Sentences with phrase «on simple justice»

How is it that Marco «supports» the behavior on Simple Justice?
It's no secret that one of Greenfield's «passions,» besides connecting the dots on Simple Justice and his work as a criminal defense lawyer, is taking baby lawyers to school.
Scott Greenfield also discussed flawgs recently on his Simple Justice blog in a post entitled, The Year of the Flawg.
Read Win, Lose or Draw: Marketing Your Batting Average on Simple Justice.
In response to Scott's post, a commenter on the Simple Justice blog noted that «Mike McQueary was a graduate student back then.
As pointed out here by Scott Greenfield on his Simple Justice blog, Gradeless appears to have found a way to monetize his massive following on Twitter through a service called Sponsored Tweets, which hooks «Tweeters» like Gradeless up with advertisers who want to reach their supposedly vast audiences (although as discussed here, a person's numbers of Twitter followers can be a pretty meaningless figure).
In his post on the case on the Simple Justice blog, criminal defense attorney Scott Greenfield agreed, writing that the fact that Jenkins was «being prosecuted because an incredibly ugly image on his body makes the cops feel angry and hurt, not to mention disrespected, goes well over the line.
Today, Scott Greenfield added to this discussion on his Simple Justice blog, pointing out that big follower numbers continue to impress many Twitter users who lack «a clear understanding that followers on Twitter are too often named «Britney» or [are] themselves only interested in gathering as many followers as possible in their simplistic quest at marketing hegemony.»
Last week, Scott Greenfield wrote on his Simple Justice blog about a panel discussion that almost occurred at the Avvocating conference, put on by lawyer listings site Avvo, but never did.
Scott Greenfield wrote on Simple Justice that new bloggers looking to him to provide them with undeserved attention and recognition have
After thousands of posts on Simple Justice, and probably tens (or hundreds) of thousands of comments on his posts, Greenfield can sometimes see what is coming before he hits the publish button.
This prompted a flurry of discussion in this post on the Simple Justice blog (written by [email protected], aka Scott Greenfield) and ultimately here on Legal Blog Watch as to the validity of Rule # 1033.

