor Bush was faced with a bill that gave Texas hospital ethics committees, which are typically staffed with some doctors, administrators (read: evil capitalists), social workers, and risk management experts (read: evil capitalist enabling lawyers) the ability to decide to cease treating patients. There are no particular requirements of expertise to sit on a hospital ethics board.

NOTE to those who don't get the sarcasm: I don't really think that capitalists or lawyers, per se, are evil, but like I said I know why you are searching this site.

The bill presented to Bush gave parents and other family members 72 hours to find a judge to get relief from an ethics committee decision. That's a bitch when you get word at 4:59 on a Friday that they are about to stop life support on your infant (Sun Hudson's mother got notice just before the long Thanksgiving weekend), and it's a double bitch when a parent doesn't just happen to already have an attorney specializing in health care law on retainer.

Bush, in the face of a largely Democrat Texas legislature, pushed to expand that 72 hours to 10 days. Bush, in the face of a largely Democrat Texas legislature, pushed to include language requiring that life support could not be removed if any other willing hospital could be identified to take the patient. He was able to prevail on those two points, but not on the overall bill.

If you want to call that hypocrisy, go ahead.

When Sun Hudson was sentenced to be removed from life support at five months, one month before he would have been eligible for cutting-edge treatment, it was a judge that did it, not allowing the mother's attorney to cross-examine any experts. If you want to blame that on George Bush, go ahead.

Lastly, the bill that Bush signed into Texas law specifically stated that the statute may not be used to effect "mercy killing." Then Governor Bush got that written into the law. Look it up. Yet, when Sun Hudson was taken off life support and died, the first thing that the hospital spokesperson said to the press was that it done out of "mercy".

Blame Bush if you want to.

What happens if you change your mind?

Terri Sciavo's case revolves around whether or not she would have decided, as a healthy woman prior to being injured, that she would not want to live in a debilitated or brain-damaged state. This begs the question, or at least it ought to, what she would desire after the fact.

We don't even ask the question. The law does not even inquire into whether or not the patient may have desires in the present, as opposed to considering only supposedly expressed wishes prior to having first-hand knowledge of what life in that condition is really like.

So what happens if you go ahead and draft an advanced directive, like everyone wants you to do now, only to come to a different conclusion after you become disabled? To suggest that my question is absurd is to assume that all brain damaged patients have no emotions or cognition that we need recognize, and I reject that assumption. It is wrong to assume that a physically healthy woman of 41 years of age might not have different feelings about the worth of her own life after having lived in a diminished state for years.

It happens all the time. No one wants to be paralyzed, lose limbs, sight, or hearing, but it happens. Typically, after a period of depression, people discover the value and worth of their lives in their new situation. Why simply assume that no such thing is possible in the case of the brain damaged? Are we really that advanced or omniscient?

In Terri's case, all rests on what a judge thinks (or says he thinks) were here wishes when she was a whole woman of the age of 20 or so. There is no curiosity at all about what the 41 year old disabled version of that person might desire in the present. That would require that the trier of fact, the judge, actually visit and observe her. That is not even contemplated.

What if you change your mind and can't express your current wishes?

The king is dead, long live the king

The King of Monaco has been placed on a respirator. Does he have an advanced directive? Surely he would not want "live that way". Hell, he used to live like a, well, like a king! How could he possibly want to live like that? No wine women and song for him in that hospital bed, you know. If we don't do the compassionate thing and stand up and shout loudly for his sacred human right to be killed by the weekend, then what have we become?

Karaoke night at Michael Schiavo's house

"I know you've heard this one before, honey, but the kids love it....is this thing on? OK, here goes...I'll try not to break into maniacal laughter this time, I promise...OK, cue music...

When you were young and your heart was an open book
You used to say live and let live
(you know you did you know you did you know you did)

But if this ever-changing world in which we live in
Makes you give in and...snort...stop the tape....sorry...I can't get past that part without laughing...try again? Kids? Listen to daddy sing. Yes, or else. Here goes, rewind a few....

But if this ever-changing world in which we live in
Makes you give and......cry

Say live and let die

separation of powers?

