Mirror of Justice

A blog dedicated to the development of Catholic legal theory.
Affiliated with the Program on Church, State & Society at Notre Dame Law School.

Thursday, July 17, 2014

Some Notes on the Libertas Project's Religious Freedom Workshop

I am just back from passing a wonderful few days of fellowship and reflection at the Libertas Project's workshop on religious freedom, hosted by the gracious and erudite Michael Moreland at Villanova Law School and sponsored by the generous Templeton Foundation. Together with other MOJ denizens Kevin Walsh and Michael Scaperlanda, I had the pleasure of talking together with a terrific group of learned political theorists, historians, theologians, and law professors about various issues--old and new--concerning the historical trajectory and current condition of the right of religious freedom.

Zak Calo and I had the privilege of moderating the seven sessions of the workshop. And the three of us--Michael, Zak, and I--worked together to assemble a panoramic set of readings to direct the group's attentions and reflections:

  • Chapters from Brad Gregory's The Unintended Reformation and Mark Lilla's The Stillborn God kicked things off
  • A historical session on Burke, the relationship of establishment and regimes of religious toleration, and the intellectual history of the maxim, "Christianity is part of the common law"
  • A session that included readings by Murray and Niebuhr set against United States v. Seeger
  • A session that considered Pope Benedict XVI's Regensburg Address, Micah Schwartzman's article about the moral justifiability of religion's special constitutional protection, and Town of Greece v. Galloway
  • And finally a few sessions devoted to Steve Smith's recent book, The Rise and Decline of American Religious Freedom, with applications to and speculations about various contemporary controversies

In all it was an extremely successful and productive event bringing together a broad range of disciplinary expertise and insight. I'll have a bit more to say about some of the more particular subjects that interested me, but for now just want to congratulate Michael on organizing this excellent conference.

"The inferiority of a Jesuit education"

Would any educated person today care whether someone was educated by Jesuits?  Harvard used to refuse Catholics *because* of their Catholic education. Good for Harvard, in a way.  

Monday, July 14, 2014

Idolatry of the Corporate Form?: A Response to Rev. John Whitney, S.J.

 

AMDG

It used to be the case that members of the Society of Jesus could be expected to offer their opinions about the issues of the day in the pages of America Magazine in a thoughtful and restrained manner in accord with their apostolic purpose: to strive for the defense and propagation of the faith and for the progress of souls in Christian life and doctrine—all done to serve the Lord under the Roman Pontiff.   Not so in the age of the blogger/priest/activist as evidenced by a recent post at the America website by John D. Whitney, S.J. (here) criticizing the Supreme Court’s recent decision in Burwell v. Hobby Lobby.  From what I can tell, Fr. Whitney is neither a lawyer nor a political scientist.  (Certainly his comments on Hobby Lobby do not reflect the thoughtfulness that ought to come with this kind of professional training).  Of course, one does not need to possess these kinds of formal credentials in order to comment on a Supreme Court opinion, but to do so intelligently one’s work must be invested with the rigor that the subject demands. When, in addition, one is also a member of the Society of Jesus, this responsibility is intensified by the objective of serving the Church consistent with the purpose of the Society.

Sadly, these qualities are absent from Fr. Whitney’s remarks, and these absences lead him to offer a conclusion that can aptly be described as over-the-top.  For Whitney the Hobby Lobby decision “ascribe[s] to a corporation the basic rights of a human being” and this is “a type of idolatry” and “the ultimate effect of decisions such as Hobby Lobby and Citizens United” is to not only “grant disproportionate rights to the owners of corporations, but also to eradicate the distinction which raises the human person above a merely legal creation.”

The first indication that Fr. Whitney has not really invested his post with the serious thought that the subject matter requires is his casual assumption that the drugs and medical services at issue in the case were merely contraceptive in effect and not genuinely destructive of nascent human life.  He does so in a backhanded fashion through use of the subjunctive: “Even if one opposes the contraceptive methods [sic] which are the source of the Hobby Lobby case – believing they are not contraceptive at all but the cause of early term abortion . . . .”

