Peter Friedman
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Ruling Imagination: Law and Creativity

January 14th, 2010 | Law as a reflection of its society, Law Enforcement, legal history, regulation | 2 comments

Learn that government regulation can be very effective in under 2 minutes.

Next time someone tells you government regulation doesn’t do any good, ask them to watch the video below and whether they’d rather be driving a car built before the government started regulating automobile safety.

August 25th, 2009 | Law as a reflection of its society, legal interpretation, propaganda, The evolution of law | Add your comment

A tribute to Justice Souter, and his recent speech on civics education

Justice Souter was woefully underestimated. He was reviled by the right because he turned out to be a moderate — someone who, especially given the rightward drift of the Court in the since Reagan was elected, seemed to the right an outright leftist. That he had been appointed by George H.W. Bush, a Republican, made Souter seem to the Right not merely a leftist, but also a traitor. Nor did the Left particularly appreciate him except, perhaps, as a man they recognized as independent in his thought.

But perhaps Souter’s biggest failure as a public figure was that his style did not fit his time. Souter did what I learned judges are to do: strive hard to do justice in each individual case. His opinions reflected his strenuous effort to make sure the law was interpreted to ensure that the parties to the lawsuits he was judging were treated justly.

Unfortunately, however, he served during a time when overreaching ideologies became the fashionable way to judge problems, especially legal problems. Law and Economics, a legal movement that interprets law entirely through the lens of a purported judgment as to its ability to efficiently allocate economic resources, has grown during my professional career from one approach among many to, arguably, the most dominant mode of legal thought in those circles that are concerned with delineating theoretical approaches to law. Since Ronald Reagan was elected, we’ve raised an entire generation that accepts without any consideration of the realities that anything government does it does incompetently and that labor unions are corrupt institutions that entrench incompetence. You’d never know that the era of the greatest American affluence (an affluence shared far, far widely than the wealth the U.S. has today) followed thirty years of big government and the rise of labor unions to the apex of their power. You’d never know that my father, the son of immigrants who grew up in poverty (which he didn’t even dream of as poverty) in the Depression, served in WWII, and was a POW in Germany, attributes his success (which, of course, is entirely resonsible for mine) to the fact the goverment paid entirely for his higher education by way of the G.I. Bill (imagine: investing in your country’s future!). He attributes his remarkable good health at 85 to health care he receives from the Veterans’ Administration, which he says is as good as better as the health care anyone he knows receives.

So when Justice Souter told the attendees at the American Bar Association’s annual meeting earlier this month that we need better civics education in our schools, he spoke the truth. We also need far, far better history instruction.

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