Not exact matches

The best single article I've seen on the moral case for parental choice in education is «School Choice as Simple Justice,» published in First Things (April 1992) and written by Prof. John Coons of the law school of the University of California, Berkeley.
The «apologist,» on the other hand, knows that institutions can not be based on such a principle and that simple justice must instead be the motive.
«The Queen's Justice» is powered by long - awaited meetings and lengthy jousts of dialogue, and it delivers on almost all fronts: Jon is simple and stubborn; Dany is intractable until she gets Tyrion's sly counsel; Cersei delivers a monologue that both summarizes years of backstory and explains her plan with a relish that would make any Bond villain envious; Lady Olenna's Blunt Talk Express reaches its terminus with Jaime; and Bran and Sansa definitely talk.
If Rudy Giuliani had somehow been elected governor, can you imagine his ever signing into law what David Paterson did on the basis of simple justice?
The former justice secretary would lumber on stage, with little grace but considerable charisma, and give his audience a simple message.
My pictures on my cheapy flip phone do not do justice to the intricate beauty of this simple scarf.
Those billboards may be alone in a field on an almost entirely disused road, but when Mildred rents them from the local ad agency (run by Caleb Landry Jones) and puts up a provocative and simple three part message calling out the police for the lack of justice for her slain child, the close - knit little town is thrown into chaos.
The movie perhaps best serves as a primer for those unfamiliar with the original film, which is a richer, far more complex work (The ending, in particular, not only contradicts a character's firm stance on justice but also resolves things in the simplest of ways).
I told this story to a group of two dozen or so of my fellow ed reformers last week at an American Enterprise Institute convening on «race, social justice, and school reform» because I wanted to make two simple (some will say simplistic) points: our expensive and aggressive ed reform efforts still focus far too little on what kids do in school all day; and we don't all have the same ideas about what it means to serve the cause of social justice — or whether it is even appropriate to place social justice issues at the heart of our efforts to improve outcomes for kids.
Plain and simple: we are on a mission for social justice.
Its focus is simple: saving cash and fighting for financial justice on anything and everything.
Reacher is still shaken by the recent horrors of «Make Me» and now «The Midnight Line» sees him on a simple quest for justice.
Professor Rosenblum does himself less than justice: he is neither the simple mainline neoconservative that he pretends or the swinging elder statesman evoked by his repeated claims of solidarity with «art historians... of a younger generation» and «anyone under forty,» but an original and sometimes brilliantly eccentric critic, distinguished among other things for his persuasive work on the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries as well as for his astonishingly early and penetratingly intelligent recognition of Jasper Johns, Roy Lichtenstein, and Frank Stella.
As I write this I have become homeless, unpaid rent on my small apartment in London is just another nail in my proverbial coffin, The 8 years I waited on the register doesn't count or the 20 years with the Housing Association, so even if I were to finally have justice in court and return to the UK my status is simple... Homeless.
With so very little going on in the legal world, let me direct you to the Simple Justice «Great Book Giveaway Contest.»
Scott Greenfield at Simple Justice agrees that law school education needs to change, and focus on what ought to be its mission: preparing students to become lawyers.
In the «5 Years» post, Scott looked back on the years he's been writing Simple Justice, the things that prompted him to write, the significant changes in the blogosphere, friends and enemies made, and more.
In both Elite Taxi and Uber France and in accordance with the Advocate General's Opinion in that first case (discussed previously on this blog), the Court of Justice rejected this line of defence, confirming that Uber itself, through its UberPOP application, offers more than simple intermediation.
While reading the Simple Justice blog today (it must have been an old post as I know I wrote a fond «Farewell to «Simple Justice» and Scott Greenfield» post back in February 2012 when Simple Justice shut down), I saw two references to young lawyers who tried placing free ads on Craigslist but ultimately rejected this business development tactic as undignified.
Although it is always desirable to move on promptly with litigation, the simple fact is that in certain cases the interests of justice demand a rather more stately and measured pace than would be proper with regard to another class of action.
On Monday morning, Scott Greenfield added a post to his Simple Justice blog («5 Years») marking that prolific blog's five - year anniversary.
Scaffidi & Associates was founded in 1985 on the simple yet vital principal that everyone, regardless of circumstance, is entitled to equal justice under the law.
How much information it's appropriate for a blawger to reveal about the matters on which he's working, morally, ethically, and according to the dictates of common sense, is a subject of much debate, some of which is hosted by Scott Greenfield at Simple Justice.
So I asked Scott Greenfield who represented Bluestone (and who reported on the case at his blog, Simple Justice to comment on the implications of the decision for bloggers.
While there may be the occasional headline - grabbing incidents of «bail gone bad», for the vast majority of people on bail, pre-trial release simple recognizes the fact that our criminal justice system presumes all accused persons to be innocent until proven guilty.
I can think of no better way to frame what I would like to say in this week's blog — on our monthly theme of «Clearer and Simpler Court Forms & Processes for SRLs» — than Mr. Justice David Brown's remarkable end - of - term speech to the Ontario Bar Association last week (2014.
That's one of the issues that Scott Greenfield beefs about in his post on the Roberts dissent at Simple Justice.
Commenting on the Illinois suspensions at Simple Justice, Scott Greenfield also criticizes CLE, in particular, mocking the quality of many of the courses:
When the parties appeared before Justice Pazaratz he told them to go and discuss the matter to see if they could reach a «sensible resolution» and that «if they didn't come to their senses I would formally request that the Area Director of Legal Aid Ontario attend before me to justify the obscene expenditure of tax money on a simple case with such an obvious solution» (para 31).
Earlier this week, Scott Greenfield at Simple Justice posted here about a criminal defendant who nearly spent 30 years in jail for conviction on a murder charge that had previously been dismissed.
- Simple Justice: Skewering the ABA Journal for «us [ing] an unemployed law school grad to teach lawyers across America how to get business based on [Twitter] twits.»
«We all thought early on that computers were going to solve all our problems in litigation because the answer to everything would be at our fingertips with the simple press of a button,» said Nova Scotia Justice John Scanlan, «but in many ways just the opposite has happened.»
The second question, as to why the focus on social justice, rather than for example, legal issues connected to derivatives trading, is perhaps a simple one.
-LSB-...] Posted by Kramer on June 3, 2009 Generation Y has a bad rap in the workplace these days. We're lazy, don't want to show up on time or actually do any work, and we expect to have the corner office from the day we walk in the door. And if law is your chosen field, you can't really do that. Over at his fine blog, Simple Justice, Scott Greenfield took issue with Gen Y lawyer and blogger Adrian Dayton, that Gen Y isn't really lazy, we just want our work to actually have a point.
This is plain to see in his writings on his award - winning blog Simple Justice.
But Scott Greenfield at Simple Justice, while warning against do - it - yourself litigation, nonetheless says: «Don't begrudge pro se litigants the opportunity to make their case on the merits despite the roadblocks the law places in front of them.»
We'll be the first to admit that our showcase of the system during prime cruddy - day - time - TV scheduling hours doesn't do it justice — but if you're looking for a simple no - fuss way to get your favorite show or sporting event on all your devices so you can watch hockey or your favorite cop show anywhere, no wires needed, the HDHomeRun really shines.
Devil May Cry HD Collection may bring Dante's first three adventures on current - gen platforms, but a simple port does not do these PS2 classics any justice.
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