There should be camera's in all courts and we should remove the court reporter. Because if you can not afford to pay the recorders fee's you financially in a disadvantage. In Los Angeles the fee's start at about $70.00 and I have paid up to $270.00 for one court date. If your broke and trying to represent yourself you are at a complete disadvantage. that is not fair. The negative's are not ovious.
Los Angeles Superior Court Judges are excpting bribes. California judges are employee's of the State not the County. The County is currently giving them $57,688.00 per yr per judge in addition to the pay and benefits they receive from the State. After being exposed for the bribes (Sturgeon v Los Angeles County) the judges paid a lobbyist to pass SBX211 granting the retro active imunity from prosecution. SBX211 does not address the loss of due proccess.
Cameras in the court would be an opportunity for public discretion on the issues, but that wouldn't last. The jurists would 'play to the audience' like the house of rep's does.
Breyer may suggest different rationales, but, simply put, the Supreme Court doesn't want the publicity.
Technology wasn't a consideration in the 18th century, but now it is. The Court likes to maintain 'legal decorum', but they can't hide behind it, or use new tehnology as an excuse to change original intent.
I think it all should be on display for the whole world to see how corrupt these Democrats are and how they use their language against the American people.
The entire US Congress is corrupt. In March 2008 they held a closed-door session. Every attending member was compelled by law not to disclose the subject matter to the American people.
Three Congressmen refused to attend that session. Ron Paul, Bob Barr, and Dennis Kucinich. The rest of them SOLD US OUT. Every one of them!
All Democrats are selling out the very citizens that voted for them. Some see it, some do not. The ones that do not are totally ignorant to any truths.
I'd say the good outweighs the bad by a long shot. Yes justice DOES move slow, democracy demands that. But it also demands right to freedom of speech so we can have all of the arguments put forth. So the best for all of us can come from that slowly. But we can't talk about it if we don't have access to it and we should be talking about it. Justice should move slowly but it shouldn't be at a relative stand-still.
I agree about the transparency, if based only on the precedent set by the other branches. I think the negative argument Breyer mentions about personalizing cases can actually be a great strength, because it will help engage the public in these issues. True, many will have a dumbed-down understanding and prejudge based on individual parties, but ultimately the educational value -- or the mere opportunity to educate -- outweighs that, I think. Perhaps, that is why he references education first.
Thank you for posting this, CSPAN.
writersblock26 2 months ago
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There should be camera's in all courts and we should remove the court reporter. Because if you can not afford to pay the recorders fee's you financially in a disadvantage. In Los Angeles the fee's start at about $70.00 and I have paid up to $270.00 for one court date. If your broke and trying to represent yourself you are at a complete disadvantage. that is not fair. The negative's are not ovious.
danielcooper1000 10 months ago
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Los Angeles Superior Court Judges are excpting bribes. California judges are employee's of the State not the County. The County is currently giving them $57,688.00 per yr per judge in addition to the pay and benefits they receive from the State. After being exposed for the bribes (Sturgeon v Los Angeles County) the judges paid a lobbyist to pass SBX211 granting the retro active imunity from prosecution. SBX211 does not address the loss of due proccess.
(see) How To Disqualify Your Judge
danielcooper1000 10 months ago
JesusChristForeverAmen blogspot
JeffreyJayFisher 2 years ago
Cameras in the court would be an opportunity for public discretion on the issues, but that wouldn't last. The jurists would 'play to the audience' like the house of rep's does.
Breyer may suggest different rationales, but, simply put, the Supreme Court doesn't want the publicity.
Technology wasn't a consideration in the 18th century, but now it is. The Court likes to maintain 'legal decorum', but they can't hide behind it, or use new tehnology as an excuse to change original intent.
esgatch 2 years ago
I think it all should be on display for the whole world to see how corrupt these Democrats are and how they use their language against the American people.
TheNewVideo 2 years ago
The entire US Congress is corrupt. In March 2008 they held a closed-door session. Every attending member was compelled by law not to disclose the subject matter to the American people.
Three Congressmen refused to attend that session. Ron Paul, Bob Barr, and Dennis Kucinich. The rest of them SOLD US OUT. Every one of them!
Wake up, America!
esgatch 2 years ago
All Democrats are selling out the very citizens that voted for them. Some see it, some do not. The ones that do not are totally ignorant to any truths.
TheNewVideo 2 years ago
Dennis Kucinich is the only Democrat I know of who did not betray his oath to the people. The rest of 'em are worthless.
'We the people' overwhelmingly opposed both the Bush abd Obama bailouts, but Congress ignored us and passed them anyway.
That's not ignorance. That's fact.
esgatch 2 years ago
I'd say the good outweighs the bad by a long shot. Yes justice DOES move slow, democracy demands that. But it also demands right to freedom of speech so we can have all of the arguments put forth. So the best for all of us can come from that slowly. But we can't talk about it if we don't have access to it and we should be talking about it. Justice should move slowly but it shouldn't be at a relative stand-still.
makeyanoticeme 2 years ago
I agree about the transparency, if based only on the precedent set by the other branches. I think the negative argument Breyer mentions about personalizing cases can actually be a great strength, because it will help engage the public in these issues. True, many will have a dumbed-down understanding and prejudge based on individual parties, but ultimately the educational value -- or the mere opportunity to educate -- outweighs that, I think. Perhaps, that is why he references education first.
MadMako 2 years ago
I trhink that would be a good idea. There are cameras in the house and the senate. Why not the supreme court?
imaginepeace63 2 years ago
I like this post. Breyer makes a good instructor/professor I think. If not that, he's a good educational speaker.
askeung87 2 years ago 2
Probably motivational as well.
It is refreshing to hear someone explain so clearly the role of the courts in this country.
jx14aby 2 years ago
Thank You For Posting This!
CivilRadiant 2 years ago 2