Mike,
You misunderstand. As I stated before, I slightly adjusted one of your quotes in order to make your point clearer, not to insult.
As for the ethics of criminal defense, that's a weighty topic. Your post suggests that it's inherently unethical to defend people charged with murder, rape, and other serious crimes. You're not alone in that belief. Many people feel that way. Any American can pay lip-service to the "presumption of innocence," but very few really understand or believe in it.
And as for my opinion that we live in a police state, I stand by that. Your admission that you "only 'badged' your way out of a ticket less than half the time," or CAG's declaration that "he's not surrounded, but rather, at the center of a target-rich environment," only serves to strenthen my position.
I've traversed the globe many times and lived in what many Americans would call a "real," (again, to use your word), police state. I know a police state when I see one. But in the end I guess it depends on what you mean by "police state." For me, a "police state" is any place where the police don't obey the laws they're entrusted to enforce. Where they "badge" their way out of tickets, for example. If the shoe fits...
Elton
You misunderstand. As I stated before, I slightly adjusted one of your quotes in order to make your point clearer, not to insult.
As for the ethics of criminal defense, that's a weighty topic. Your post suggests that it's inherently unethical to defend people charged with murder, rape, and other serious crimes. You're not alone in that belief. Many people feel that way. Any American can pay lip-service to the "presumption of innocence," but very few really understand or believe in it.
And as for my opinion that we live in a police state, I stand by that. Your admission that you "only 'badged' your way out of a ticket less than half the time," or CAG's declaration that "he's not surrounded, but rather, at the center of a target-rich environment," only serves to strenthen my position.
I've traversed the globe many times and lived in what many Americans would call a "real," (again, to use your word), police state. I know a police state when I see one. But in the end I guess it depends on what you mean by "police state." For me, a "police state" is any place where the police don't obey the laws they're entrusted to enforce. Where they "badge" their way out of tickets, for example. If the shoe fits...
Elton