Shysters!
by James J. Odle
[email protected]
Special to TLE
[Authors Note: This one is intended for non-libertarians. I hope a
few are actually reading The Libertarian Enterprise.]
"The first thing we do, let's kill all the lawyers." -- Part Two, Act
IV, Scene II of Henry the VI by William Shakespeare.
"Lawyer: one who protects us against robbery by taking away the
temptation." -- HL Mencken.
"I am not a lawyer, and shall always strive to live a good and honest
life, so as not to become one." -- former Congressman Sam Steiger's
Promise.
"The trouble with law and government is lawyers." -- Clarence Darrow
"There is no crueler tyranny than that which is perpetuated under the
shield of law and in the name of justice." -- Baron de Montesquieu
December 7, 1999 a day that should live in legal infamy. A day in
which all morally minded, oath keeping, Constitution respecting
attorneys should rise up in total outrage at the actions of their
brethren. For it is on this day that the corrupt Clinton
(mal)-Administration announced its intention to join with other
corrupt criminal enterprises masquerading as municipalities, in an
blatant extortion attempt of suing gun manufacturers to recover costs
associated with gun violence.
These groups are bitching that they have been forced to expend scarce
tax victim dollars on dealing with the consequences of those who
misuse firearms and they blame the gun manufacturers for marketing
guns to those who are not legally allowed to possess them -- such as
juveniles and criminals.
This is the publicly stated purpose of these lawsuits. The hidden
agenda is to force gun manufacturers out of business or, at least,
drive up the price of their products beyond the reach of the average
American. If they can reap a windfall in stolen loot in the process,
so much the better [in their eyes]. Much as tobacco companies, gun
manufacturers are perceived as having deep pockets and all tax
authorities see themselves as resource poor. In the entire history of
mankind, no government or subdivision thereof has ever believed that
it has taken in enough revenue.
Nevertheless, suing gun manufactures for irresponsible marketing is
an exercise in total legal lunacy and corruption. After all:
- Gun manufacturers and distributors, unlike the tobacco
companies, have never pretended that their products are safe. In
fact, the manual that accompanied my Beretta .45 ACP
specifically says -- among other warnings: Firearms Safety
Course: To familiarize yourself with the proper use of firearms,
attend a Firearms Safety Course in your area. Remember: only YOU
are responsible for the firearm in your hands. Prevent accidents
by knowing its functioning. HANDLE IT WITH RESPECT NOT
FEAR�Safety devices on firearms are EXTRAS and are not
substitutes for safe handling;
- Gun manufacturing and distributing is a perfectly lawful,
respectable and constitutional business;
- Gun manufacturing and distribution are among the most highly
regulated businesses in the US today. Everyone involved in the
process must comply with literally thousands of unconstitutional
rules;
- It is obviously beyond the thinking abilities or inclination
of government bureaucrats to look to other potential causative
environmental factors in understanding and dealing with urban
violence. Some of these are:
1) The War on Drugs. Drug prohibition creates powerful
incentives for those who are either illiterate, unskilled,
unemployable, unscrupulous, greedy and/or lacking in
anything resembling moral principles to sell drugs rather
than pursuing more socially beneficial enterprises because
of the large amounts of money involved;
2) minimum wage laws and other government impositions which
raise the costs of doing business beyond the market value
of the unskilled;
3) public schools which undermine basic morality, dumb down
their students and don't provide the skills necessary to
compete in today's high tech world; and
4) a high level of taxation, that exceeds 50% of one's
yearly earnings and compels women to enter the marketplace
rather than tend to the kids at home. The result, parents
with little time to supervise children during their
formative years. Think about this, taxation at all levels
of government was about 2% of GNP at the turn of the
century. Families were far more stable and home buyers
probably didn't take out 30 year mortgages to buy their
homes either.
These then are a few of the environmental factors that distort the
normal workings of a free society and create powerful inducements
towards violence -- particularly inner city gang violence. None of
them are legitimate reasons for taking up arms and initiating
aggression toward one's fellow man. Nevertheless, for most of this
century, the socialists/statists in both of the major political
parties have done their best to separate adults from the
responsibilities of adulthood. One of the unintentional consequences
is inner city/school violence.
Other than to use it as an example of out-of-control lawyers, it is
not my intention to focus on the legal/social issues revolving around
the prevalence of lawsuits against gun manufacturers. I'm sure that
other writers for TLE will cover that issue in more depth.
