Sentences with phrase «writing simple justice»

Writing Simple Justice never interferes with life or practice.
Thank you, Scott, for a fabulous five years writing Simple Justice.
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.

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.
, approved in eight states and D.C., may also improve turnout via «two transformative, yet simple, changes,» the Brennan Center for Justice, a nonpartisan public policy institution based at New York University Law School, has written.
Automatic voter registration, approved in eight states and D.C., may also improve turnout via «two transformative, yet simple, changes,» the Brennan Center for Justice, a nonpartisan public policy institution based at New York University Law School, has written.
THE JUDGE has high - minded goals beyond making itself Oscar ™ - bait, but issues of justice, rule of law, and the simple joys of small - town life don't stand a chance against writing that relentlessly panders to Academy ™ voters, particularly when they run smack up against a courtroom scene that is deliberately staged to look like something out of TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD, a film we are put in mind of when Hank mentions Atticus Finch.
«In the earliest public schools, teachers taught and students listened,» U.S. Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas has written approvingly about that simpler era in American education.
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.
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.
Scott Greenfield wrote on Simple Justice that new bloggers looking to him to provide them with undeserved attention and recognition have
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.
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.
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.
And for proof that a simple, direct writing style isn't a newfangled idea, we need only consult some well - known 19th - and early - 20th - Century writers and Supreme Court justices.
One he followed was Scott Greenfield, who writes at Simple Justice that Conley's actions revealed «a gaping hole in Twitter and a sad failing in lawyers.»
Finally, to paraphrase Scott Greenfield, author of the Simple Justice blawg: «Just because anyone can write a blog, doesn't mean everyone should.»
After well over nine months, enough has been said and written about the Jackson reforms but little if any attention has been given to what now seems to be a clear picture of the driving force behind these changes: civil justice for personal injury claimants is to be rationed, based upon the simple value of the claim rather than its substantive merits.
Scott Greenfield, who writes the brilliant Simple Justice, asked (via Twitter) bloggers to blog about programs that use wreaths to honor those who died in the service to their country.
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