The
story is now an old one.
In
Western societies, there is now a tremendous disconnect between the traditional
political and business elites and the citizenry. The populations of the West
now find themselves ruled by a transnational elite who see tradition, loyalty,
and patriotism as primitive, and whose promoters within academia, nonprofits,
government bodies, labour unions, NGOs, and the media teach that nations, citizenship, borders, and
law defined by elected parliaments are irksome problems to be overcome.
I
cannot say exactly when I saw these symptoms first arise in the United States.
But more than a decade ago, I was clerking in a federal courthouse. It was a
good gig. I was glad to have it. The public—litigants, lawyers, jurors, witnesses,** and visitors—went through the front entrance with a security check. Court officials and employees
(including judicial law clerks) went through a back entrance, also, with a
security check. One day, early in my tenure, I was going through the security
check, and an older man went around me and bypassed screening. The security
officer waved him through. After I went through security, I asked the security
officer:
Seth: Who was that guy? Why did you wave him
through without going through screening?
Deputy U.S. Marshal: That’s
Magistrate Judge ___. We don’t screen judges.
Seth: What?—You don’t screen judges? Why
not?
Deputy U.S. Marshal: Of course we
don’t screen judges. Get real. Security checks are not here to make the
courthouse safe for the public.
Security checks are here to keep the judges safe from the public.
I
am not a radical egalitarian. I am not suggesting that judges should enter
courthouses through the main entrance along with the public. Likewise, if there
is a line at the security desk, I am happy to have the judges move past me to
front of the queue—a judge’s time is
more valuable than that of other courthouse staff. Finally, there is nothing
wrong with judges having private bathrooms. If judges used the public
restrooms, it could create problems were the judges to be seen in the company
of parties to a dispute during active litigation, not to mention the fact that many
judges are older people who might be particularly vulnerable in bathrooms. But
the default rule ought to be that the same rules which apply to the public also
apply to the rulers—and that includes judges. Exceptions to the default rule—such
as private bathrooms—have pragmatic justifications behind them.
I
cannot think of a good pragmatic reason for allowing judges to escape the
security check all others must go through—particularly in light of the recent
conviction of a federal judge on gun-related charges. As judges escape the
everyday burden the law imposes on others, it becomes too easy for them to
impose burdens on others which they do not feel. The current system is a bad
result which must teach the public to disrespect the judiciary, as it must teach the judiciary to disrespect the public.
The
interesting question is—how many judges have ever protested this inegalitarian
and deeply un-American policy?
Seth
**In some criminal actions, defendants and witnesses come into courthouses through the (secure) back entrance.
Welcome Instapundit readers.
**In some criminal actions, defendants and witnesses come into courthouses through the (secure) back entrance.
Welcome Instapundit readers.
Seth Barrett Tillman, 'Courthouse Security Checks,' New Reform Club (Aug. 7, 2016, 7:33 AM), <https://reformclub.blogspot.com/2016/08/my-personal-brexit-courthouse-security.html>;
My prior post: Seth Barrett Tillman, Souvenir from a recent summer vacation--Brexit Poster: Vote To Leave, The New Reform Club (Aug. 5, 2016, 1:55 PM)
"The current system is a bad result which must teach the public to disrespect the judiciary, as it must teach the judiciary to disrespect the public."
ReplyDeleteSeems our problem is oversupply, not scarcity, of public deference to judges. Intoning about separation of powers might prove more or less effective than observing the practices of security queues. Whatever gets the message across.
"The populations of the West now find themselves ruled..."
ReplyDeleteAnd this is the biggest problem. We are not "ruled" by anyone. The "elites" may think they "rule" us, but they are mistaken. We attempt to elect representatives to help "govern" us. Huge difference. The people are starting to push back on this misrepresentation by those "elites".
The first time I took note of this phenom was over 30 years ago. I lived in California and there had been several physical assaults on teachers in the classroom. (Yes, this was reported as a shockingly big deal back then.) So the legislature rushed through a law adding extra penalties for attacking a teacher. Soon thereafter they tacked on corrections officers. And so on and so on until almost every public employee was protected by stronger statutes than applied to everyone else. I wasn't very political at the time, but I noticed that public "servants" were seemingly being elevated to a privileged class. And then I started reading about their pensions, benefits, pay, non-accountability, early retirement, etc.
ReplyDeleteIt has now metastasized to the point they hold the public in contempt, becoming ever more partisan while taking advantage of every self-enrichment scheme their unions provide them.
It's going to take a very strong president WITH a determined Congress to put them back in their place.
Several voter referendums have reformed the Oregon public employee retirement system (PERS, full salary until death do us part). But a state supreme court decision always overturns the voters decision. Why? Because the judges are members of PERS. Legalized corruption.
ReplyDeleteThe judges and other political elite are above the law. It starts with no security checks at the courthouse and spreads from there. (No insider trading for congressmen for example). Anyone serfs that obey the law when they don't have too are suckers.
ReplyDeleteIn Western societies, there is now a tremendous disconnect between the traditional political and business elites and the citizenry. The populations of the West now find themselves ruled by a transnational elite who see tradition, loyalty, and patriotism as primitive, and whose promoters within academia, nonprofits, government bodies, labour unions, NGOs, and the media teach that nations, citizenship, borders, and law defined by elected parliaments are irksome problems to be overcome.
ReplyDeleteYah, that about covers it. The ivory tower gets higher and higher. And
To knock a thing down, especially if it is cocked at an arrogant angle, is a deep delight of the blood.--George Santayana
Consider the law that allows current and retired LEO's to carry a concealed weapon anywhere, in any state.
ReplyDeleteConsider the post office signs prohibiting weapons, at the public entrance-hint-it wasn't the patrons who gave rise to the phrase "going postal".
Consider the California politicians who, I have read, recently passed a bunch of gun control laws while exempting themselves from those laws.
ThepPhotographer David Duncan took a trip in the Soviet Union in the 1960's, IIRC. His book and pictures included a tray of various nail clippers, pen knives, etc, that had been removed from the public who were attending a political conference, with the caption to the effect "unlike the USA, the communists do not trust their own people". Gotta say, that really hit home.