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BurtLaw's Law And Everything Else
![]() Law and its many connections -- law and literature, love, lollipops, & fun, law and everything else under the sun
Notes: 1) LawAndEverythingElse.Com & BurtLaw.Com don't solicit business for any law firm or give legal advice, other than that lawyers may be hazardous to your health. There are many more bad ones than good ones. Who can find a virtuous lawyer? Her price is far above rubies. It is easier for a camel to pass through a needle's eye than for a lawyer to inherit the Kingdom of Heaven. So saith the Lord. 2) In linking to another site or source, we don't mean to say we necessarily agree with views or ideas expressed there or to attest to the accuracy of facts set forth there. We link to other sites in order to alert you to sites, ideas, books, articles and stories that have interested us and to guide you in your pleasure-seeking, mind-expanding, heart-opening, soul-satisfying outer and inner travels.
"All persons, living and dead, are purely coincidental." - Kurt Vonnegut, Jr.
"All the news that gives judges and lawyers fits." Burton Randall Hanson
"The best way to prepare for the law is to [become] a well-read person. Thus alone can one acquire the capacity to use the English language on paper and in speech and with the habits of clear thinking which only a truly liberal education can give. No less important for a lawyer is the cultivation of the imaginative faculties by reading poetry, seeing great paintings,...and listening to great music...." Felix Frankfurter
"Every thing should be treated poetically -- law, politics, housekeeping, money. A judge and a banker drive their craft poetically as well as a dancer or a scribe....If you would write a code or logarithms or a cookbook, you cannot spare the poetic impulse...." Ralph Waldo Emerson
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Front page - Daily Quotes - Daily Poem -BurtLaw's Places - Featured Sites - Greatest Quotes On Law - Ralph Waldo Emerson's Laws - Law and Justice Holmes - Law And Love I & II - Law And Kissing - Law And Poetry - Legal Writing - Romantic Flicks I & II - Rockin' Rand Recommends - Court Gazing I & II & III & IV & V - Judging - Mandatory Retirement of Judges - Judicial Economics - Judicial Independence & Accountability - Judicial Elections - Lawyers On Parade - Law And Economics - Legal Secretaries - BurtLaw's Legal History - Secular Sermons - Law & Christmas - Law and Women - Law And Kids - Fathers And Kids - Law And Norwegians - Law and Brits - Law And Dogs - Animals - Law & Death - Law & Comics - Law and Friends - Law and Swimsuits - Crime And Punishment - Capital Punishment - BurtLaw's CaseLaw - Politics - Harvard Law School - War I & II & III & IV - About BRH - About Mathilda Wonder Dog - Contact BRH - DMCA Digital Millennium Copyright Act Claim Notification Info pursuant to Subsection 512(c)
Weblog/webzine on law and its relation to everything else.BurtLaw Daily Quick Links:
-- USSCt Calendar + recent opinions (Cornell)
-- 'Law School Boss' tries to gag paper? (Ghana)
-- Law & comics
-- Kurt Vonnegut speech (ITT)
-- Great gals - secretarial division (ThrillDet)
-- Bad Lawyers in Movies (NovaLRev)
-- Online home of American slang (SlangCity)
-- Truth is another country (UKGuardian)
-- Interview w/ Geo. Pelecanos (MysteryOne)
-- Profile of Geo. Pelecanos (LegalAffairs)
-- Lynchings in Duluth (MNHistSoc)
-- History of first names (BehindTheName)
-- Kathleen Parker on Fred Rogers (THF)
-- Profile of Elmore Leonard (UKGuardian)
-- What would Kant do? (HarvardGazette)
Friday, 09.30.2005 - Might this day, fifty years ago, have been the real day the music died? At 3:30 p.m., 09.30.1955, just outside Bakersfield, driving his new Porsche Spyder 550 on the way to Salinas, with his mechanic beside him, he is stopped and ticketed for speeding. At 5:45 p.m., at the intersection of Routes 466 and 41, near Chalame, the Porsche collides with a sedan driven by a fellow named Don Turnupseed. His mechanic is thrown free and survives. James Dean is dead. More at 09.30.2005 at BurtonHanson.Com.
