Saturday, January 9, 2016

Yale School of Law - the brave defender of oppressed Pakistani attorneys

In my previous blog I described how 21 judges (state and federal, trial-level and appellate-level), participated in punishing me for criticism of the judiciary, in the same way as was recently criticized as an example of political oppression in China.

One of the judges who participated in depriving me of my law license based on the "Chinese" retaliative political sanctions of a state judge, Ralph K. Winter of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 2nd Circuit, is on the faculty of Yale Law School, as an adjunct professor.

My quick search of the law school's website revealed that Ralph Winter is often "honored" by that law school with various programs, prizes and even  lecture program in his name, funded by his former law clerks.

Here is an interesting detail.

In 2007, Ralph K. Winter's employer, the Yale Law School has published the following:





The signature list is long, I do not provide it here in full, you can see the full signature list here.

The idea is - the Yale Law School faculty is protesting.

They are protesting against

(1) suspension of the Constitution;
(2) persecution of attorneys protesting against unlawful behavior of court and other branches of the government.

Yet, the same faculty is repeatedly "honoring" Ralph Winter, a judge who is routinely participating in similar suppression of Civl Rights in the U.S., and who repeatedly upholds the "right" of various public officials to violate their own constitutional oaths of office, with impunity, and thus, to suspend the U.S. Constitution that he is sworn to uphold.

Once again, it is easier to express such bravery towards civil rights violations when they are happening somewhere abroad.

Where such a protest can cause you to lose your bread-and-lobster, the "honorable" legal profession, including the law professors of one of the most elite law schools in the United States, prefers to "honor" the tyrant and oath-breaker rather than to show him the door and lead protests against judicial corruption and suspension of the U.S. Constitution.



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