The law in Florida (passed by the legislative branch) gives an agency of the executive branch the authority to take into custody vulnerable adults when there is credible evidence of abuse or neglect. The delegation of that authority works that way because the agency is the one that possesses the particular expertise needed to do the job best on the behalf of the people.

For a judge to decide, before the fact, that said agency (DCF) may not exercise this statutory authority, without having the foggiest idea what information the agency has or what analysis the agency has employed in reaching the decision that it hasn't even made yet, is jaw-dropping.

If you've been worried about separation of powers lately (and who among us hasn't woken up every day of our lives determined to stand tall for that doctrine? sarcasam/off), then this is it. Judges are the serial offenders of separation of powers.

This is exactly the same thing as if a federal judge had ordered the US Marines not to attack Fallujah, while the Marines were planning and considering doing just that.

If you can explain the significant legal difference, let me know.

On Terri and federalism

It is not a states' rights issue, it's an issue of the rights of an individual.

You conservatives who are all up in arms about violations of federalism, I have one question for you.

Do you believe the rights that an individual possesses, as protected by the US Constitution, are separate and distinct from rights that the same person has protected by his or her State Constitution?

If you say no, they are the same, then one or the other document is superfluous and has no practical meaning. It is just a piece of paper. Therefore, select either your State Constitution or the US Constitution and tear it up. Since we started this conversation with you worried about states' rights, I suggest you tear up the US Constitution.

IF you say yes, those rights are distinct and separate, then state government can enforce rights under the State Constitution in state courts, and the federal government can enforce federal rights under the federal constitution in federal courts.

Terri is a human being, despite media attempts to dehumanize her. She possesses rights protected by her State Constitution. She possesses rights protected by her Federal Constitution.
Are we clear yet?

On Terri and the 11th Circuit Decision

If one federal judge can ignore the will of the majority of Congress in commanding a de novo review, and instead construe the law from the point of view of those who voted in the minority,

why the hell can't we treat the appeals court's 2-1 vote exactly the same way?

Tuesday, March 22, 2005

Judges are just alright with me

In America, Judges say what the facts are. In Terri's case, one circuit court judge (and trust me, these are nothing more than lawyers who have the ability to get other lawyers to give them money to run campaigns -- and then rule on the cases brought by those same lawyers) is a god, with the power of life and death and dominion over all the rest of both state and national government.

He says what the facts are, and he also says what the law is. He throws executive agencies out of court with harsh words. He throws letters from the governor in the wastebasket and laughs about it. He heaps public scorn on the heads of other branches of government. He is your god if you come before him. He is literally judge, jury and executioner in this case.

Greer not only allowed the removal of the feeding tube, he declared that it shall be done no matter what. Judge, jury, and executioner in one man, literally.

His decrees and pronouncements are reviewed by other judges. And the judges back the judges. And no judge finds the smallest criticism of the other judge. Among the judges, the judge is judged to be perfect, in every way, and all the time.

Obey at your own risk.

Monday, March 21, 2005

Why libertarians can support Terri, too

Free Market News brings us private solutions to public problems. So what does one do with a public solution to a private problem? This is what we’re looking at in the case of Terri Schindler-Schiavo in Florida, and I am sympathetic enough to libertarian concerns over government involvement in the case that I feel, as this site’s legal correspondent, an obligation to weigh in on this once again.

For better or ill, decisions about the care of disabled wards are supervised and overseen by courts. This is not because government requires that disabled people have guardians, rather it is because people who wish to exercise control over another sovereign human being need to have some legally-sanctioned reason for doing so, and ask the government, through the courts, to get involved and grant them that power of control over another person.

Think of it this way. Many of us have been divorced, and could have found a private solution to the crumbling marriage, simply filing a settlement agreement to conclude the matter. Most people, however, seek a public solution, asking our government to issue orders as to how the couple’s property will be distributed and where the kids will live most of the time. Guardianships aren’t any different. We invite government into our private lives, like the proverbial vampire who cannot enter unless welcomed.

In the case of Terri Schindler-Schiavo, she has had her food and water withheld from her not because her family members had the right to cause her death by the method of dehydration, but because a judge has ordered that it will happen. Many people, even otherwise well-informed libertarians, often make the mistake of forgetting that judges are the government. When one considers the intervention of the US Congress into this case, one must remember that this is not the intrusion of the government into a private affair. Rather, it is one part of government attempting to ensure the rights of an individual in light of what another part of government has done.