It Can't Happen Here, by Sinclair Lewis - still relevant 70 years later. "In 1935 Sinclair Lewis, Minnesota's Nobel-prize-winning novelist, published It Can't Happen Here, a novel that imagined the coming-to-dictatorial-power in America of a demagogic politician who promised quick solutions to the Depression, as Hitler had done in Germany in 1933. Fact is, it already had happened. Right here in good ol' Minnesota. And our courts helped make it happen...." More
On judicial swimsuits & the Rules of Judicial Conduct. "Undoubtedly, a judge's wearing nothing but a swimsuit in the courtroom would be deemed to not only demean the judiciary but cause disrespect for the judiciary and interfere with the administration of justice. This is so despite the fact that some of the greatest artistic representations depict Justice as a scantily-clad (and blind) woman and Law as a scantily-clad (and all-seeing?) man...." More at Law & Swimsuits.
you're a Jockstrap-and-Bra Lawyer or just an ordinary person who's curious about this area of legal specialization, click here for a little something we like to call "BurtLaw on Jockstrap and Bra Law."The everyday saints of my youth. Black branches that sometimes blossom. Minor poets who once or twice in our meager lives produce something beautiful. Small-town Norwegian women whose crafts were making pies and rosettes -- and making memories for little boys.... More at BurtLaw's Secular Sermons.
Of fathers & small-town barber shops & fishing & walleye beer batter.
salesman from Ohio, I believe, back in the 1920's. A handsome man, he became enamored of Anna Hoiland, daughter of the owner of Hoiland's Mortuary & Furniture Co. (for some reason, the two, caskets & furniture, always were sold by the same guy in small-town America). Bill & Anna got married and had one kid, a boy, but.... More at BurtLaw's Fathers & KidsJune 2005 - Ol' Blue turns 17. Ford Motor Co. is observing its 100th birthday. I have owned two Fords for a total of 25 years, one-fourth of all the years Ford has been making cars. My first car, a classic aqua-velva-coloured Mustang, served me well from 1966 to 1976. All June we are celebrating the 15th birthday of Ol' Blue, my 1988 Ford Crown Victoria LTD wagon, which I bought new in 1988 and which recently passed the 197.000 mile mark. Re Ol' Blue's role in rescuing my daughter on Father's Day,
click here. helps them learn the basics of plumbing. When I was a kid we had Gilbert Chemistry Sets and Gilbert Erector Sets. When my kids were little they had Lego Systems. But if you've a son, at least, and you want him to be popular with the chicks, you might consider buying him one of these fluid piping systems once they're on the market. I know an attractive & otherwise bright babe of whom it was rumored (falsely, I presume) that she was a sort of pipefitters' groupie. :-) I'm thinking I might develop a BurtLaw Junior Lawyer system that will allow kids to open their own pretend law firms and play the civil "justice" game. Here are some recent links dealing with that game: Reforming contingency fees (LA Daily News); Judge steers fees to friends, supporters (NewsNet5). And see, BurtLaw's Lawyers on Parade and BurtLaw's Law and Economics. For a story on Law and Pipefitters, see Labor Dept. sues over pipefitters' hotel (Hotel-Online). The real Waldo. My pick for the greatest American is Ralph Waldo Emerson. If I had to pick one writer whose writings have influenced me most, I'd also pick Emerson. The list of people he influenced is long, and includes some of my favorite writers, e.g., Thoreau, William James, Robert Frost, and Wallace Stevens. His influence continues. He was a contemporary of many of our great writers during the "Flowering of New England," including Hawthorne, Melville, and Longfellow. One of these was Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes, a medical educator at Harvard and wildly-popular author, as well as father of the great Supreme Court Justice of the same name. Emerson's thinking and some of his style are reflected in Justice Holmes' opinions and other writings, including his extraordinary letters. For example, consider this November 1842 entry from Emerson's journal: "Do not be timid and squeamish about your actions. All life is an experiment....What if you do fail, & get fairly rolled in the dirt once or twice? Up again, you shall never more be so afraid of a tumble." Compare it with this from Holmes' great dissent in Abrams v. United States, 250 U.S. 616 (1919): "[T]he best test of truth is the power of the thought to get itself accepted in the competition of the market....That at any rate is the theory of our Constitution. It is an experiment, as all life is an experiment. Every year if not every day we have to wager our salvation upon some prophecy based upon imperfect knowledge. While that experiment is part of our system I think that we should be eternally vigilant against attempts to check the expression of opinions that we loathe..." Emerson's voice is a revolutionary, true, pure American voice. Emerson links: Ralph Waldo's Laws (LawAndEverythingElse.Com); profile and poems (Academy of American Poets); links to works (Bartleby.Com); links to texts (EmersonCentral.Com); link to texts (RWE.Org); Emerson & Transcendentalism (Transcendentalists.Com); Essay: "The Sage & the Self-Promoter" (NEH.Fed.US).
