With about ten minutes of editing, Steve, this essay should go directly to the 
Times (and anywhere else you can think of) as an op-ed.  The way you keep 
pounding in the nail is rhetorically superb.  

 

Well, except perhaps your summary of my position.  Good lord!  I hope I only 
said that the law should be designed not to push us into violent confrontation. 
 Delete that paragraph when you send it to the Times.  

 

Nick Thompson

thompnicks...@gmail.com

https://wordpress.clarku.edu/nthompson/

 

-----Original Message-----
From: Friam <friam-boun...@redfish.com> On Behalf Of Steve Smith
Sent: Tuesday, November 23, 2021 8:13 AM
To: friam@redfish.com
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] corruption and impartiality

 

 

uǝlƃ ☤>$ wrote

 

> ...

> The Lerner posts seemed to echo a bit of Jon's and your objection to 
> bureaucracy, but also evoke a larger argument I've had with several people 
> about institutional/systemic knowledge. And Jon mentioned "jury 
> nullification" awhile back, which is a similar subject. *Where* is "the law"? 
> Not only where is it defined, but also where is it executed/computed? This 
> strikes me as an unsettled question ... even a couple hundred years on in 
> this experiment.

 

It seems trite but I'd say the law was *everywhere* and *nowhere* at the same 
time.   Jacob Blake was killed *by the law* because he was presumed to be afoul 
of "the law", but many felt that the "lawmen" who killed him were operating 
outside or above "the law".   When "the law" couldn't hold them accountable for 
this presumed "unlawful" action, a large portion of the citizenry decided to 
*push the law* by expressing their *lawful right* to demonstrate but then with 
some of them stepping over some lines of *the law* with various acts of 
property violence (and perhaps violence against police in a few cases?)   When 
Rittenhouse obtained a semi-automatic assault rifle he did so *outside the law* 
and then when he showed up on the street claiming (in his mind and after the 
fact to the jury) to be there to *enforce the law*, it seems that he is at 
least *pushing* the law as hard as the protestors on the street

*threatening* violence with their mere presence/posture.  Carrying a (n

apparently) loaded weapon in public (especially during civil unrest) is nothing 
less than a *threat* of violence and a strong risk of breaking *the law*. 
"Don't take your guns to town" as Glen has invoked before.

 

The police who drove past Rittenhouse, even offered him a bottle of water 
*after* having shot 3 people were "being the law" in some sense (doing their 
job as they understood it?)...  and then when he was collected (on 
his/family/lawyers') terms rather than hunted down (like the Antifa-presumed 
fellow in WA about the same time) and executed in the street (apparently within 
the law because the officers/shooters felt they saw he might have a weapon?)  
The jury trial (starting with charges, continuing with judge assignment and 
jury selection) was all an exercise of *the law*.   The courtroom scene 
unfolded "according to the law" even if some of us might question some of the 
activities/postures the judge adopted, I don't believe he exceeded his 
authority or jurisdiction.   The jury exonerated Rittenhouse on *all counts* 
precisely as the system is designed to work, even if I am personally concerned 
about various implications of that decision.   For the most part, the protests 
in WI and across the country *after* the decision were executed *within the 
law*, but as with the initiating protests, have an overtone of threatening 
violence, threatening to break out of the confines of "the law", as did 
Rittenhouse when he swaggered down the street with a loaded military style 
assault weapon at-ready.

 

So, while I sympathize with Nick's ideation that "well crafted, executed, and 
defended laws" *should* yield a kind/gentle/just/healthy society, I think 
virtually everything we are seeing today indicates that the limits of that have 
been exceeded.   Unfortunately, this circumstance just feeds the authoritarian 
ideation which is that one

*must* clamp down as hard as necessary to obtain compliance with *the law*.  I 
say unfortunately, because history indicates that such exercise of absolute 
power, even within the constraints of well-designed laws, becomes it's own 
problem pretty quickly.

 

Add in the "authority" of God (or similar) and it gets yet-more-squirrely 
because in fact one can justify anything under that kind of absolute authority. 
  At best, it seems we get religious wars as absurd as Swift's 
Big/Little-enders in Lilliput under the edicts of Lunderog and the Blundecral.

 

- Stir

 

 

 

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