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Culture War Roundup for the week of April 27, 2026

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On an article on viewpoint diversity in the Law at the University of Chicago. Sunstein Viewpoint Diversity

Growing up I believed according to American mythology that the law is blind. Everyone knows of the Blind Justice Statue of the Roman Goddess Justitia. This always implied to me (perhaps being an engineer) that the law was like math 2+2 =4. Word x+y has meaning Z. The whole idea that adding a bunch of words together lacks a definable meaning to me makes no sense. Law shouldn’t have theory. It should be math especially if it is going to be blind and not swayed by public opinion. There should be no theory involved. I guess this makes me a textualists. But it turns out at places like UC that you have 10-20 smart clusters of people who all have different solutions to 2+2 = 4.

Law being like math I believe should definitely apply to judges. Legal theory can be useful for a lawyer who works for a Senator who is writing legislation. Then legal theory has a purpose of designing the equations to get a law that does what you want.

One thing that came out of UC was applying economics to law. This again I have no problem with adding economics to new legislation you create. But from my understanding of legal history judges began adding economic tests to old law. To me this is like discovering that 2+2 had a different answer than the 4 that was a correct answer.

Once I realized the law as practiced is not mathematics I switched my judicial philosophy from some form of originalism to Ketanji Brown theory. I just want a judge who votes the way I want her to and do not care if she’s worse at arguing her theory than another guy. The best I can tell from history is that when public opinion on an issue changes the legal theorists of the smart guy at UC becomes the theory everyone else begins to quote. I prefer to just pick judges who back the policy I want in the current legal environment.

Pragmatically the law has never been blind. The criminal justice system has always judged poor dumb kids differently than rich smart kids. The same crime committed by an urban youth versus a Kennedy kid has never been punished the same way. A big reason for this is the court had a reasonable expectations that the Kennedy’s had the resources to deal with the behavior internally and society didn’t need to spend resources to make sure the crime didn’t happen again.

Thank you for the article! I quite enjoyed it. Reminded me of what Feynman wrote about great men. It reminds me of the episode "The Supremes" in The West Wing Season 5 as well. I thought your arc pretty much is the story of idealists being disappointed with reality and become a cynic. I think "Justice" with the capital J is like "Truth", it is something almost always unreachable, yet the correct thing, and the beautiful thing, is to keep striving towards it. The legal system, and as the article demonstrates or that West Wing episode dramatizes, benefits from intelligent, talented, thoughtful, experienced, and hard-working individuals with variety of viewpoints coming together to inspect problems from a variety of angles so that in the debate and discussion and verbal sparring and arguments, something closer to "Justice" can be found. At least, that's my optimistic takeaway.

Edit1: Oh man I love the clip, everyone should watch it (only 2m36s) https://youtube.com/watch?v=cYR3ZzOBg1Q

Honestly I hate this view. Law shouldn’t be debatable. It’s should be black and white. And this I think will increasingly be an issue. Sure I can nerd out and think the debates are intellectually stimulating, but at the end of the day a Dem will vote one way and a GOP the other way. You might as well just nominating Ketanjis who might write poorly but vote your way versus a Scalia. It’s basically just a super Senate. The opinions are just a game for some nerds.

A big reason we got here is because justices thought it was an interpretive game to twist some words to get the political outcome they wanted instead of calling balls and strikes.