No, this article is about lawyers and some of the damage they are
doing to this, what was once a free country.
Let's us go now to a subject near and dear to the hearts and minds of
many writers and readers of TLE.
Guns!
I will not repeat material I covered in an earlier article ["Those
Horrid, Horrid Guns!" The Libertarian Enterprise, September 30,
1999], but I will add a few additional observations. Take another
look at the Second Amendment:
"A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a
free state, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms shall
not be infringed."
Notice that there aren't any words with more than four syllables.
Now consider this. In order for a candidate to be accepted into the
average law school, that candidate usually has to write an essay in
which he demonstrates his command over the English language. It is
reasonable to presume that law school graduates possess a great deal
of facility in the use {or is it abuse?} of linguistics. It is
therefore puzzling why these language experts can not successfully
read, interpret and apply such simple, declarative words as are
contained in the Second Amendment. Hell, a high school graduate
should be able to read and apply it.
Rather, it is not that they can't do it. They refuse to do it. What
happens to the so-called Rule of Law when the legal profession picks
and chooses which laws it will abide by?
To any lawyers out there, I have to ask, is the practice of law so
damn dull that lawyers have to create elaborate, nonsensical legal
theories, as opposed to applying the normal meaning of commonly used
words, in order to take an interest in their profession? Reading
"Second Reading", by Daniel D. Polsby {Reason Magazine, March 1996,
downloadable from www.reason.org, then a few clicks from there} is to
experience legal lunacy in the fullest. The article reminded me of
Jesuit priests, pondering angels dancing on the head of a pin.
It also occurs to me that if the legal profession can't be safely
entrusted with the proper interpretation of words of four syllables
or less, then what in hell can it be trusted with?
But, fellow freedom lovers, our problems with the legal profession
don't end here. Let us take a look at one of the most common myths
among Americans today, namely, the ridiculous idea that the federal
government possesses the constitutional authority to 'promote the
general welfare.'
A Proper Interpretation of the Preamble
If you ask politicians to explain where they get the constitutional
authority to pass laws regarding Social Security, Medicare/Medicaid
and other debris of the welfare/warfare state they will usually point
to the Preamble to the Constitution of the United States, and
specifically to the 'promote the general welfare' clause.
Are they correct? Take a look:
"We the People of the United states, in order to form a more
perfect union, establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility,
provide for the common defence, promote the general Welfare, and
secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity,
do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States
of America."
Ladies and Gentlemen, in business parlance this would be a mission
statement -- that is, a list of objectives to be obtained. There is
nothing in the Preamble that either grants or forbids power to the
federal government to do anything whatsoever. It is in the articles
and sections of the Constitution where actual grants of power take
place. It is the articles and sections that specify the means by
which the goals listed in the Preamble are to be achieved.
The curious reader will now be asking, "OK ? smart guy. How can I,
when reading the Constitution, know when power is actually granted?"
Here are a few examples:
"Congress shall have the power...to lay and collect taxes...to
coin money...to borrow money on the credit of the United
States." -- from Article 1, Section 8
"...All bills for raising revenue shall originate in the House
of Representatives; but the Senate may propose or concur with
amendments as on other bills." -- from Article 1, Section 7 (a).
Did you notice the use of the words 'shall' and 'may' in the above
examples? You see, in law, the words 'shall', 'may' and also 'will'
are normally treated as synonyms and are to be taken as either grants
of power to do something or actual commands to either do/not do
something depending on context.
So unless someone can show me where in the Constitution it says that
any US Government entity 'shall' or 'may' or 'will' have the power to
'promote the general welfare' then, clearly, there is no such power.
If the Founders intended for the US Government to have such a
wide-sweeping power as to 'promote the general welfare' then why
would some of them argue against the Bill of Rights, insisting that
the government only has the powers that have been expressly delegated
to it?
Also, there would be no point in enumerating any powers or passing
the Ninth and Tenth Amendments since literally anything can be
justified as 'promoting the general welfare.' Do you want to execute
drug dealers without granting them the benefit of a fair trial before
a jury of their peers? No Problem. Do you want to strip Americans of
their historic, natural and Constitutional right to keep and bear
arms? Hey, we're just 'promoting the general welfare' around here and
you guys really don't need fair, jury trials or firearms, do you?
