Americans Must Quietly Demand Judicial Accountability
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Americans Must Quietly Demand Judicial Accountability
It is April 8. Welcome to yestohellwith.com.
The future of justice in America depends upon ordinary people quietly demanding accountability.
Not with anger. Not with hatred. Not with chaos.
But with knowledge. With courage. With respect.
Too many Americans assume that if a judge says something, it must be correct.
But judges are human. They make mistakes. They become impatient. Sometimes they become part of the very system they are supposed to restrain.
That is why the judicial canons exist.
The canons are a reminder that judges serve justice—not themselves, not the government, and not convenience.
The American people do not need to attack judges. They simply need to know the rules and quietly insist that the rules be followed.
If enough people do that, the system changes.
Because a judge who knows that the people understand the canons, understand the record, and understand the duty of impartiality is far less likely to abandon those duties.
The Liberty Dialogues is not about hostility toward the courts.
It is about restoring the proper order.
Authority. Jurisdiction. Status. Standing. Obligation.
And in every case, a judge must remain a neutral and honorable referee of that process.
That is not too much to ask. It is the very foundation of justice.
And as always, may truth reign supreme.
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