
Thanks, Charles, for the attached rant. Very amusing. Me, I prefer to tell the truth, and if that means that I don't abide by your standard of "graciousness," so be it. I've run into the Federalist Society a few times before. I occasionally go to their conferences, and I know they've been active in such HEINOUS dealings as: -- arguing against the Communications Decency Act -- arguing against state-by-state content regulation of the Internet -- arguing for your right to speak anonymously online -- arguing for your right to use and distribute encryption freely Yes, folks, you heard it here first. These folks are evil and must NOT be allowed to hold seminars for judges. (Only leftists are allowed this particular trick.) BTW, if Charles had half a clue, he'd know George Mason's law and economic schools are not particularly conservative, but are instead free-market and libertarian. (How many conservatives opposed the CDA?) The Federalist Society is also generally libertarian. Libertarians are not pro-big business; they oppose corporate welfare and special-interest lobying. Such as what Charles seems to endorse. -Declan At 18:49 -0500 12/21/97, charles mueller wrote:
Declan McCullagh, still displaying a reluctance to debate with graciousness (below), now wonders if I've heard of the Federalist Society. "PS: I wonder if Mueller knows about the Federalist Society, which is a group of libertarian-leaning lawyers and law professors. Among other things, they make a point of educating judges about (gasp!) economic theory and this concept of a government strictly limited in its powers..."
I've been reporting on this propaganda mill for roughly 2 decades-- and have published hundreds of pages on it. (See my January post on the subject, below.)
Charles Mueller, Editor ANTITRUST LAW & ECONOMICS REVIEW http://webpages.metrolink.net/~cmueller
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Return-Path: <antitrust@essential.org> Date: Wed, 15 Jan 1997 19:04:50 -0500 (EST) Errors-To: antitrust-owner@essential.org Reply-To: cmueller@metrolink.net Originator: antitrust@essential.org Sender: antitrust@essential.org From: cmueller@metrolink.net (cmueller) To: Multiple recipients of list <antitrust@essential.org> Subject: GMU's "Law & Economics Center" X-Listprocessor-Version: 6.0c -- ListProcessor by Anastasios Kotsikonas
Perhaps I can add some information on the "Law & Economics Center" at George Mason. My journal first reported on its teach-in with the federal judges in 1981 (Vol. 13, No. 3, pp. 70-71) and the following year I physically visited the University of Miami campus (where it was then housed) and did extensive interviews with several of the Center's people. Those interviews, plus another interview series I did at Emory University in Atlanta when the Center moved there, and finally at George Mason itself after the 3rd move, fill a number of my issues, beginning with Vol. 14, No. 2 (1982). I've also reported on a couple of the legal challenges (unsuccessful) to the Center's indoctrination of the federal judges. For example, U.S. District Judge Spencer Williams presided over a predatory pricing case against ITT Continental Baking (Wonder Bread) some years back. The day after the jury began its deliberations, Judge Williams left San Francisco to begin attendance at a 2-week "economics" seminar presented by the Law & Economics Center at the Royal Biscayne Hotel in Miami. While he was gone, his jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff in the amount of $5 million which, under the law, he was bound to triple to $15 million. Instead, he returned from Florida, overturned the jury's verdict, and wrote a letter to Henry Manne in Miami that read in part as follows: "As a result of my better understanding of the concept of marginal cost, I have recently set aside a $15 million antitrust verdict. I will send you a copy of the memorandum [opinion] as soon as it is prepared." (See my journal, Vol. 17, No. 2 (1985), p. 13.) Nan Aron and her colleagues at the Alliance for Justice in Washington published a monograph on the subject--Justice for Sale In America--in 1993 and I reprinted the key chapters in my journal, beginning with Vol. 24, No. 3 (1993). For earlier background, see Fortune, May 21, 1979; Washington Post, January 20, 1980; and The Nation, January 26, 1980. Put simply, this "Center" is a right-wing propaganda mill masquerading as a purveyor of academic "economics." The "teachers" have been Harold Demsetz and others from the University of Chicago and its major academic outposts (paid at an hourly rate commensurate with the up to $600 per hour commanded by George Stigler and the others as antitrust "experts" in court). No opposing economists have ever been allowed to appear before the judges. When I asked the Center's people why they didn't permit distinguished non-Chicago economists to share the podium at these judicial teach-ins, they laughed and said, "Let them go start their OWN seminars for the judges!" I asked to be allowed to just sit in as an OBSERVER with the judges and/or the 200 antitrust law professors (who have been run through a similar indoctrination program) and Henry Manne himself responded to my request (by telephone), No, "We keep it all in the family." (Manne, who had been a law professor at the University of Rochester, founded the "Center" in 1974 at the University of Miami, then moved it to Emory and finally to George Mason. A federal judge--Judge Hoffman, as I recall--helped him get the approval of the judiciary's executive body in Washington, headed by the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court. The money to finance these sessions at luxury resorts (mostly at Key Biscayne and other Florida beach towns) was originally gotten directly from Fortune 500 companies who had experienced the sting of antitrust prosecution; in response to some criticism of that obvious conflict of interest, Manne, with some creative accounting, arranged it so that the seminars for the judges themselves--in 1981, the cost was $5,000 per judge per 2-week seminar--were thereafter paid for exclusively by the corporate foundations, e.g., Schaife, Olin, etc., rather than by active firms that frequently appear before the judges as antitrust defendants. With this accounting twist, the judiciary gave its full blessing to the operation.) I also did an interview with a federal appeals judge in Washington (DC Circuit). He saw nothing wrong with Manne's program, even assuming it was pure propaganda designed specifically to bias the federal judiciary against the antitrust laws and in favor of corporate monopoly. Why? (1) First, he said, judges are, by the nature of their work, "immune" to propaganda of all kinds. They hear so much argument on so many sides of every issue that it's simply impossible to "bias" them via argument. (2) Second, he told me, federal judges have every RIGHT to be as intellectually "biased" as they like and to DEVELOP those intellectual biases with the help of WHOEVER they please. For example, he said, suppose I go to the beach for a weekend with 3 volumes of Karl Marx's writings in my briefcase. I find Marx so persuasive that I come back to my chambers on Monday, throw away an opinion I had just written on one of the cases before me, and proceed to write a new one giving my decision to the opposite party. Karl Marx "biased" me to change my decision. He had every right to do it--and I had every right to LET him do it. George Mason University law school and its economics department aren't scholarly enterprises at all; they're hired propagandists, awash in corporate money awarded precisely for the purpose of making a contrived "economic" case for laissez-faire monopoly. They get away with it for one reason and one reason only: Manne's operation had the approval of Reagan's Justice Department (rember Ed Meese?) and now it has the blessing of Clinton's. All it would take to bring it to a halt would be a couple of speeches by, say, the Attorney General and, if necessary, by Clinton himself. If Justice treated it as the outrage that it plainly is, the press--and the ensuing public condemnation--would purge the judiciary of this 20-year scandal within a matter of weeks. Charles Mueller, Editor ANTITRUST LAW & ECONOMICS REVIEW http://www.metrolink.net/~cmueller/
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