Were the Feds 'promoting the general welfare' when they authorized
subsidies to McDonalds to advertise in foreign markets, or when they
sent scarce tax victim dollars to thugs [government officials] in
Russia without receiving anything tangible in return or when Clinton
authorized the transfer of high technology to China?
Enough of this idiocy, because my friends, our problems with lawyers
don't end here. We turn now to...
Trial by Jury?
In America today, real trial by jury, that is, the kind of trial by
jury that was intended by our Founding Fathers, has virtually ceased
to exist. What kind of jury trial is that? Well, a hint can be found
in the Noah Webster's first dictionary -- a dictionary that was
written to preserve and protect the integrity of the language of the
Constitution, or so I'm given to understand. For it is in that
dictionary, that you will discover that the word 'jury' is defined as
one's local peers who have the power to judge both the law and the
actions of the defendant and who are truly independent of judicial
jury tampering.
But we don't have that kind of jury trial today. Now it is
commonplace, to require an oath of a jury members to 'faithfully
apply and uphold the law as the judge explains it to you.' It is
usually difficult for the jury member to get a copy of the law in
question so that he can read it for himself. He will usually be
forbidden to know what the potential penalty is for the crime in
question.
Further, potential jury members effectively have fewer rights than
the defendant. Did you notice the way the OJ jury was treated? Those
poor people were locked up for a year {the legal term for this
madness is 'sequestered'} and denied unapproved access to TV or
reading material less they become 'tainted' [horrors!]. Is it any
wonder that they bolted after what was it, three hours of
'deliberation' after a year of suffering with legal windbags? Hell,
I'd run for it too. The OJ jury should thank God they weren't sitting
in on the IBM antitrust case. That one lasted for, what was it,
twelve years, only to be dismissed.
Speaking of the practice of 'sequestering' jury members less they
become 'tainted', I refer to this as the 'human beings as test tubes'
theory of jury management. "Don't let any foreign matter get in
there!" It's based on the ridiculous idea that human beings can be
brought into the jury box free of any opinions derived from the
outside world. A person with no opinions is a person without a brain.
In short, the perfect juryman, in the eyes of the legal profession.
In this country, people are not supposed to be jailed unless they
have committed crimes and are being escorted through the legal
jungle. A hotel [which is where the OJ jury was kept for most of
their servitude] is just as much a jail even though food, approved
visitors and entertainment are allowed.
It gets worse. We haven't even spoken of the abuse potential jury
members suffer during the prescreening process where they are
routinely asked highly personal questions such as their civic
affiliations, their routine reading matter, their bank account
balances, the source of their income, the bumper stickers on the
backs of their cars, where they work, where they play, and what they
think, know and feel on a thousand different topics. Jury members in
other countries don't put up with this crap. Why do the lawyers do
this? The defense wants to purge the jury of anyone who is hostile to
the defendant before any testimony is given. The prosecution wants to
purge the jury of any anti-government types who might be predisposed
toward the defendant or who might display a tendency to think for
themselves. Neither party to the controversy wants independent
thinkers. They want jury members to sit there passively and absorb
everything like a sponge while they prance up and down playing their
lawyer games -- having their sidebar conferences, going into chambers
for lengthier discussions. What happens to the Constitutional
requirement that trials must be public when part of the trial is
conducted at the side bar or behind the closed doors of the judges
chambers, away from the eyes and ears of the jury or the press?
In a story in the January 2000 issue of the LP News, Peter McWilliams
has decided to plead guilty to the charge of 'conspiracy to
manufacture and distribute marijuana.' He had been denied the right
to use medical necessity as a defense to the charge. He suffers from
AIDS and cancer. Can you think of anything more outrageous than the
practice of deciding for a defendant what constitutes a 'legitimate'
defense to a given charge? Why did Mr. McWilliams plead guilty?
Quoting from the article:
"We had no place to go...We couldn't present our medical
marijuana defense, so we would be automatically found guilty,
taken into custody on the spot, and begin serving a mandatory
10-year sentence.
"By pleading guilty, we take the crime out of the mandatory
minimum category and permit the judge to use compassion in his
sentencing."