For those concerned with whether Congress’ actions violate the principle of separation of powers (suddenly en vogue after a long period of dormancy), I offer you the following controversial thought: our system of government never contemplated that judges have the final say on any issue, either public or private. If that were so, “checks and balances” would only refer to irrelevant fights between the executive and legislative branches while they waited for the courts to order them to behave in a certain way. What the Florida legislature did the last time Terri’s feeding tube was removed (the second of three times that has happened) in passing “Terri’s Law” was nothing but the grant of a temporary stay of the order to end her life so that an objective guardian ad litem could be appointed to advise the judge as to Terri’s best interests. Other than providing that safeguard, Terri’s Law handed the ultimate decision back to the court.

What the United States Congress did this past weekend is similar. Article I, Section 9, Clause 2 of the Constitution makes it clear that every citizen has the right to bring a writ of habeas corpus before the federal courts. The Congress, by the authority granted to it in Article III of the Constitution, has the responsibility to determine the scope of the jurisdiction of federal courts. Therefore, in extending habeas rights to Terri (the right to ask that one’s case be reviewed when one is detained under the authority of local government officials), the Congress did nothing more than expand jurisdiction from one court to another. The ultimate decision remains in the hands of judges.

Right or wrong, courts still get the final say in this matter. Thus, it is intellectually dishonest to claim that elected representatives of the people acting on behalf of Terri, in either the case of Terri’s Law in Florida, or in the US Congress’ recent action, violates the principle of separation of power.

As for concerns about what Congress’ action on Terri’s behalf does to the principle of federalism, I will first note that it’s rather quaint to see the left in this country rediscover federalism. I hope that sticks. Second, I humbly suggest that libertarians need not see this as an assault on State’s rights, unless one is opposed to the Constitution itself. If the Constitution extends the right to habeas corpus, and if the Constitution also demands that life and liberty shall not be taken from any of us without due process of law, then libertarians ought not be alarmed if their elected representatives seek to ensure that due process has real meaning and the conclusions of judges are just.

Instead, those who seek private solutions to public problems should take pains to scrutinize, in detail and with informed knowledge, the decisions of judges who may hold our very lives in their hands.

Sunday, March 20, 2005

Man On Fire

It's Creasy time. If you haven't seen the movie, Man on Fire, that won't make any sense to you.

They are killing Terri, right now. She is dying, right now. If you think that's good, you are either a demon or horribly misinformed. Either way, I don't want to hear from you.

In the meantime, justice will be had. Visit Impeach Judge Greer dot com and get on board.

Friday, March 18, 2005

The Florida Legislature has failed us all

If government does not have the will to protect innocent life, it has no legitimate reason for existing.

I hate it that the Republican majority that we worked for for decades has taken this opportunity to act, and blown it. This will have vast consequences, both for Florida and the nation.

This is a good time to quote from a movie I like, Man on Fire.

Lisa: What are you gonna do?

Creasy: What I do best. I'm gonna kill 'em. Anyone that was involved. Anybody who profited from it. Anybody who opens their eyes at me.

Lisa: [Whispering] You kill 'em all.

Quote of the Century

George Felos, demon and part time lawyer representing Michael Schiavo, uttered this day:

"My client has scrupulously obeyed the court orders in this case, and he is ordered to cause the feeding tube to be removed at 1 p.m., and that is what he is going to do," attorney George Felos said."

You see? Michael has no choice in the matter...the Judge ORDERED the ward to be killed.

Now, whether you read that last sentence in an ironic sense, or literally, you would be equaly right and the implications equally ghastly.

To see why Felos thinks he cans say such a thing, click here.

Man, this is really something. "Hey, I didn't want to kill my wife, but an authority figure told me to!"

In other news: www.impeachjudgegreer.com

Fear no evil, Terri

Dear Terri Schindler-Schiavo,
I am sure you have no idea how deeply you have touched so many people, but how we feel today does not matter. Maybe later it will be nice for your family to read how much affection and sympathy we have for you. You are about my age. I bet we liked a lot of the same music and movies in high school. We have not forgotten that you are a person with an individual personality, and not a slogan or a symbol. On this day, Terri, the only other thing I can think to say to you is fear no evil. What I hope for you today is the awareness of the presence of the One who loves you most, your Creator and Heavenly Father.