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I met Justice William Douglas, the longest-serving member of the Supreme Court, when I was clerking for Justice William Brennan. Douglas struck me as cold and brusque but charismatic -- the most charismatic judge (well, the only charismatic judge) on the Court. Little did I know that this elderly gentleman (he was sixty-four when I was a law clerk) was having sex with his soon-to-be third wife in his Supreme Court office, that he was being stalked by his justifiably suspicious soon-to-be ex-wife, and that on one occasion he had to hide the wife-to-be in his closet in order to prevent the current wife from discovering her....
From The Anti-Hero by Richard A. Posner in 02.24.2003 The New Republic (via law.uchicago.edu/news), a review of Bruce Allen Murphy, Wild Bill: The Legend and Life of William O. Douglas (2003). Judge Posner adds: "Apart from being a flagrant liar, Douglas was a compulsive womanizer, a heavy drinker, a terrible husband to each of his four wives, a terrible father to his two children, and a bored, distracted, uncollegial, irresponsible, and at times unethical Supreme Court justice...." Apart from that, was he an "o.k. guy"? (02.28.2003)
quick calculation presumably using one of those old time-tested formulae. The instructions for this one are to type in your full first and last name and the full first and last name of the person in whom you're interested. More at BurtLaw's Law and Love I & II.Coming soon to a court near you. I have long felt that one of the public policy outrages of the 1990's was the federal government's failure to discourage -- indeed, its indirect encouragement of -- the manufacture and sale of SUVs. And back in 1997 I predicted that plaintiffs' lawyers someday would target the manufacturers, and maybe the drivers, of SUVs. The other day the New York Times, in a story titled The Lawyers are Lurking over SUV's, reported that, yes indeed, plaintiffs' lawyers are targeting SUV manufacturers, giving us yet another example of government by default -- that is, expensive litigation in the courts as a substitute for the responsible leadership that big business and big government fail to provide. Giving fuel to the litigation engine is NYT reporter Keith Bradsher's book, High and Mighty: SUV's, reviewed by Stephanie Mencimer in The Washington Monthly in a piece titled Bumper Mentality, a piece that begins, provocatively enough, with this simple query: "Have you ever wondered why sport utility vehicle drivers seem like such assholes?" (Actually, I know some who aren't.) In any event, although I believe our society is not only overlawyered but over-litigated and over-regulated, I guess I'll be pleased if anyone --even plaintiffs' lawyers -- help put an end to SUV-madness. (01.06.2003)
Of war talk and war plans, of Eros and Death. In response to some of our anti-Bush, anti-BushWarOnIraqII postings, a friend informs us that she prays for peace but adds that "good" must "overcome evil" and therefore she "understand[s] that war [with Iraq] is inevitable" to protect the good old USA from "more evil," which she posits will ultimately benefit the Iraqi people if we can free them by "quash[ing] evil dictatorship."
