Saturday, January 13, 2007

"...And justice for all."

The words of the Pledge of Allegiance express the beliefs and values that hold America together. Our republic is "one nation, under God, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all." It is a simple expression of the ideals our laws and government seek to attain. There has been much debate and defense over the inclusion of "under God," but not much debate over the last clause, "liberty and justice for all." Who would question it? Judging by these comments, perhaps that last clause is debatable to some in our current government after all.

To me, justice reaches beyond satisfaction for victims of a crime. Justice means that those accused of breaking our laws or social compact have the opportunity to defend themselves, whoever they are, however they are accused, and wherever they were born. If they are at fault, then they will be appropriately punished, and if not, they will get their lives back. It seems so simple and so basic. Justice cannot be achieved when those accused are not given the ability to defend themselves, and it is a problem in our legal system. Unequal public defender systems, immigration laws and the war on terror prevent some people from defending themselves well or even at all, while the wealthy and well-connected are able to defend themselves until they are above the law itself. To malign the people who are working (for free!) to minimize this gap because of who they defend is to attack justice, and to attack the ideals on which this nation was founded.

I don't write this to imply that the people being detained at Guantanamo or accused of a crime are all good honest people, clearly they are not, but when anyone is judged without the benefit of a defender who knows the law, or worse without a trial, we do not have justice. Even those whose legal knowledge ends with what Dick Wolf tells them know that the state must prove its case. It is the responsibility of all Americans to demand that they do.

Wednesday, January 10, 2007

Polling used for evil...

As evidenced here. Some people lack any semblance of a conscience, and Frank Luntz is one of them.

Saturday, January 06, 2007

Happy New Year! Sorta...

It's 75 degrees outside and January, and as much as I'd love to be snowboarding today, the weather is in its own way sorta cool. Of course, I spent the morning inside balancing my checkbook. Freakin' resolutions. I just have to keep reminding myself the morning's been sacrificed for the good goal of saving myself finance charges and late payment fees. Totally worth it, right? RIGHT?

Down to business, we're nearly a week into the year and I haven't recapped '06 yet. Unfortunately, I didn't quite pay enough attention to music this year to do a "best of" list, but these are my 10 favorite highlights. It's a pop-heavy year, a little fun in times of serious trouble. Enjoy. Go forth and buy CDs!

1. Rudebox. Robbie Williams kicks this album off with the line, "OK then, back to basics..." and never has it been done better. A synth-pop masterpiece that hasn't left my CD player since it came out of the jewel box. Seriously, it's the best thing I've heard in AGES. Robbie's biting humor is back (see She's Madonna if you don't believe me), and he clearly had fun with this album, it's a beautiful thing. If my iPod were alive (may it rest in piece...), I would've seriously looked like a spastic iPod commercial whenever Rudebox came on. Or Lovelight. The whole thing's awesome.

2. Continuum. I've already posted about Stop This Train, so I won't drive you nuts with a rehash, but the rest of the album's awfully damn good too. In the new year, I'm doing my best to stop the whole Jessica Simpson thing from diminishing my opinion of his music. It's just ass, right?

3. Whatever People Say I Am, That's What I'm Not. I've beaten this one to death too, but it's still frickin' awesome.

4. FutureSex/LoveSounds. I'm going to get a lot of shit for this, but I'm sorry, JT rules. If SexyBack doesn't make you dance, I'm not sure you have a soul.

5. Pearl Jam. Their best in quite some time.

6. Ring the Alarm. Haven't heard the whole Beyonce album yet, but this song is the shit. Angry Beyonce RULES.

7. Ain't No Other Man. I really thought I hated Christina Aguilera, turns out, not so much...

8. The World. Brad Paisley stops all that drinking that made him famous in '05 and makes the sweetest song (and video!) of the year. I know, I know, I'm a dork, but it makes me smile.

9. Hips Don't Lie. I heard this song at a bar in Guatemala City and the whole place went nuts, best moment of international bonding I had this year. Hell, she makes a woman want to speak Spanish!

10. Original Fire. As many times as I've heard it on Darren's MySpace page, I still love it.

One more side note, hurrah You Tube! Made this so much easier than last year. MUST get off the couch now... later skaters! Comment away...