Dear American right-to-life movement,
As you did with Sun Hudson earlier in the week, you have completely fallen down on the job. Your signs, speeches and petitions are a joke. Congratulations on getting some face time on camera, though. But what will you to tomorrow? Will you pull out the guardianship statutes of all the states, looking with a fresh eye at flaws and dangers? Will you take the time to do that? Will you propose reforms to those laws? Will it hold your attention long enough to go through the years-long process of running for office, attaining office, and passing the reforms? Will you stick around long enough to help impeach Judge Greer and others like him? It won't be done in a week or a month. It will take years.

Dear Members of the United States Congress:
Please, please, don't try stunts that you will not go to the mat for. Do not propose "creative" bills that you have no intention of getting to a vote. Do not debate up to the point of seeming hope, and then go on vacation. And do not, damn you, give ammunition to those on the other side who sneeringinly claim that "they are only trying to keep Terri alive to score political points with the religious right." You are making those critics seem correct. You are doing more harm to the cause of life than good, and exposing your self-imposed impotence.

Dear Florida Legislature:
You are the most disingenuous and cowardly group of people I've run into in a long time. You have known all about Terri's plight for years. The feeding tube has been removed twice before. The case has made it glaringly obvious that the guardianship statute is not perfect, yet you have not taken serious steps to reform it even in the face of this impending and tragic injustice. The Florida Supreme Court found your earlier slapdash attempt called Terri's Law to be unconstitutional last September. You have had every minute of every day since then to decide how to act, yet here we are on the morning of Terri's execution, wondering whether or not you will resume the debate you adjourned on last night.

You are the body with the most direct, simple, and straightforward responsibility to prevent a ghastly injustice caused in part by the flaws in the laws you've passed. As our elected representatives, we also look to you to provide a check on renegade judges who hold our very lives in their hands. If it is not the job of government to first and foremost protect life and property, then you have no legitimate function at all.

Monday, March 14, 2005

Tony Blair's wife enables oppression of women

I swear there is no price too great when it comes to deconstructionism of western culture and values.

The title of this post is my own. I came to that conclusion after reading an article about a British court ruling that a school had violated the human rights of a female student when it asked her to conform to the dress coat and not wear a "jilbab" (think burka, but more drab). If you get into the details you find out that the rights that were really violated was the right to have one's case analyzed first and above all else in light of the European Union convention on human rights. Disregard the details. Only judges can twist yes or no questions into pretzels like that.

Some things really jump out at me in reading about this from what seems to be an interesting source (link below). For instance:
Quote:
Interestingly, Shabina was represented by Cherie Booth, the wife of British Prime Minister Tony Blair. Some Muslims might see something to celebrate in this and say “Look, the wife of the British prime minister is defending a Muslim girl’s rights”. There is no need for celebration.

The writer, properly so, wishes aloud that the wife of the Prime Minister would use her law degree to further some other right of muslim women other than to be bundled like a mummy by her older brother.

In 2005 Europe (which equates, I think, to 2003 California, 2007 New York, and 2025 in the red states), it is considered a major human rights triumph to bring extremism into the mainstream. The world is upside down. Wearing the jilbab is not a muslim right. I'll say that again, another way. Wearing the jilbab is not an expression of islam, it is an expression only of the most oppressive and undemocratic sect of islam. That would be like saying that the practices of David Koresh would have to be accepted as the standard in an American Christian school. Mull that one over. Tell me how I'm wrong.

Here's what else jumped out at me:
Quote:
I felt like screaming with anger and frustration when I heard about Shabina’s case because once again a Muslim woman is in the headlines only because of what she wears. When will this madness end?

Preach it, my muslim sister.

And finally this:

Quote:
Shabina’s school went out of its way to accommodate the needs of students who are nearly 80 percent Muslim, speak 40 different languages and who are from 21 different ethnic groups.