Interestingly, this kind of thinking and rhetoric illustrates points made in an interview I serendipitously came across at TomPaine.Com with Chris Hedges, a New York Times war reporter who is the author of a recently-published book titled War is a Force That Gives Us Meaning, a book that analyzes what happens to good people and good societies as they go to war. He "unravels the myths and dysfunctional nationalism that grip nations heading to war; the intoxicating effect of these causes and rhetoric; and the terrible costs that soldiers, victims and societies pay -- when the realities of war -- not the rhetoric -- are experienced." Hedges observes that at the inception of a conflict leading to war:
"The state gives you a language to speak and you can't speak outside that language or it becomes very difficult. There is no communication outside of the clichés and the jingos, 'The War on Terror,' 'Showdown With Iraq,' 'The Axis of Evil,' all of this stuff....The myth [of the glory of patriotism and war] predominates -- the myth, which is a lie, of course, built around glory, heroism, heroic self-sacrifice, the nobility of the nation. And it is a kind of intoxication. People lose individual conscience for this huge communal enterprise....We become the embodiment of light and goodness. We become the defenders of civilization, of all that is decent. We are more noble than others. We are braver than others. We are kinder and more compassionate than others -- [and] the enemy...is perfidious, dark, somewhat inhuman. We turn [our enemies] into two-dimensional figures. I think that's part of the process of linguistically dehumanizing them. And in wartime, we always turn the other into an object....The defeat in Vietnam made us a better nation and a better people. We were forced to step outside our own borders and see how other people saw us. We were forced to accept very unpleasant truths about ourselves -- our own capacity for evil. I think that that process, especially during the Reagan years, or at least that state, began to disintegrate. War once again became fun: Grenada; Panama, culminating in the Persian Gulf War. So that we're now at a process -- Freud argues that all of life, both for the individual and within human society, is a battle between Eros, or love, and Thanatos, or the death instinct. And that one of these instincts is always ascendant, at one time or another. I think after the Vietnam war, because of the terrible costs that we paid, because of the tragedy that Vietnam was, Eros was ascendant. I think after the Persian Gulf war, where we fell in love with war -- and what is war, war is death -- Thanatos is ascendant. It will, unfortunately, take that grim harvest of dead, that ultimately those that are intoxicated with war must always swallow, for us to wake up again...."
soon-to-be-published sequel to his novel, The Associates). The first Casey novel I read was actually a novella, A Year in Mid-Air (1972), republished in Redbook's Famous Fiction 56 (1977) (Harriet, a sweet, shy, pretty girl with "soft features...high, smooth forehead and...pale, fine hair," makes the Harvard Law Review, then asks her study-mate, stuttering Harry, to.... MoreWhy is health insurance so expensive?
our BurtLaw Nerd Club Pocket Protecters. Worn in the left front pocket of a nerdishly-white dress shirt, this badge of pathos will say to the popular kids, "I'm a nerd; stay away." And (this is the good part), it really works! Only $14.95, plus a modest shipping & handling charge of only $20.05. Free BurtLaw Nerd Club Member certificate included.Fathers and kids.
Very few books stay in print for long, fewer still do well enough to justify a second edition. J.HA's book has remained in print since it was published and has been sufficiently successful -- "enormously successful," according to Houghton-Mifflin -- that H-M subsequently published a revised, updated second edition, with around 20% new material, including a new cover. Click here for table of contents. The new edition of the book was featured at graduation time a couple years ago in a national promotion of "Gifts for Grads" by Barnes and Noble. More...Rehnquist Confidential!
Occasionally, I could have "special collector's editions," e.g., a special issue devoted to the other famous Swedish jurist (after Per Curiam), C. J. Wm. Rehnquist himself. There are a couple fairly current items on the internet newslines that I could use right now. One is the story of C. J. Rehnquist's little hissy fit over a minor breach of the Chief's sense of courtroom decorum and dignity during a recent oral.... More Update. We actually are publishing such a weblog/webzine now. It's called BurtLaw's The Daily Judge.How to contact BRH.
