Domestic Diversions

Hating justice

The New York Times reviews “The Myth of Moral Justice,” by Thane Rosenbaum. The author emphasizes the human desires for dignity, respect and for that simple opportunity to be heard.

Adam Liptak writes (excerpt):
“One of the dirty little secrets of the legal system,” Thane Rosenbaum writes in this simultaneously woolly and provocative book, “is that if people could simply learn how to apologize, lawyers and judges would be out of work.”

Mr. Rosenbaum is a lawyer and a professor at Fordham Law School, but his aim here is to burn down his own house. He proposes a sort of talking cure for the legal system. There is, he says, too much emphasis on money in civil cases and on punishment in criminal ones. The system should focus instead, he writes, on the dignity of the participants and on hearing them out. The American justice system, he says, “relies too much on logic and not enough on love.”

Where lawyers see a set of carefully calibrated neutral principles meant to ensure equal treatment, Mr. Rosenbaum sees a system that robs participants in lawsuits and prosecutions of the opportunity to tell their own messy, contradictory, inconclusive stories. Where lawyers see legal doctrines that prevent the filing of stale claims and the presentation of irrelevant evidence, he sees a conspiracy to silence the truth.
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“Despite my legal training,” he writes, “I was not trained to know how to respond to those feelings of silence, banishment and deprivation that the legal system imposes on losing parties.”

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