Say again, over? I guess people aren't kidding when they call Europe Eurabia. Somehow those numbers just floored me. Link:
www.muslimwakeup.com/main/archives/2005/03/will_a_muslim_w.php

Friday, March 11, 2005

Judicial quote of the day

In his refusal to allow the DCF to conduct an investigation and his denial of their request for a 60-day stay to conduct the inquiry, Greer said DCF’s request “appears to be brought for the purpose of circumventing the court’s final judgment…..in violation of the separation of powers doctrine”.

Coming soon: my explanation of what "separation of powers" used to mean. I'll tease the topic by noting that it used to normally be applied to judges not straying into the domain of elected lawmakers, and not the other way around.

What "separation of powers" means in Judge Greer's courtroom and in American courts in general lately: "I AM YOUR KING. Your vote for you lawmakers is meaningless and your governor must obey me." I can't think of a simpler way to say it.

Thursday, March 10, 2005

welcome guest blogger, "macbroo"

Today I lend the blog to a guest blogger, who asks a good question, from the point of view of the average Westerner:

Could Islam be reformed?
The Catholic Church underwent a great reformation in which a great period of enlightenment ensued: An age of reason.

Could the same be in store for Islam?

Tremendous bloodshed and political upheaval followed the reformation in the west. Monarchs fell with instability and war crippling devastated societies with residual distrust and enmity lingering throughout the centuries between Protestants and Catholics.

Now the Muslims must undergo this same painful transition. It can't be any more painful than the tyranny they've lived under for centuries. Is there an Islamic Martin Luther to lead the way? If there is no Muslim to step forward, is there not another who will lead them on that path?

The reformationists already exist and live in fear and oppression. Death and retribution are their reward for their secularist views. And there is a trip begun down the road to reform: It is headed by a nation lead by George W. Bush. But it didn't start with him. This road to reform began some 80 years ago when Turkey became a secular nation ending the Islamic caliphate. The Protestants removed the Pope from their church whereas the Muslims must now remove the caliph, the spiritual head of Islam, an almost identical prospect and no less heretical.

Reform has stalled until now. Perhaps fate has added the western world into this process. With fundamentalist Islamic terror exploding outside its borders into our realm, it has now become our movement. The Islamic world was incapable of reform in large measure, but they will have it now. It is no longer an option.

We will all be the better for it.

Wednesday, March 09, 2005

What the world needs now.

What the world needs now is a good Afghani blogger. This site, I predict, is going to become popular, much like Iraq the model. There is only one post so far, but it has great promise. Check this guy out.

Rallying Cries

As you know, after many days and many wonderful picures of young Lebanese demanding freedom and beaming while waving flags....all of a sudden a flippin' enormous crowd appears in Beirut (I've heard everything from maybe a couple hundred thousand to a million people).

Uh-oh. This must be bad, right? Bush and Bush supporters let a smile break out on their faces a bit prematurely, perhaps? Democracy isn't REALLY breaking out in the Mideast, right?

Courage, Dan, courage. I don't share those worries -- not yet, and I'll tell you why. You know authenticity when you see it. I frankly don't care how many people they get to show up with identical photographs of a foreign occupying and murderous dictator, I will not believe in my heart that such is what those people truly yearn for. It's time we just go ahead and let ourselves believe, once and for all, that freedom is preferable to slavery and fear, yes, even for THOSE people; indeed for all people. The Creator did not design the human spirit to merely exist as the ward of those more powerful, or depraved, but designed man's spirit to be fully and truly alive.

Thus when I see large crowds yelling, screaming, spitting, things like "We sacrifice our blood and our souls for you, oh Bashar!", I'm not buying it. I simply no longer believe junk like that, and I don't believe those on the street spouting it believe it either. I say prove it, Hezzbulah. "No for antagonist pressures against Syria" simply is not the sort of thing burning in the hearts of the average Lebanese, so much so that many thousands would spontaneously create identical signs to express that burning emotion. Please.

Nope, even though the pro-Syria demonstration was ginormous, I'm not worried, because it is not REAL. It is not what it appears to be. It is large, and has a bulky shape, but is hollow. Patience.

Tuesday, March 08, 2005

Terri Schiavo update/call to action

TODAY the US House of Representatives is considering Congressman Weldon's habeus corpus bill. Contact your congressperson today, please. Now.