The Court demurred on the issue of whether the four methods to which Hobby Lobby objected – the drugs Ella and Plan B, and the Copper IUD and the IUD with progestin – were abortifacient in nature as the resolution of this factual question was not necessary to the Court’s analysis in applying RFRA.  Although the proponents of these various methods have argued that they are not abortifacient in nature (here), had Fr. Whitney bothered to investigate the matter he would have discovered that the bulk of scientific evidence indicates that the methods at issue in the case can operate in an abortifacient fashion. (See the article here citing to the specific scientific literature).  That is, while some of these methods may work to prevent the creation of a human embryo by preventing ovulation, they are also known to cause the destruction of human embryos that have already formed through the meeting of sperm and ova.  They can work to bring about the demise of the human embryo by preventing uterine implantation, or causing the expulsion of the embryo following implantation by preventing maturation of the uterine endometrium.

Why Fr. Whitney would uncritically repeat (even if only in a backhanded fashion) the talking points of those who both oppose religious liberty and support the culture of death is a mystery, but it cannot be attributed to a careful reading of the available scientific literature.

The bulk of Fr. Whitney’s post focuses on his quite uncontroversial claim that corporations are “legal fictions created to protect individuals from liability and risk.”  Of course this general description applies whether the entity is for-profit or not-for-profit. Whitney says that protecting individuals from liability and risk is designed “to encourage investment and economic development” when in fact this feature of the corporate form goes beyond business entities oriented toward for-profit investment. 

Here it is worth recalling that local churches (dioceses), religious institutes (orders of vowed religious) as well as hospitals, universities and charitable organizations that operate under church-sponsorship are organized as corporations.  This is something that Fr. Whitney surely knows since the Oregon Province of the Society of Jesus is a corporation (an Oregon domestic non-profit religious corporation) that he headed for six years as provincial superior.  Indeed, the Oregon Province is a corporation under civil law and an ecclesiastical entity and juridic person under canon law. 

Whitney says that, as creatures of the state, the rights of corporations were historically “determined by the legislature” but that these rights “were not seen as intrinsic.”  He contrasts the Lockean understanding of rights as a matter of public contract (which make rights a matter of prudence “contingent on the perceived needs of the group”) with the Catholic tradition according to which “fundamental rights are not granted by the state nor by the majority but by God.”  From this perspective rights enable men and women to fulfill God’s call and “pursue the good life of communion and justice.”  Whitney’s concern is that “granting the rights of citizens to corporate structures . . . means that the owners are somehow given disproportionate power, and the rights of those with wealth supersede the rights of those without.”  Indeed, he fears that this gives the owners of corporations “a double-dose of rights” and that this places “their rights over and above the rights of employees and ordinary citizens.”  He says that the effect of the Court’s decision is to give a “fictional entity the authority to make moral decisions on behalf of natural persons.”

Several things could be said in response to this.

(1) First, Hobby Lobby is very much in keeping with the recognition of corporate entities as creatures of the state whose rights are subject to legislative control.  Indeed, the Hobby Lobby decision is an exercise in statutory interpretation in which the Court concluded that, by its own terms, RFRA applies to “persons” and that Congress intended the term to include not only individuals (i.e., natural persons) but entities such as corporations, partnerships and associations, which are legal persons.  Congress is of course free to amend the statute if it so chooses, and some Democratic members of Congress have already proposed doing so.

(2) Fr. Whitney refers to the status of corporations as “legal fictions” and as “fictional entities.”  This description is undoubtedly true insofar as such entities are not flesh-and-blood human beings.  A corporation does enjoy a kind of legal personality, however, and this is a “fiction” insofar as it is not a natural person, but it is and remains a legal person that has many of the rights and obligations under the law that natural persons possess.

But the rhetoric of “legal fiction” should not obscure the underlying reality.  Corporations, partnerships, associations and other organizations are entities constituted by individuals.  Whether a for-profit corporation like Hobby Lobby or a not-for-profit corporation like the Oregon Province of the Society of Jesus, these entities are collections of persons.  Indeed, operating under Christian inspiration, a business can be a genuine community of persons dedicated to the common goal of the business venture.  It is very much a part of the Catholic tradition, and the Catholic understanding of how a well-ordered society ought to be structured, that individuals and groups have the freedom to come together to form “intermediate organizations” including businesses engaged in the provision of goods and services.

