Wednesday, August 10, 2016

The American Bar Association's Report on the future of legal services in the U.S. - the "sensitive" core issues are conspicuously and cowardly not addressed

A 116-page report on the "future of provision of legal services" was released by the American Bar Association in August of 2016.

No revolutionary changes were proposed by the ABA.

Do not search the report for words such as

  1. judicial misconduct
  2. immunity
  3. whistleblowers
  4. retaliation
  5. antitrust
while judicial misconduct, judge-invented "immunities" of government officials as to accountability to constitutional violations, relentless persecution of attorney whistleblowers and antitrust activities of attorney disciplinary committees acting to protect their markets rather than protect the consumers - are at the core of public discontent with the legal profession, the judiciary, and at the core of unavailability of affordable legal services to the majority of the U.S. population.

Instead, the ABA wants to keep regulation in the hands of the judiciary - which is a big problem, creating an ability for the judiciary to hold attorneys in a death grip, and preventing independent representation of clients, and especially in cases involving governmental misconduct and judicial misconduct.

And, of course, the ABA, a non-profit corporation that has foreign funding, wants to control attorney regulation and provision of legal services in the United States, jamming down consumers' throats what consumers do not want - government-imposed expensive attorneys (or incompetent assigned attorneys for the indigent) instead of court representatives of consumers' own choice, as it should be, with or without the government's approval of such a choice through law licensing.

Well, no matter what the length of the ABA report on the "future of provision of legal services", when the core issues making the legal profession and its regulation the main reason why the majority of the U.S. population cannot have true access to impartial courts and cannot have effective remedies at law for violations of their rights are not reflected in that report, the value of that report is zero.

And, of course, the report is a prime example that the ABA knows that the legal profession is in jeopardy and is trying hard to save it - by further rearranging the chairs on the deck of the sinking Titanic.






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