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Monday, July 12, 2010

Beware Young Crusading Lawyers in Pinstripes

One such group -- Youth Law Center -- did immeasurable damage to Utah's children and Department of Child and Family Services by a lawsuit accusing the department of neglecting foster children. They bombarded the Court with half-baked allegations and statistics, got a trustee place over the department, and orders for rushed placing of children and hiring of social workers. The hurried hiring, training, and placing process burned out over half of the new workers who quit -- costing Utah millions then and after.

Amazingly, during this same time the national association of such agencies rated Utah's department one of the ten best in the nation. Watch out for these young lawyers-with-a-cause, who staff the so-called "public interest law firms" granted charity status by the IRS. Most share an acid, cynical view of our society -- reflected by such groups as ACLU activists, GreenPeace, PETA, and gay lesbian activists. these crusaders gain exciting trial experience and notoriety, do their damage, and then they mellow, grow temperate, and ride off into a law career elsewhere.

But the damage thy do, the contention they stir up, and the costs to society are immeasurable. Rue the day the government decided to subsidize them with charity IRC 501(c)(3) tax exempt status. Let people with causes fund their own litigation, I say.

Friday, July 9, 2010

Amateur detectives – TV news channels

TV's 24/7 news channels (especialy FOX News) fill their hours playing amateur detective when they can't find any real news. Let a U.S. girl disappear in Aruba and Greta Van Susteren and her cohorts are on it in a flash -- for hours, daily. They know just whom the authorities should have detailned, what questions they should have asked, and where they should have looked. Do they do any harm? They do if you seriously watch this stuff. With media technology they can find, daily a murder, mysterious disappearance, or violent crime to tickle the appetite for the bizarre and the gruesome. Applying the editorial preference for spectacular bad news, they're like the newspaper's police blotter on steriods. Thank goodness your peace of mind and world view do not depend on FOX News or CNN. Their programming resembles that of the New York Times famous masthead phrase, with an added phrase: "All the news that's fit to print" . . . and a whole lot more that isn't.