
People Fear Attorneys, Judges More Than Terrorists
Titled "LAW-LESS: Why many Americans fear attorneys and judges more than terrorists," this eye-opening and disturbing special report leads off with veteran radio talk host and columnist Dennis Prager, who writes:
I was raised to believe that law is the glory of decent society; that the rule of law is the sine qua non of civilization; that international law is the greatest protector of human rights; that lawyers should be coupled with doctors as an elite profession to which a young person can aspire; that making laws is the great work of legislatures; that law schools are among the noble places of learning in society; that the title "judge" was perhaps the highest appellation in society; and that the jury system is an essential component of a just society.
Most of the preceding has become nonsense.
I have come to fear almost everything having to do with law. Though there are many fine people in the legal profession, and though law is necessary to protect society from descending into chaos, I now fear the legal profession more than I do Islamic terror ...
After that warm-up, WND Editor and founder Joseph Farah weighs in with a comprehensive and forceful analysis of the current Supreme Court, unambiguously titled "Impeach the 'Sodomy 6.'" In it, he lays out in detail his reasons for initiating a national movement to impeach the six justices that voted to prohibit Texas and all other states from passing sodomy legislation.
Picking up the ball, Allyson Smith follows with a stunning and prescient look at the future of sex laws in the United States. Titled "Court opens Pandora's box of perversion," Smith's in-depth investigative piece shows conclusively that, thanks to the Supreme Court's recent decision, the unthinkable may be just around the corner: legal and eventually social acceptance of polygamy, consensual incest, bestiality, gay marriage and more.
Whistleblower also presents Scalia's scathing dissenting opinion, in which he proclaims the majority's sodomy decision "effectively decrees the end of all morals legislation." Farah calls Scalia's lengthy dissent "one of the most brilliant analyses I've ever read."
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