Please note that these links do exist -- but
they're in the process of being shuffled around a little because of some
asshole making an issue of my web sites in court. If one doesn't work today
-- it will very soon. I'm guessing November 30, 2005!
In
June of 1998, I sold a very good company for a very good price
because I refused to accept paying tens of thousands of dollars
every year settling frivolous lawsuits as the ordinary cost of doing
business. These suits were often Class-action suits filed by a small
cottage industry of lawyers who specialized in this extortion. It
was cheaper to spend $5,000 to settle these bogus suits than to pay
$100,000 in attorney fees to win. The lead client would get about
$1,000 and the Lawyer would get about $4,000 for his 20 minutes
work.
The
courts basically turned their head to this practice as these lawyers
contribute heavily to see that the judges won elections. It was like
paying protection to the Mafia and I couldn’t take it any more — so
I sold the company to someone who could accept this as a normal
business expense. The trail lawyers bank-roll Democrats, so if you
vote Democrat — your contributing to the problem. Lawyers and Unions
(both who keep the scum in office) are the biggest problem standing
in the way of America being as great as it could be. Below is
another example of legal extortion.
November 4, 2000
Lawyers Plan Slave
Reparations Suit
By PAUL SHEPARD
..c The Associated Press
A powerful group of civil rights and class-action lawyers who have
won billions of dollars in court are preparing a lawsuit seeking
reparations for American blacks descended from slaves.
The project, called the
Reparations Assessment Group, was confirmed by Harvard law professor
Charles J. Ogletree and appears to be the most serious effort yet to
get American blacks compensated for 244 years of legalized slavery.
Lawsuits and legislation dating back to the mid-1800s have gone
nowhere.
``We will be seeking more
than just monetary compensation,'' Ogletree said. ``We want a change
in America. We want full recognition and a remedy of how slavery
stigmatized, red, murdered and exploited millions of Africans
through no fault of their own.''
Ogletree said the group,
which includes famed attorney Johnnie Cochran, first met in July and
will hold its fourth meeting in Washington D.C. later this month.
``This country has never
dealt with slavery. It is America's nightmare. A political solution
would be the most sensible but I don't have a lot of faith that's
going to happen. So we need to look aggressively at the legal
alternative,'' Ogletree said.
For now, there are more
questions than answers in the planned litigation. Left to be
determined are when the suit will be filed, exactly who will be
named as defendants and what damages will be sought.
Ogletree declined to discuss
specifics but said the federal government, state governments and
private entities such as corporations and institutions that
benefited from slave labor could be targets of the legal action.
``Both public and private
parties will be the subject of our efforts,'' he said.
Ogletree said the Reparation
Assessment Group includes attorneys Cochran and Alexander J. Pires
Jr., who won a $1 billion settlement for black farmers who claimed
discrimination by the U.S. Department of Agriculture; Richard
Scruggs, who won the $368.5 billion settlement for states against
tobacco companies; Dennis C. Sweet III, who won a $400 million
settlement in the ``phen-fen'' diet drug case; and Willie E. Gary,
who won a $500 million judgment against the Loewen Group Inc., the
world's largest funeral home operators.
Also in the group is Randall
Robinson, president of the TransAfrica Forum, a think tank
specializing in African, Caribbean and African-American issues.
Robinson recently wrote the book ``The Debt: What America Owes to
Blacks,'' which argues for reparations.
``This will be the most
important case in the history of our country,'' Pires said Friday.
``We all agree the suit has to tell the story of what slavery has
done to blacks in America ...
``We are still suffering
from slavery's impacts today,'' Pires said.
Ogletree said the assessment
group will call on experts in education, politics, family
development, health and economics to help trace how slavery's
outgrowths such as segregated schooling and neighborhoods have
affected society today.
Enslavement of Africans in
America began in the 1600s. A slave sale was recorded in 1619 in
Jamestown, Va. The ``peculiar institution'' helped to fuel the
prosperity of the young nation, while also dividing it. Slavery was
not officially abolished until the 1863, during the Civil War.
Reparation supporters point
to recent cases where groups have been compensated in cash for
historic indignities and harm.
A letter of formal apology
and $20,000 were given by the U.S. government to each
Japanese-American held in internment camps during World War II.
Austria last week
established a $380 million fund to compensate tens of thousands of
Nazi-era slave laborers who were born in six eastern European
countries.
Reparation opponents argue
that victims in the Nazi and Japanese-American cases were directly
harmed while many generations separate enslaved blacks and their
modern-day descendants.
In addition, those opposed
to reparations say it isn't fair for taxpayers and corporations who
never owned slaves to be burdened with possible multibillion dollar
settlements.
Neither Ogletree nor Pires
mentioned any industry or company that could be a target of the
suit.
But Pires said there were
overlaps between the slavery of past centuries and today's
corporations. He noted that Aetna Inc., the nation's largest health
insurer, apologized earlier this year for selling policies in the
1850s that reimbursed slave owners for financial losses when their
slaves died.
In July, The Hartford
(Conn.) Courant newspaper published a front-page apology for running
ads for slave sales and the recapture of runaways in the 1700s and
1800s. Such advertisements were commonplace in many newspapers until
the Civil War.
Pires was one of the lawyers
in the assessment group who discussed reparations in the November
issue of Harper's magazine.
Pires said he believes that
any monetary settlement or damage figure should be among the last
items discussed as the suit takes shape. He said it is more
important to tell the story to all Americans of what slavery did to
the country ``and let people decide what should be done to repay.''
``Most people,'' he said,
``don't like having dirt on their hands.''
AP-NY-11-04-00 1321EST
Copyright 2000 The
Associated Press
If you
don’t think you are paying for this, consider that every cup of
McDonald’s coffee, every ladder, and every football helmet (to list
just a couple of thousands of things lawyers sue for) you buy —
you’re dreaming. If you don’t think that business insurance
increases aren’t passed to consumers — you’re dreaming. If you don’t
think that this is the number one reason for medical bills being
raised by 2,000% in the last twenty years — you’re dreaming. If you
think that only rich people and companies pay for this, and none of
it has caused the inflation of goods and services to you — you’re
dreaming. The lawyers and the political campaigns of Democrats are
the only ones winning. You and I lose! The next time someone tells
you about how they hired a lawyer to screw an insurance company,
remind that person they are part of the problem.