Thursday, January 28, 2010

A Quick Review of Citizens United

By now you’ve heard about the recent Supreme Court decision in Citizens United v. FEC.  If you watched the State of the Union Address, you heard President Obama call out the Court for it’s poor jurisprudence.  There are two main reasons why I think Citizens United was, in fact, poor jurisprudence.

Wednesday, January 13, 2010

Pat Robertson, Cancer on Society

Conservative wingnuts have outdone themselves today.  I cannot think of a sufficiently repugnant metaphor to adequately describe Rush Limbaugh and Pat Robertson.  Pustulent genital sores comes close.  (Apologies to those with weak stomachs.)

Friday, January 8, 2010

Great Books

Aristotle wrote, “We are what we repeatedly do.  Excellence then is not an act, but a habit.”  Our habits speak volumes about us.  It strikes me as a corollary that what we love also reveals much about us.  And to be clear, I do not mean the things we profess to love.  Although, even what we profess to love says much about us.

Saturday, December 12, 2009

Tort Reform

Michael Getnick, President of the NY State Bar Association, published last weekend, this editorial in the NY Daily News, discussing tort reform.  Having been a personal injury attorney, Getnick predictably opposes tort reform.  I neither oppose nor support tort reform per se, but would like to see it as part of a discussion about health care reform. Which is why I become so frustrated by knee-jerk reactions like Getnick’s, which exudes false exasperation.

Monday, December 7, 2009

Legislative Sneakery: A Brief Review

This article was first published on the Journal of the American Bull Moose, but since they were having a little trouble with some of the hyperlinks, I have reposted in its entirety here.

Tuesday, November 24, 2009

A Call for New Legislative Drafters

The Texas State Legislature desperately needs new legislation drafters, or at least proofreaders and editors. And it needs to stop beating the dead horse of gay marriage. A recent flare up of controversy surrounding the state’s constitutional gay marriage ban suggests that the Legislature may have inadvertently banned all marriage.

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

Is Useful Political Discourse Dead in America?

I have a new article in the Journal of the American Bull Moose.  Please check it out, leave comments, etc., over there:  http://americanbullmoose.com/content/?p=439

Brief summary:  political debate in America gave way to partisan debate, which gave way to partisan rhetoric, which has now reached its cancerous end-stage, which could be described as opposing obfuscative misinformation campaigns designed for the dual purpose of swelling the ranks of political cults and making money.