One understands their chagrin. One sympathizes with anyone
who is named in a contract.
No, not the kind of contract you study in law school. Not
the kind of contract you negotiate with your boss.
I am referring, instead to the kind of contract a Mafioso
puts out on you.
And that Shakespeare seems to have put out on lawyers.
In Henry VI, Part II, a character named Dick the Butcher
said:
The
first thing we do, let's kill all the lawyers.
Ever since, lawyers have been seriously discommoded. One
feels their pain. Would you want to be named in a contract put out by the bard
himself? It may not cost you your life, but it will certainly damage your
professional reputation.
Obviously, the state of the legal profession in the time of
Henry VI (fifteenth century) was not the same as it was in the time when
Shakespeare wrote the play (sixteenth century). Neither was the same as today’s.
And yet, when today’s audiences watch the play, they often
break out in applause when they hear Dick the Butcher put out a contract on
lawyers.
Perhaps they are thinking that the legal profession is not
subject to checks and balances, so… the best they can do is laugh at it.
Those who defend the good name of lawyers have been known to
perform a bit of critical exegesis on
the bard’s words. They point out that Dick the Butcher wants to kill the
lawyers because he wants to jettison the rule of law… the better to establish a
tyranny based on royal edicts, or, as they say today, executive orders.
And yet, a little bit of extra exegesis will tell us that
there is a difference between the rule of law and the rule of lawyers. Playing
fair and playing by the rules is one thing. Hobbling business with a mountain
of regulations concocted by overzealous bureaucrats is quite another.
Everyone who runs a business knows how bad the regulatory
burden has become during the Obama administration. It did not start with the
current administration, but the Obama team has used the financial crisis to
fulfill its wish to hobble business with regulations.
In many ways, it has succeeded.
But, it gets worse. When lawyers run wild they produce some serious negative effects on the economy.
We are grateful to The Economist for having pointed out the
dangers that lie in the rule of lawyers.
Wrap your mind around this. This week the sober and often
left-leaning publication ran an editorial and a major report denouncing the
American legal profession as “an extortion racket.” Strong words those. It comes as something of a
surprise, because no one that I know of, on the right, the left or the center,
has offered such a vigorous denunciation.
Why do people hate lawyers? Read a few choice paragraphs
from The Economist:
WHO
runs the world’s most lucrative shakedown operation? The Sicilian mafia? The
People’s Liberation Army in China? The kleptocracy in the Kremlin? If you are a
big business, all these are less grasping than America’s regulatory system. The
formula is simple: find a large company that may (or may not) have done
something wrong; threaten its managers with commercial ruin, preferably with
criminal charges; force them to use their shareholders’ money to pay an
enormous fine to drop the charges in a secret settlement (so nobody can check
the details). Then repeat with another large company.
The
amounts are mind-boggling. So far this year, Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase,
Citigroup, Goldman Sachs and other banks have coughed up close to $50 billion
for supposedly misleading investors in mortgage-backed bonds. BNP Paribas is
paying $9 billion over breaches of American sanctions against Sudan and Iran.
Credit Suisse, UBS, Barclays and others have settled for billions more, over
various accusations. And that is just the financial institutions. Add BP’s $13
billion in settlements since the Deepwater Horizon oil spill, Toyota’s $1.2
billion settlement over alleged faults in some cars, and many more.
In many
cases, the companies deserved some form of punishment: BNP Paribas disgustingly
abetted genocide, American banks fleeced customers with toxic investments and
BP despoiled the Gulf of Mexico. But justice should not be based on extortion
behind closed doors. The increasing criminalisation of corporate behaviour in
America is bad for the rule of law and for capitalism.
You would almost think that the legal profession, or large
parts of it, is an organized criminal enterprise. Being the law seems to have
put it above the law.
Apparently, the rule of lawyers stifles capitalism. It
stifles job creation. It stifles economic growth. If we are to believe The Economist the American legal system
is a parasite, sucking the lifeblood from the American economy.
Obviously, it does not reflect capitalism:
This
proliferation of cases is not a preordained consequence of America’s capitalist
system. Instead, it reflects profound changes over the past century or so in
thinking about the respective responsibilities of individuals and institutions
and about the role of the state as an increasingly active participant in many
areas of business. Collective responses to crises, notably war and depression,
have also played a part, as has the embodiment in law of (often transient)
economic theories.
