The Eroding Character of the American People
Paul
Craig Roberts
How
can the life of such a man
Be in the palm of some fool’s hand?
To see him obviously framed
Couldn’t help but make me feel ashamed to live in a land
Where justice is a game.—Bob Dylan, “Hurricane”
Be in the palm of some fool’s hand?
To see him obviously framed
Couldn’t help but make me feel ashamed to live in a land
Where justice is a game.—Bob Dylan, “Hurricane”
Attorney
John W. Whitehead opens a recent posting (see below) on his Rutherford
Institute website with these words from a song by Bob Dylan. Why don’t all of
us feel ashamed? Why only Bob Dylan?
I
wonder how many of Bob Dylan’s fans understand what he is telling them.
American justice has nothing to do with innocence or guilt. It only has to do
with the prosecutor’s conviction rate, which builds his political career.
Considering the gullibility of the American people, American jurors are the last
people to whom an innocent defendant should trust his fate. The jury will
betray the innocent almost every time.
As
Lawrence Stratton and I show in our book (2000, 2008) there is no justice in
America. We titled our book, “How the Law Was Lost.” It is a description of how
the protective features in law that made law a shield of the innocent was
transformed over time into a weapon in the hands of the government, a weapon
used against the people. The loss of law as a shield occurred prior to 9/11,
which “our representative government” used to construct a police state.
The
marketing department of our publisher did not appreciate our title and instead
came up with “The Tyranny of Good Intentions.” We asked what this title meant.
The marketing department answered that we showed that the war on crime, which
gave us the abuses of RICO, the war on child abusers, which gave us show trials
of total innocents that bested Joseph Stalin’s show trials of the heroes of the
Bolshevik Revolution, and the war on drugs, which gave “Freedom and Democracy
America” broken families and by far the highest incarceration rate in the world
all resulted from good intentions to combat crime, to combat drugs, and to
combat child abuse. The publisher’s title apparently succeeded, because 15
years later the book is still in print. It has sold enough copies over these
years that, had the sales occurred upon publication would have made the book a
“best seller.” The book, had it been a best seller, would have gained more
attention, and perhaps law schools and bar associations could have used it to
hold the police state at bay.
Whitehead
documents how hard a not guilty verdict is to come by for an innocent
defendant. Even if the falsely accused defendant and his attorney survive the
prosecutor’s pressure to negotiate a plea bargain and arrive at a trial, they
are confronted with jurors who are unable to doubt prosecutors, police, or
witnesses paid to lie against the innocent defendant. Jurors even convicted the
few survivors of the Clinton regime’s assault on the Branch Davidians of Waco,
the few who were not gassed, shot, or burned to death by US federal forces.
This religious sect was demonized by Washington and the presstitute media as
child abusers who were manufacturing automatic weapons while they raped
children. The charges proved to be false, like Saddam Hussein’s “weapons of
mass destruction,” and so forth, but only after all of the innocents were dead
or in prison.
The
question is: why do Americans not merely sit silently while the lives of
innocents are destroyed, but actually support the destruction of the lives of
innocents? Why do Americans believe “official sources” despite the proven fact
that “official sources” lie repeatedly and never tell the truth?
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