Re: Transparency and Medicine
by
cos1979
12/03/2007, 11:33 AM #
I agree, Doctor, with your point. A good friend of my is currently in her residency, and she expressed the same explanation, but that aside, CT has a point. At some point, we have to ask ourselves if a "right to know" trump the moral obligations of our judges to do their jobs fairly and professionally? I would answer is does not. Most often, the justices are just performing for the sake of performing, asking silly questions that only thinly relate to their case. I will never forget during the Texas sodomy case, Lawrence v. Texas, Justice Scalia asked if the law would be any fairer if it was anti-poll-sitting. What? That, of course, was a professorial question that only a former law professor would have asked, but it did not persuade him one way or another since Scalia--surprise!--dissented (for the Court, Kennedy struck down the anti-sodomy law as unconstitutional).
Frankly, if you're not persuaded by the oral arguments, why bother asking questions and interrupting a lawyer's only chance at persuading you the merits of her case? That's the same reason why I oppose cameras in the Court: it only creates greater pressure on our lawyers to perform for the cameras and for ego-centric justices to make bigger 'holes of themselves than they already do. In an age of reality-based everything, and the democratization of our Republic, it's refreshing we have one last institution not so inclined to subject themselves to the whining habits of lawyer-journalists like Lathwick, Totenberg, Tobbin, and Greenhouse but to the view held by Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes, that judges--much like the law--ought to be "behind the times."
So, like "ABC" (read Thomas' memoir for the reference), I too, think the Justices ought to "shut up!" and listen.