The worst part is, it all feels completely extra-legal:
Perhaps
the most destructive part of it all is the secrecy and opacity. The public never
finds out the full facts of the case, nor discovers which specific people—with
souls and bodies—were to blame. Since the cases never go to court, precedent is
not established, so it is unclear what exactly is illegal. That enables future
shakedowns, but hurts the rule of law and imposes enormous costs. Nor is it
clear how the regulatory booty is being carved up. Andrew Cuomo, the governor
of New York, who is up for re-election, reportedly intervened to increase the
state coffers’ share of BNP’s settlement by $1 billion, threatening to wield
his powers to withdraw the French bank’s licence to operate on Wall Street. Why
a state government should get any share at all of a French firm’s fine for
defying the federal government’s foreign policy is not clear.
Of course, it does not just damage corporations. It is not
merely a form of stealth socialism of businesses that are assumed to be guilty.
It makes it far more difficult for people to respect lawyers and the rule of law.
2 comments:
"... There is a difference between the rule of law and the rule of lawyers."
"The increasing criminalisation of corporate behaviour in America is bad for the rule of law and for capitalism."
There is no difference between the rule of law and the rule of lawyers in today's America. Lawyers have co-opted the public's spirit for the rule of law and used it for their own gain. In addition, the legal academy's voracious appetite for progressivism and secularism since the early 20th century has divorced a lawyer's educational foundation from metaphysics, morality and ethics. This separates law from its true role in society, creating the win-at-all-costs attorney/hero/defender against the unhinged, ideological legal activist. Pick a team... whose side are you on? But this rot goes further and deeper, into the way people separate themselves from their social bonds/obligations. Just as the banker excuses unscrupulous choices on the grounds that "Making money by any means possible is my job, and everyone knows it," we can draw equivalence to the legal profession's "Doing whatever is necessary is my duty to my client, and everyone know it."
However, it's not that simple. The legal profession has done something more insidious, something that is eating at the heart of capitalism, civics and voluntary association: forcing us to live by the letter (not the spirit) of the law. These knights on paperback offer protection from the evils that lurk with us all, ostensibly to may make our lives more "livable." Lawyers have progressively replaced normal social ethics with legalism as a more reliable means to give society structure and safety. But lets's be clear: the legal system cannot possibly fulfill that charge. Today's legalism serves as an arrogant counter to John Fletcher Mouton's famous remark: "Obedience to the unenforceable is the extent to which the individuals composing the nation can be trusted to obey self-imposed law." In place of this self-regulation, laws and regulations pile up to mitigate bad behavior. Honor fast disappears as a core component of masculinity. Being clever becomes the most important part of the job. Soon, it's every man for himself. Society grows more and more dysfunctional. Is this any way to live?
If every businessman knows he's skirting or breaking the law, or fears he's exposed to thousands of laws he doesn't know about, he comes to see himself as a de facto criminal -- no matter how many rationalizations and positive affirmations he comes up with. He fears getting caught by a vast legal system that continually threatens to prosecute him, supported by an expanding police state collecting data on his crimes (to protect us from "terrorism"). Feds frantically beg and bribe Bank of America to purchase Countrywide amidst the 2008 economic implosion, and then prosecute BofA to win billions in fines (6 years later, for Countrywide's contribution the original mess). The businessman's life becomes a race against time, in between buying politicians (almost all lawyers) for protection. In the interim, he attempts to gain as much wealth as he can, as quickly as he can, and hires his own attorneys to fend off those of their same species. It's called racketeering. There are laws against racketeering. Who's enforcing them? Ah, yes, the lawyers, who will all say in unison "I'm just doing my job." And they're right. And that's the problem: it's a closed system.
Author Philip K. Howard, himself a lawyer, points out that law is created by society to serve society, not so that society will serve law. That's the most cogent explanation of what we're up against. Props to the The Economist for calling things as they are.
Well, maybe so, Anon, but we can also see it as extortion or as pay-to-play. On the smaller business side, read http://www.coyoteblog.com/
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