Moreover, corporations may reflect moral values in how they conduct their affairs – whether in implementing certain “green” practices as the Hobby Lobby majority noted (Slip Op. at 23), hiring for “diversity,” or refusing to do business with companies overseas that employ child labor.  Through the conscience of its owners and managers a corporation can reflect moral and religious values in how it does business.

As such, the corporate form and other organizational arrangements (e.g. partnerships, unions, associations, dioceses, and religious institutes) are merely the legal conventions available within our legal system that enable individuals to exercise their legal rights – including their God-given natural right to religious freedom – when they enter into the marketplace and civil society.  “Freedom of religion” is much broader than the “freedom of worship” that the Obama administration has championed before the Supreme Court.  It is not limited to prayer, rituals, and Sabbath observance.  It is the freedom to go out into the world – including the marketplace – where one’s faith is lived, where one can witness that faith to others.  It includes the right to have and live a vocation – not in the narrow sense of ordained ministry but in the copious understanding of Vatican II.  (One can see these principles at work in the Oregon Province’s own plan for reorganization available on its website (here) wherein it claims rights and obligations under the civil law).

Here it is worth recalling that the Council urged all Christians to live out the call to holiness, “to strive to discharge their earthly duties conscientiously and in response to the Gospel spirit” (Gaudium et Spes ¶ 43).  It decried the “false opposition between professional and social activities on the one part, and religious life on the other” (Id.).  Indeed, Vatican II taught that “[t]he split between the faith which many profess and their daily lives deserves to be counted among the more serious errors of our age” (Id.). 

It was, said the Council, a grave mistake for people to “think that religion consists in acts of worship alone and in the discharge of certain moral obligations” or to “imagine [that men and women] can plunge themselves into earthly affairs in such a way as to imply that these are altogether divorced from the religious life” (Id.).

Thus, the Council taught that in living out the Christian vocation in various walks of life, lay men and women “are not only bound to penetrate the world with a Christian spirit.  They are also called to be witnesses to Christ in all things in the midst of human society” (Id.). The Council urged that “[i]n the exercise of their earthly activities” Christians can “gather their humane, domestic, professional, social, and technical enterprises into one vital synthesis with religious values, under whose supreme direction all things are harmonized unto God’s glory” (Id.).

The notion that a business owner must forfeit his or her religious way of life by going into business and adopting the corporate form is incompatible with Vatican II’s understanding of the Christian vocation in the midst of the world.

(3) For these reasons, the owners of businesses do not receive a “double-dose of rights” under the Hobby Lobby decision.  They are not granted the same rights twice.  Rather, the decision merely restores to these owners the right that the government had sought to take away from individuals who enter into the marketplace and make use of the corporate form.

Similarly, the Jesuits who are members of Oregon Province of the Society of Jesus do not enjoy a “double-dose” of legal rights simply because they have taken advantage of the corporate form by establishing a juridic person.  The creation of such an entity is surely a way of limiting individual liability, but it also represents the common sense conclusion that some things simply cannot be accomplished as individuals.  They require a collaborative effort.

To see the Court’s decision as granting corporate owners a “double-dose of rights” one must subscribe to the view advanced by the Obama administration that people lose their rights when they adopt the corporate form as a means of conducting their affairs in the world, or (more narrowly) that they lose these rights when they enter the marketplace as business entities that are for-profit enterprises.  But as noted above, this is a view of the human person and his or her vocation in the world that is decidedly at odds with the vision of the Council and, one might add, the grand tradition of Catholic moral theory and canon law.

(4) The respective rights of distinct individuals inevitably come into conflict.  But this takes place irrespective of the corporate form or the recognition organizations as entities that can engage in the “exercise of religion.”  Suppose that Hobby Lobby had not been a large national corporation, but an unincorporated sole-proprietorship (a “mom-and-pop store”), and that the HHS mandate was not limited to companies with fifty or more employees but applied to all employers.  If the sole-proprietor running the store objected to the mandate on the same grounds as the actual plaintiffs in Hobby Lobby, the same conflict of rights would arise: the right of the employee to a government mandated benefit provided at the employer’s expense, and the right of the employer to the free exercise of religion.  The prevalence of the corporate form and the recognition of corporations as possessing a right to religious freedom may make this sort of conflict more common (though I doubt it), but this is a tension that is unavoidably present in a society marked by pluralism.

