Law in Contemporary Society

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RealityVsUnreality 21 - 25 Feb 2009 - Main.TheodorBruening
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When Prof. Moglen was discussing the wide chasm separating between what we know about the penal system and what really transpires behind prison doors, it occurred to me that this divergence between reality and unreality certainly isn't unqiue to the criminal "justice" system, and that the failure to bridge that gap often leads to a distorted understanding of human behavior in other contexts as well. In the case of the penal system, we witness some alarming absurdities: the father who thinks jail time will "shape up" his son, the politician who pads his resume with convictions, the prosecutor whose political ties pervert her duties as a public servant, and a community which thinks itself safer despite rising rates of incarceration and crime. These symptoms are no doubt worrisome, but I believe the same social forces operate in other cases as well.
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 And for the sake of ending this post on a period, rather than a torturous question mark--http://www.nytimes.com/2008/10/13/arts/design/13tulo.html.

-- JosephLu - 23 Feb 2009

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* A right to decent housing is also completely undiscussable because it would be socialism.

Huh? Such a right exists statutorily in France and I think in Germany too. I don't recall them being socialists... Socialism cannot just claim every idea created out of empathy.

-- TheodorBruening - 25 Feb 2009

 
 
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Revision 21r21 - 25 Feb 2009 - 18:17:21 - TheodorBruening
Revision 20r20 - 23 Feb 2009 - 21:56:35 - JosephLu
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