{Note: Mr. McWilliams lives in California and there is a California
law enabling the use of marijuana for medical reasons -- which is why
Mr. McWilliams wanted it.}
Now its true that many times judges are following the law as passed
by our elected official when they limit a defendant's defense, but
this practice is incompatible with the fundamental structure of a
free society. It removes power from the citizenry and places it in
the hands of government officials. Abuse of power becomes more likely
as government misdeeds can be shielded behind judicial protection.
For example, the Waco defendants had been refused the opportunity to
present evidence of government misconduct during the standoff.
Nevertheless, the jury still managed to keep most of their wits about
them. They found the defendants not guilty of the majority of the
charges leveled against them and guilty of a few minor weapons
infractions. The judge, under pressure from the prosecution and who
knows who else, then threw out the not guilty verdicts, found the
defendants guilty and sentenced them to, I believe, 40 years in
prison.
Question: Where, in hell, does any judge get the legal authority to
throw out a not guilty verdict?
Question: What the hell is the point in having a jury trial if the
government can throw out verdicts that it doesn't like?
Question: How can a jury serve its proper function of defending the
defendant from the government when the government is out of line, if
the judge can invade the province of the jury like this?
Question: How the hell can you call it 'trial by jury' when the
government is in there dictating what constitutes a 'valid' defense,
and what arguments and evidence a defendant may advance?
Question: Who the hell's defense is this anyway. Is it the
defendant's defense or a government imposed defense?
Question: Are "We the People", as represented by the jury panel,
supposed to come up to the government's standards or is the
government supposed to come up to our standards? Who's the employer
here and who's the employee anyway?
Personally, I don't care if a defendant argues that the moon is made
of green cheese. As long as he can present some factual basis for how
he determined that the moon was made of green cheese, it is for the
jury to decide if a green cheese moon is relevant to the issues at
hand. Anything else leads to pernicious judicial jury tampering.
These then are a few of the problems that freedom lovers are having
with the legal profession. Another area in dire need of attention is
the use of asset forfeiture laws to seize property from people who
are never charged with crimes. I could also mention judges passing
laws from the bench -- such as the Eastern judge who mandated a tax. I
might also mention the insane doctrine of sovereign immunity.
I don't want this article to become to lengthy. Let's close with...
A Few Words from Sam Steiger
"No longer should we abide a legal system in which normal social
activities are spoiled, and foolish deeds are rewarded. It is
ridiculous that public events which once benefited charities are
now canceled because of the high cost of disability insurance.
Family doctors are withholding maternity care, leaving that
practice to specialists burdened by excessive insurance costs.
Obstetricians simply will not practice in small towns where they
would be most vulnerable to the vagaries of pregnancy,
childbirth and infant mortality. The end is in sight for contact
sports in small, poor schools with no budgets for insurance. Our
culture is crumbling.
"Our coddling of culprits is a national disgrace. Our disdain
for the rights of victims is reprehensible. A bank robber flees
with a money bag, which explodes and injures him. He sues the
bank and wins a large settlement. A dipsomaniacal woman drinks a
fifth of bourbon every day for twelve years and develops
cirrhosis of the liver. She sues the whisky company. She wins. A
drunk pilot crashes an airplane. He sues the aircraft
manufacturer. He loses, but because it cost $2 million to defend
the lawsuit, the manufacturer ceases to build general aviation
planes. More culture crumbles.
"There is a great deal already wrong with our civilization �
undersupported schools, drug use, erosion of individual
responsibility, miscrepancy in high office, corruption in low
office, afternoon television, well done steaks, professional
wrestling, unabashed pimping and political reporting. But the
most glaring evil abroad in the land today is the practice of
law by armies of avaricious attorneys.
"They must be stopped. Scorn will help."
-- from
Kill The Lawyers, by mule killer, curmudgeon,
libertarian-leaning, former Congressman, now Mayor of Prescott,
Arizona, Sam Steiger.
Suggested Reading
An Essay on Trial by Jury, by Lysander Spooner
We the Jury: The Impact of Jurors on Our Basic Freedoms, by Godfrey
D. Lehman
James J. Odle is a splendid fellow who, unlike the
vast majority of so-called 'public servants' has a real job in the
private sector performing real work which a real employer voluntarily
pays him to perform. He is a Life Member of Gun Owners of America,
a $25 a year member of the National Rifle Association.
"The Confederate flag is offensive in many, many ways, as we all
know. It's a symbol of racism and slavery, but I also understand how
others do not view it in that fashion." -- Senator (and pretender to
the throne) John McCain