While Charon QC seems sympathetic to Molyneux, Scott H. Greenfield at
Simple Justice believes the magistrate exceeded the bounds of propriety:
Not exact matches
I am a
simple, honest, gentle man who passionately
believes in the principles of equality, fairness,
justice,...
As the Department of
Justice faces off with the major publishers and Apple, I want to offer up a
simple statement that likely contradicts what most readers
believe: Making e-books is harder than it looks.
«These are ambitious, innovative and exciting plans and I
believe they could make the
justice system
simpler and more user - friendly.»
** Going forward I
believe the importance of any single event should be evaluated by whether or not it prompts Scott Greenfield to re-open
Simple Justice for a post, i.e., does the event meet «The Greenfield Test.»
Not surprisingly, Scott Greenfield, the blogosphere's most prolific law blogger (if you don't
believe me, then take a look at his monthly archives in the left menu bar of his blog) has done
Simple Justice to Blawg Review # 170.
His recommendations, which he
believed would improve the ordinary citizen's access to
justice, included the introduction of
simpler unified rules, more court control, free advice for litigants in person and greater use of information technology.
Ghostblawging (a term I
believe coined by Scott Greenfield at
Simple Justice and Mark W. Bennett at Defending People) is the natural evolution of Web 2.0 snake oil salesmen promising SEO fueled riches with nary a thought or effort.
she
believes Scott at
Simple Justice provided her private email account under which she had commented to another commenter who in turn sent her an objectionable email to her private email account.