Showing posts with label empathy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label empathy. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 27, 2012

And the other shoe drops...

A couple of weeks ago I posted about how the University of St. Thomas School of Law had replaced the William Mitchell College of Law as the second ranked law school in the Twin Cities in the US News best law school rankings.  The post noted that St. Thomas, despite taking its data accuracy "very seriously," had over reported by more than 200% the number of St. Thomas graduates who were employed at graduation.  It wasn't clear to me whether correct reporting would have ranked William Mitchell above St. Thomas.

We don't have an answer to that question but the National Law Journal reports that US News has decided to move St. Thomas into the "unranked" rankings.  Unranked schools are the lowest 25% of American Bar Association accredited schools. An asterisk will appear next to St. Thomas's entry to explain the change.

Unsurprisingly, Thomas Mengler, the dean at St. Thomas, is not very happy about this.  Dean Mengler wrote a letter to US News complaining that in previous years schools did not suffer in the rankings until the year following the discovery of inflated numbers.  I have no idea why a worse rating next year is better than a worse rating this year but assume that Dean Mengler knows what he is doing. 

That said, Dean Mengler really isn't concerned about the punishment that St. Thomas receives.  He is more concerned that future accidental mistakes of this nature will not be uncovered because of the precedent set by US News.  Dean Mengler writes, "I fear your decision will serve as a disincentive for others to self-report errors."  That may be true.  However, a steep punishment might also serve to make folks double check so that the numbers are accurate the first time.  In any event, it is nice to see the Dean take time out from his immediate problem and instead focus on how the punishment hurts the punisher.

Tuesday, August 10, 2010

A response to one of Mr. Torvik's questions.

A few days ago you posed some questions related to the result in Perry v. Schwarzenegger. While I have still not finished reading the 136-page order, I am prepared to answer one of your questions. Specifically, whether it matters that Judge Walker may be gay.

As an initial matter, it is worth noting that, as Tracy Clark-Flory points out, the blog entry used to support the theory that Judge Walker is gay is not going to make Woodward and Bernstein lose sleep that they might be losing their place in the pantheon of reporting.

But even if the speculation about Judge Walker is correct, the answer to your question "Does it matter, at all, to anyone, that Judge Walker is, apparently, gay? " is "Not unless you are a special interest group that is using the gay marriage trial to raise money." (I'm talking about you National Organization for Marriage and American Families Association). For the rest of us the answer has to be "no".

The answer is no because if we reversed the sexual identity of the judge would anyone, other than special interest groups, be claiming that a straight judge needs to recuse himself? Of course not. Unless we can somehow devise a method by which judges without sexual preferences are the only ones who can hear sexual orientation cases; and judges without gender are the only ones who can hear gender discrimination cases; and judges who don't belong to any racial group are the only ones who can hear race discrimination cases, we can't find membership in this sort of group to be a disqualifying factor. On a side note, it would be interesting to know if any of the people who think the answer is "Yes" also think that Justice Thomas should recuse himself from racial discrimination cases.

Is it possible that Judge Walker's sexual orientation gave him a degree of empathy that a straight judge his age might not have had? I suppose it is. But, Judge Walker's empathy towards gay people, if he has any, might also spring from the fact that gay people are seen more sympathetically by society in general. For evidence of this, one need look no further than to compare the Supreme Court opinions in Bowers v. Hardwick with Lawrence v. Texas.

In Bowers, Justice White described the issue facing the Court as follows:

The issue presented is whether the Federal Constitution confers a fundamental
right upon homosexuals to engage in sodomy, and hence invalidates the laws
of the many States that still make such conduct illegal, and have done so
for a very long time.
I am not the first person to note that as soon as you read the issue, you know that the state is going to win the case.

In Lawrence, Justice Kennedy writes things like this: "the Texas statute furthers no legitimate state interest which can justify its intrusion into the personal and private life of the individual." He also wrote "the intimate, adult consensual conduct at issue here was part of the liberty protected by the substantive component of the Fourteenth Amendment's due process protections." And then this kicker, "Bowers was not correct when it was decided, and it is not correct today. It ought not to remain binding precedent. Bowers v. Hardwick should be and now is overruled."

If a seventy-year-old man probably straight man can write the opinion in Lawrence, and not be told he should have recused himself, it is hard to make a rational argument that a sixty-six-year-old possibly gay man can't reach the same conclusion without having to rely on an impermissible bias.

Saturday, August 7, 2010

More on Judge Walker

One of my random questions about the Prop 8 case was whether it mattered at all that Judge Walker is supposedly gay.  In a short profile of Judge Walker, New York Times reporter John Schwartz address this issue at some length:

[S]everal published reports have stated that [Judge Walker] is himself gay. In February, The San Francisco Chronicle called it an “open secret.” Critics have argued that his sexual orientation was a source of bias that should have disqualified him from hearing the Proposition 8 case. Judge Walker has declined to discuss the matter.
Monroe H. Freedman, an expert in legal ethics at Hofstra Law School, said that while bias could lead to recusal in rare cases, “you could say, ‘If a gay judge is disqualified, how about a straight judge?’ There isn’t anybody about whom somebody might say, ‘You’re not truly impartial in this case.’ ”
Mr. Freedman cited a 1975 opinion by Judge Constance Baker Motley of Federal District Court, an African-American jurist who was asked to disqualify herself from a lawsuit alleging unlawful discrimination. “If background or sex or race of each judge were, by definition, sufficient grounds for removal, no judge on this court could hear this case, or many others,” she wrote.

I agree with Mr. Freedman and Judge Motley.  But it seems to me there's a deeper point here.  Apparently this issue is so well-settled and accepted that the attorneys defending Prop 8 didn't even think it was worth raising.  This is another sign of how much our culture has changed in its treatment of gays--now a gay judge presiding in a court trial over a momentous issue of gay rights is simply unremarkable, even to zealous advocates.  However the Prop 8 comes out after the appeals, I think the fact that a gay judge was allowed to act as the trial judge without so much as a peep is a sure sign the campaign for gay rights and gay marriage will ultimately succeed.

This brings to mind some of the early controversy surrounding Justice Kagan's sexual orientation.  As you'll recall, there was a report on cbsnews.com stating that Kagan is gay.  Kagan said nothing, but the White House criticized the report as containing "false charges."  Then there was a lot of teeth-gnashing among pundits about whether it should even matter.

I always thought it--the truth about Kagen's sexuality--mattered, though not to whether she is qualified to serve on the Supreme Court (as she clearly is).  If we are actually supposed care about diversity or "empathy" -- and maybe we actually aren't -- then it matters.  Moreover, having an openly gay member of the Supreme Court would be another big step for gay rights, no?  On the other hand, another closeted member of the Supreme Court would seem to be a step back.  Either way, the truth matters.