The name of the bill is the "Incapacitated Person's Legal Protection Act". [UPDATE: it now has a bill number, HR 1151]

Click below to find contact information for your representative. Email is good, phone calls are better. For all of you who have wanted to DO SOMETHING, today is a big day.

www.visi.com/juan/congress/index.html

What a real journalist is

There's all sorts of back-and-forth lately about whether or not bloggers are "real journalists". Of course, those who are established journalists are the ones doing the questioning, in much the same manner as the stylists at the local mall salon wouldn't hesitate to turn you into the state licensing board if they found out you were doing a little neighborhood hair cuttin' on the side. They have turf to protect, pure and simple.

I agree compeletely with the notion that simply having a blog, and blogging, does not make the blogger a journalist. I would say that some bloggers can properly be called journalists, even more when you include opinion and analysis among the products that journalists routinely create. But most bloggers are not journalists, and so what? Why would they want to be?

After all, just what is a "real" journalist? This NYPost page six entry just might give us a good idea * of what it takes to be not only a reporter in the news capital of the world, but what it takes to be the editor of a New York newspaper.
It isn't the first time that (New York Press writer) Taibbi has shocked Manhattan media types. In 2001, while editor of the wacky, ex-pat magazine the Exile, Taibbi burst into the Moscow office of The New York Times and flung a cream pie filled with horse sperm into the face of bureau chief (PiratePundit: I'm removing the poor pie-target's name because, really, who wants to be associated with that?)

Come again? Taibbi was the guy who recently wrote the extraordinarily unwise (but Real Journalist Approved!!)
"The 52 Funniest Things About the Upcoming Death of the Pope." I don't know a lot of Catholic Taibbis, but maybe he thought that was a good use of newsprint.

So that's the real journalist writer. Dead Pope jokes and horse sperm pies, and said pies flung in faces. So what about his editor? Editor-in-chief (that's a "real journalist" sounding title, isn't it?) Jeff Koyen (yeah, I don't know a lot of Catholic Koyens either) was told, by his real journalism bosses, not to run the idiotic Taibbi bit. Koyen, steadfastly risking all to stand up for the people's right to know 52 unfunny, un-newsworthy and untrue things, disobeyed his bosses and ran it anyway.

Upon getting suspended for that insubordination, how does a "real journalist" convey the facts, express the moment, enlighten and inform, and tell us who, what, where, and when? Why, he does it by commenting, when interviewed about it by othe real journalists:
"They're both just weenies. They're little spineless turds."

(Can you imagine one WITH a spine?) For the record, ladies and gentlemen, don't ever call me a real journalist. Or come within 100 feet of me with any kind of pie if you are one yourself.

* (looking at the URL, the story will probably be completely different tomorrow, thus I excerpted a little more than I usually would).

Friday, March 04, 2005

(inter)national consensus on capital punishment

Much has been written by some very astute observers about the Supreme Court’s decision this week that it is unconstitutionally cruel and unusual punishment to execute murderers who committed their murders while under the age of eighteen. I will not attempt to replicate the good analysis of the Court’s opinion that is available all over the internet, but as an attorney who has read the opinion, I would like to share some thoughts and a story of what some interesting people think of the Court’s action.

My first thought is that most of the punditry about the decision (Roper v. Simmons) is correct that the Supreme Court pretty much made it all up, as opposed to applying existing law. I’ve read the decision and it is true: the 5-4 majority started with a conclusion and worked backwards, and did so poorly. As a matter of fact, they had a lot of tap-dancing to do to explain why their own Supreme Court decision of just fifteen years ago that squarely said the exact opposite no longer applies. So what changed in fifteen years? The Constitution has not been amended; it still says the same things. The makeup of the Court has changed, but that’s not supposed to make a difference, if we live under the rule of law and not men. European attitudes toward capital punishment in general haven’t changed, either. What has changed is the willingness of the US Supreme Court to ignore both the unchanged US Constitution, and the laws of states previously held to be valid by the same Court; it ignores all of that and instead embraces the laws of other countries.

The bad news is that you no longer live under a stable Constitution. The bad news is that when you go to the voting booth to elect representatives to express your will under the Constitution, it is a meaningless exercise. In the hands of this Court, the Constitution simply does not exist and can be ignored anytime the justices wish to apply the personal moral views of five people (out of nine justices) to all American citizens. Even worse bad news is that we are now, in effect, ruled by other people in other countries, and cannot vote for them and probably will never even know their names. Some private school students will recall that a revolution was once fought in this country over that sort of thing.

