As a college football fan, I don't care much about the NFL. If anything, I dislike it, as one of our local news channels is now running Green Bay Packer reports 365 days per year, thus forcing me to try to remember which channel that is so I can avoid it. Despite things like this, however, I've always admired the NFL's business model and business acumen (including its recent settlement of the concussion litigation on terms so favorable that the deal was rejected by a judge as being unfair). But my admiration of the NFL is waning. Why?
Saturday, January 25, 2014
Thursday, January 23, 2014
Introducing The Irreverent Lawyer
I am pleased to introduce Legal Watchdog readers to The Irreverent Lawyer—a gun-slinging civil attorney out west who brilliantly
criticizes, among other things, mandatory state bar associations and continuing
legal education (CLE) requirements. (And
he does it with wonderfully illustrated posts.)
Now, I always knew that, notwithstanding my state bar’s hyper-positive
spin, I wasn’t getting anything for my nearly-$500 check that I sign every year. And I always knew that after taking most CLEs I was frustrated and drained of money, time, and energy. But I was never angry about any of this until I started reading some of his posts.
Tuesday, January 14, 2014
Knightly welcomes the students of Columbus State Community College!
Knightly (pictured) takes a break from his legal research to welcome Professor Cathy Ritterbusch's students to The Legal Watchdog. Cathy's class, Criminal Law & Procedure in the paralegal program, will be splitting time between substantive criminal law and criminal procedure. After the jump are some recommended posts to get the ball rolling. The posts are organized by substantive law and procedural law, although in practice, the two areas often overlap and are difficult to separate. In any case, enjoy!
Thursday, January 9, 2014
Why isn’t there a major in “college athletics”?
I’m kind of torn on the so-called student-athlete. On the one hand, I like to joke about the
title — for the most part, we all know that they’re athletes and not really students,
right? But on the other hand, the
student-athlete probably isn’t much worse than the typical student at many
schools. (It’s just that non-athlete
students aren’t thrust in front of the camera every Saturday afternoon after
the game, so we don’t get to see and hear them.) And then, when I saw an article about what
some kids are able to study in order to earn a degree, I started to appreciate
the student-athlete even more.
Tuesday, January 7, 2014
Breaking the bank: JP Morgan Chase needs to stop paying off the government
JP
Morgan Chase just agreed to pay another $1.7 billion to the government as
part of a criminal settlement agreement.
So what was Chase’s alleged crime this time around? The government alleges Chase violated the
Bank Secrecy Act by failing to file a “suspicious activity report” for certain “suspicious
transactions” in Bernie Madoff’s bank account. (Source: WSJ.) I find this absolutely hilarious, given that
the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) did absolutely nothing to stop
Madoff, even though a Wall Street Analyst named Harry Markopolos did all of the
SEC’s work for it, mathematically proved that Madoff was running a ponzi scheme,
notified the SEC repeatedly in writing, and begged the SEC to put a stop
Madoff’s then ongoing crimes.
Sunday, January 5, 2014
God intervenes in the 2014 edition of the GoDaddy.com Bowl
After Arkansas State
blocked a last second field goal attempt by Ball
State to win the GoDaddy.com Bowl, the
Arkansas State Coach attributed the win to his personal god: “god answers
prayers,” he said, when interviewed by the sideline reporter. This kind of thinking is deeply flawed, very
upsetting, and even potentially dangerous.
First, coach, even if your personal god takes an interest in
college football, I can assure you that he/she/it was not watching the
GoDaddy.com Bowl. (I barely watched it,
and I probably have less on my plate than a god would.) Second, and more to the point, how did you
get so arrogant that you believe god would choose your people over the
fine men of Ball State ? Are they somehow less worthy or less deserving
of his/her/its love and rewards?
The problem, of course, begins with “faith,” i.e., the belief
in things without evidence or reason.
The Arkansas State
coach, like so many of us, has been taught from a very young age that faith is good
and should be respected. And once
we accept that as our starting point, then any claim that is made in the name
of faith is as valid as any other. The
results range from the incredibly harmful and even deadly (e.g.,
religious wars or religiously-motivated terrorist attacks) to the usually harmless but ridiculous (e.g., the belief that god put
someone’s cancer into remission, or spared a person from some type of harm, or
intervened in a college football game).
The solution, of course, is simple. As the late, great one argued, faith, in all
contexts, should be questioned, challenged, and criticized. It should not be rewarded, praised, or
encouraged.
The post-BCS world: don’t call it a playoff
I loved the pre-BCS college bowl system because, unlike the
NCAA tournament in college basketball, half of the teams in college football
went home winners. And, I hate to have
to admit it, but I also liked the BCS system.
First, the BCS essentially preserved the bowl system that I loved;
second, the BCS typically didn’t screw up my beloved Big 10 – Pac 12 matchup in the historic Rose Bowl; and third, the BCS’s four-decimal place faux
accuracy that it used to decide the national championship matchup and other bowl
matchups gave me something to ridicule.
Wednesday, January 1, 2014
Friends who let friends drive drunk (and the prosecutors who charge them)
According to this story, a 17-year old girl was driving
drunk and killed herself, and now two of her friends are charged with misdemeanor
crimes for letting her drive when they knew she was intoxicated. It’s rare to get two issues in one news
story. Here they are:
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)