It may be possible, under some circumstances, for the rights of both parties to be respected.  If there is some other “less restrictive means” through which the government may accomplish its objectives, then it is free politically to pursue this as an option going forward – a point underscored by the Hobby Lobby majority (Slip Op. at 40-43).

(5) Fr. Whitney’s claim that the effect of Hobby Lobby is to give a “fictional entity the authority to make moral decisions on behalf of natural persons” grossly mischaracterizes the Court’s decision.  The case does not stand for the proposition that an employer may decide whether or not an employee uses contraception.

With respect, to say so is to simply mimic the talking points of Planned Parenthood and other actors in the “reproductive health” industry.  Contrary to Whitney’s assertion, an employee of Hobby Lobby today is just as free to choose to use contraceptives or abortifacient drugs as before the decision.  The difference is that the federal government may not appropriate a religiously inspired business for its own purposes and coerce the company’s owners into cooperating with actions to which the owners object on religious grounds.  The holding is not that employers can now make health care decisions for their employees, but that the government cannot force an employer to pay for its employee’s use of abortifacient drugs and other techniques.

(6) Whitney says that the Catholic tradition “has long supported both negative rights, such as personal liberty, and positive rights, such as basic health care.”  Elsewhere he notes that his discussion “radically oversimplifies a complex group of theories.”  Fair enough, but here Whitney’s oversimplification is seriously misleading.  The Catholic tradition does not believe that anyone has a negative right in personal liberty to engage in actions that kill innocent human life, even if that life is in the embryonic stage.  Likewise, while the Catholic Church in the U.S. has long been supportive of a positive right to “basic health care” it does not regard contraception – let alone abortifacient drugs and other techniques that lead to the destruction of innocent, nascent human life – as “health care” at all, basic or otherwise.  Contraceptives as such do not address any physiological or other medical malady in the human body, and abortifacients do not work to preserve human life.  On the contrary, they act to destroy it.

In sum, Whitney’s hyperbolic conclusion – that recognizing organizational entities as possessing “the basic rights of a human being” is “a type of idolatry” misses the mark by a wide margin. The rights of natural and juridic persons to maintain and adhere to a moral code consistent with the common good is not idolatry but an authentic exercise of religious freedom.  Hobby Lobby does not mistake an inanimate legal fiction for a real flesh-and-blood human being.  Instead, it recognizes Congress’ conclusion that a person does not forfeit his or her rights by engaging in business and adopting the corporate form.

It is certainly true that idolatry exists today and that it surrounds much of American business.  The false idol of business is the profoundly mistaken belief that what is truly important in life (what is worth sacrificing one’s life for) is the accumulation of wealth and power.  But that is not what the Hobby Lobby case is about.  Instead, it is about the use of the corporate form to exercise religious liberty – something, one would think, a Catholic priest would strongly support.

If Fr. Whitney is truly concerned about vanquishing the idols of our day, there exists a whole pantheon against which he could direct his ire, including the idol of immorality that the culture celebrates as sexual liberation and the fulfillment of personal autonomy.  Perhaps this is unlikely (see here, here, here, and here) as Fr. Whitney appears to think that the Catechism is something that ought to be ignored (except where he thinks it ought to be followed, see here), but one can hope and pray that this member of St. Ignatius’ little company will come to embrace the full teaching of Christ’s Church by striving to defend and propagate the faith for the progress of souls in Christian life and doctrine.

 

 

 

Robert Christian on Obama's Pro-Family Proposals

Robert Christian, of the Millennial blog and Democrats for Life, writes at Time of the President's policy proposals at the recent White House summit on working families:

The leaders and members of the Church are the perfect partners in this push for economic justice and stronger families. From supporting the Pregnant Workers Fairness Act to minimum wage increases to a paid family leave program, Catholics should take up the battle to provide American families with the flexibility, support and economic security they need to thrive in the 21st Century.