Announcement. We've finally gotten around to launching our new webzine/blawg: BurtLaw's The Daily Judge:
It is not an online newspaper and is not affiliated with or intended to be mistaken for any existing or previously-existing newspaper or journal. Rather, it is a so-called "blawg," a law-related personal "web log" or "blog," one with a subjective, idiosyncratic, and eccentric sociological and social-psychological slant that focuses not on the latest judicial decisions of supposed great importance but on a) the institution of judge in the United States and in other countries throughout the world, b) the judicial office and role, c) judicial personalities, d) the great common law tradition of judging as practiced here and throughout the world, e) judges as judges, f) judges as ordinary people with the usual mix of virtues and flaws, etc. We link to newspapers and other sources in order to alert the reader to ideas, articles, stories, speeches, law books, literary works and other things about "judges" that have interested us and that may interest the reader.
We don't promote our blawgs, but readers of this blog and of our affiliated political opinion blog, BurtonHanson.Com, may be interested in it. We don't think there is another blawg quite like it.
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Weblog/webzine on law and its relation to everything else.
you're a Jockstrap-and-Bra Lawyer or just an ordinary person who's curious about this area of legal specialization,
salesman from Ohio, I believe, back in the 1920's. A handsome man, he became enamored of Anna Hoiland, daughter of the owner of Hoiland's Mortuary & Furniture Co. (for some reason, the two, caskets & furniture, always were sold by the same guy in small-town America). Bill & Anna got married and had one kid, a boy, but.... 
helps them learn the basics of plumbing. When I was a kid we had Gilbert
The real Waldo. My pick for the greatest American is Ralph Waldo Emerson. If I had to pick one writer whose writings have influenced me most, I'd also pick Emerson. The list of people he influenced is long, and includes some of my favorite writers, e.g., Thoreau, William James, Robert Frost, and Wallace Stevens. His influence continues. He was a contemporary of many of our great writers during the "Flowering of New England," including Hawthorne, Melville, and Longfellow. One of these was Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes, a medical educator at Harvard and wildly-popular author, as well as father of the great Supreme Court Justice of the same name. Emerson's thinking and some of his style are reflected in Justice Holmes' opinions and other writings, including his extraordinary letters. For example, consider this November 1842 entry from Emerson's journal: "Do not be timid and squeamish about your actions. All life is an experiment....What if you do fail, & get fairly rolled in the dirt once or twice? Up again, you shall never more be so afraid of a tumble." Compare it with this from Holmes' great dissent in Abrams v. United States, 250 U.S. 616 (1919): "[T]he best test of truth is the power of the thought to get itself accepted in the competition of the market....That at any rate is the theory of our Constitution. It is an experiment, as all life is an experiment. Every year if not every day we have to wager our salvation upon some prophecy based upon imperfect knowledge. While that experiment is part of our system I think that we should be eternally vigilant against attempts to check the expression of opinions that we loathe..." Emerson's voice is a revolutionary, true, pure American voice. Emerson links: 
quick calculation presumably using one of those old time-tested formulae. The instructions for this one are to type in your full first and last name and the full first and last name of the person in whom you're interested. 
soon-to-be-published sequel to his novel, The Associates). The first Casey novel I read was actually a novella, A Year in Mid-Air (1972), republished in Redbook's Famous Fiction 56 (1977) (Harriet, a sweet, shy, pretty girl with "soft features...high, smooth forehead and...pale, fine hair," makes the Harvard Law Review, then asks her study-mate, stuttering Harry, to....
our BurtLaw Nerd Club Pocket Protecters. Worn in the left front pocket of a nerdishly-white dress shirt, this badge of pathos will say to the popular kids, "I'm a nerd; stay away." And (this is the good part), it really works! Only $14.95, plus a modest shipping & handling charge of only $20.05. Free BurtLaw Nerd Club Member certificate included.
Very few books stay in print for long, fewer still do well enough to justify a second edition. J.HA's book has remained in print since it was published and has been sufficiently successful -- "enormously successful," according to Houghton-Mifflin -- that H-M subsequently published a
Occasionally, I could have "special collector's editions," e.g., a special issue devoted to the other famous Swedish jurist (after Per Curiam), C. J. Wm. Rehnquist himself. There are a couple fairly current items on the internet newslines that I could use right now. One is the story of C. J. Rehnquist's little hissy fit over a minor breach of the Chief's sense of courtroom decorum and dignity during a recent oral....