The good news is that the Supreme Court is now coming under some scrutiny. Many in the alternative press are actually reading the Court’s opinion and reporting what the justices are doing, that is, subjecting the United States Constitution to interpretation through the lens of what non-American governments think. This is the start of a good trend. When CourtZero.org was founded, the whole purpose of that website was to actually explain what the courts are saying and get people talking about what that means to the notion of representative government and self-determination. It is a good thing that people are beginning to wake up. Still, the Court holds all the power, and we must obey its ruling. What else can we do? Where’s Andrew Jackson when you need him?

Before I continue, I must insert a disclaimer of sorts. I am aware that many free-market thinkers oppose the death penalty on principle. In my own life, I am acquainted with many people who do not support the death penalty either for emotional, religious, moral, or practical reasons. I have no quarrel whatsoever with anyone who does not wish for legal executions to occur. I truly can see both sides of that argument. Nevertheless, the US Constitution does expressly authorize capital punishment, and does not outlaw cruel OR unusual punishment, only cruel AND unusual punishment. The difference is supposed to be important. Is the execution of someone who committed a premeditated and brutal murder at the age of seventeen unusual? Yes, it is, and thank God that it is. Is it cruel to carry out that sentence? I do not think so, and neither do most states that have the death penalty.

And this leads me to the experience I had earlier today. I was in a meeting of seven people, including myself. Six were female, and one was male. Two were black, and five were white. Three were attorneys, one there giving free legal services to the poor, one representing a poor person, and myself. Three of us were female social workers, intent upon providing needed services to a family in crisis, and the last member of the group was the poor person in need of those social services. In a nutshell, our little group did not the profile of a hard right-wing group of people.

At the close of our business, one of them asked, in conversation, whether we’d heard news that a school bus driver had been killed by a student. I remarked, “He doesn’t have to worry about the death penalty.” At that point an interesting discussion began. One of the black women, an attorney with long experience as a defense attorney in juvenile delinquency cases, made it clear that “some little kids aren’t so little”, expressing that many teenage criminals, for whatever reason, have very adult minds when it comes to crime. We understood what she meant. Anyone who hangs around a juvenile courthouse for very long gets it. It’s common sense. Some, but not all, teenagers who commit horrible crimes know exactly what they are doing in a way that will not be enhanced magically by turning eighteen, or turning forty-five, for that matter.

We talked about that for a while, and came to the consensus that only one of us disagreed with whether or not the death penalty should be available to teen murderers tried as adults. It was then that I commented, as I expressed in my disclaimer above, that good people can disagree on the death penalty for moral or emotional reasons, but I asked, “Does anyone think the Supreme Court was right in declaring it unconstitutional?” The immediate and animated response, from every single person, was that the Supreme Court’s decision was just plain ridiculous.

I recognize that this experience was not in the form of a scientific poll, but I do think it significant in that the Supreme Court made its decision based, in part, on what it called a “national consensus”. They really will do anything to avoid actually looking to the Constitution when interpreting the Constitution. Here, in a little meeting, I had six people disagreeing with the Supreme Court in all respects, and seven out of seven disagreeing with the Supreme Court on its interpretation of the Constitution. Again, this wasn’t a meeting of the Angry White Male Gun Club of Ocala; it was a meeting of social workers and attorneys for the poor, and one bona fide representative of the actual poor and downtrodden.

So where does the Supreme Court find its “consensus” in the face of the Constitution and its own recent ruling? It wouldn’t find it in the room I was in today. The Court vaulted over common sense – one of the black woman attorneys told me that this decision is going to empower street gangs to force kids to commit the worse crimes, and I believe her – the Court also vaulted over the professional opinions of the experienced and learned, and compassionate people in that room. The Court also vaulted over the Constitution, for those who care about such things, in favor of using a UN treaty that the United States expressly did not sign as precedent to decide the laws of American States.

As we like to say at CourtZero.org, “The courts have ruled us, now let them enforce it!” That should become a rallying cry, as more and more regular folks begin to realize that the Supreme Court is exercising ultimate power only so long as we allow it.

Wednesday, March 02, 2005

Sun Hudson to get another hearing

This is very good news. The appeals court in Texas is giving Sun a shot at an actual hearing on what should be done with his young life.

I wrote earlier in this blog about Sun Hudson, the disabled infant in Texas whose doctors were seeking the ability to cease treating him and withdraw life support. I also wrote about the case in Free Market News. I was the very first (and until today, only) one to report that the trial judge had not allowed the mother of the child to present evidence. I got the story because I spoke to the mother's attorney, lawyer-to-lawyer, and learned some hair-raising things about the judge's misconduct.

When the story got reprinted at Free Republic, many called me all sorts of fun names, the nicest of which was "liar".

Well, two weeks later, the Houston Chronicle finally makes mention of the facts I'd reported.

Caballero's motion to recuse McCulloch, filed minutes before a Feb. 16 hearing, alleged the judge had "a preconceived factual opinion that creates a bias and a prejudice that prevents him from making a fair decision."

The motion was in response to remarks McCulloch made at an earlier hearing, in which he said, "I am concerned about this continuing to go on and on because I am concerned about the baby. I understand that the baby is in significant pain."

At that time, Caballero asked the judge, "May I ask how the court knows that that child is in significant pain, since we haven't heard any testimony?"


Let's hope that Judge McCulloch has the good sense to just go ahead and recuse himself now. And then we have to get busy networking to find a willing health care provider for Sun, because that's going to be the central issue at the next hearing. I wish the right-to-life movement were able to actually find those resources instead of just showing up at rallies.

Tuesday, March 01, 2005

Aviation milestone gets little reporting

I don't know why this is so completely unreported. I can't even find it in a googlenews search of the word aviation. Have any of you heard that the second un-refueled, non-stop, around the world flight is in its second day?

I just found out. I think it's newsworthy.

www.livescience.com/technology/050228_globalflyer_takeoff.html

Quote:
The one-of-a-kind experimental plane is a single-engine turbofan aircraft designed expressly for nonstop global circumnavigation. Nobody has ever made the trip alone without refueling.

With the Sun set, the plane rolled down the runway, lifting off at roughly 7:47 p.m. ET (6:47 Central) from the Salina airfield. The craft is to follow the jet stream winds across the Atlantic to the United Kingdom. From there, Fossett will head Southeast across the Mediterranean and the Gulf region before turning east towards Pakistan, India, China and Japan.

Euro social engineering update

If you've read the post below, you'll see where I'm coming from on this one. It's like peeling an onion. Read this from Salon:
the county government (länsstyrelsen) in Norrbotten has banned the publication of a book about gender equality because it contains an interview with a scientist who argues that the difference between men and women is not only caused by the environment, but a combination of inheritance and environment.

O.K. Name the government that actually outlaws books. Name the government that bans scientific inquiry into social questions. It's not a right-wing one, of course. This is a good example of the Projection Principle. Socialist countries like Sweden and gender-feminists share the same side of the political spectrum, and are apt to accuse the right of book-banning and closed-mindedness, but practice shows the exact oppisite to be the case. Read the article. It's alarming.

I'm telling you, whatever the Scandavians can dream up, an American court will embrace in a changing of American laws sometime within the next one to five years. That's just PiratePundit's opinion as a court watcher. Get ready for statements like the following from government officials (and get ready to LIKE IT):
"Our Swedish gender equality policy is based on us being equal and being socialised into different gender roles," declared Britt-Marie Lugnet-Häggberg in the Wednesday DN. "Annica Dahlström is an essentialist feminist (särartsfeministisk) and believes that boys and girls are totally different. The county government cannot publish material with that opinion."

Get government out of our kitchens!!

I can hardly comment on this. Thank goodness for big government, right? What business does the EU have advising the UN on how to tell all the world how to divide up dishes and laundry and such in their own homes. There is plentiful evidence that the EU has a primary goal of dismantling traditional families, and it keeps rolling in.

the European Union has issued a pre-conference statement that calls for men to do an equal share of unpaid labor in the home and for new financial incentives so that women with children will "take up, remain [sic] and return to work."


Just read a couple paragraphs of it. You'll get the picture.