Shiffrin on Hobby Lobby

First Amendment scholar Steven Shiffrin has a typically thoughtful post on the Hobby Lobby decision. Part of what makes the post so good is that it follows from Steve’s own longstanding and (to me) persuasive criticisms of the extraordinary lengths to which we are prepared to recognize rights of free speech. Parenthetically, the last time I checked, Steve is not particularly well-known for his dyed-in-the-wool conservatism. But setting aside that rather tedious ideological point, it is quite striking to see the expansive interpretation of the rights of speech (whatever the source–constitutional or statutory) in conjunction with what critics of decisions like Hobby Lobby argue should be a narrowing of the rights of religious freedom. Steven goes through a few of the issues, but among the best parts of Steve’s post is the following:

I am puzzled by the selective tolerance of secular liberals. These liberals are prepared to protect speech involving depictions of animal cruelty, gruesomely violent video games sold to children, and the intentional infliction of emotional distress at military funerals. They would also agree that the state should not compel people to violate their conscience without substantial justification.

Although the Court’s decision in Hobby Lobby makes clear that none of the involved employees would be denied access to insurance coverage for contraceptives, most secular liberals would deny the freedom of religion claim….

Why protect those who traffic in depictions of the abuse of animals and the like, but not protect the conscience of conservative Christians?

The essential rule of interpretation of Pope Francis

The essential rule of interpretation of Pope Francis: No, it's not the great-nice-try that was the "hermeneutic of continuity."  Instead, according to Fr. Bernd Hagenkord, SJ, Head of the German-language Section of Vatican Radio, it is power:

Francis knows exactly how power is spelled,” says Bernd Hagenkord, a Jesuit who is in charge of German programming for Vatican Radio. “He’s a communicator in the league with Mother Teresa and the Dalai Lama.They say he’s being unclear, but we know exactly what he means.

For the context of the quote, follow the lead in Rorate Caeli

As one senior European prelate who has served under the last three popes once told me, "Francis doesn't often refer to himself Pope, but when you're in his presence, you know that he knows he's the Pope, and that's why he doesn't need to call himself Pope."  Indeed, we know exactly what he means.    

Sunday, July 13, 2014

Mixed messages on poverty from the Domus [UPDATED]

Pope Francis has stressed his desire for a "poor Church for the poor."  Now the same Vicar of Christ has convened many of the world's most highly paid athletes, participants in the recent World Cup, to play a soccer match in Rome for the purpose of promoting "dialogue" among world religions.

We in the United States have heard much about a "consistent ethic of life."  I'm just wondering, therefore, as something of a thought experiment, what place professional sports, especially (but not only) at the richest level, would have in a "consistent ethic of poverty."  

Consider how much it costs to travel far to attend the World Cup.  Consider, further, what immediate benefit, if any, the playing of the World Cup has to the poor of Brazil. I've been to Brazil; I've seen (and smelled) the poverty; and I can conjure the impassable gap between the hovels and the stadium.

We've heard Pope Francis pass moral judgment on everything from pets (he's down on them) to nice cars (he won't ride in them and criticizes some who do).  What about the bread and circuses of professional sports industries that concentrate vast sums of money in the hands of small groups of those who are lucky enough to be able-bodied, coached, and thus relieved of life's ordinary burdens in order to "play" all the time?  Don't get me wrong, sport has its place in a healthy human life, perhaps even as an example of what some refer to as the "basic good" known as "play."  Sana mens in sano corpore, and all that.  

But what about the economics of professional sport as such?  What has the Holy Father to say on this topic?  Perhaps I've missed it, but I do keep a pretty attentive eye on what gets published under the name Franciscus, including the redacted homilies preached in the Domus, and I can't recall any condemnation of the mega-wealth accumulated on the backs of the poor (and the middle-class) in the name of, say, World Cup.

I recently read an editorial some place that baldly contended that the World Cup mocks the poor.  It's a contention that's worth pondering, especially now as the beneficiaries of the World Cup prepare to gather in Rome at Pope Francis's invitation in order to engage in "dialogue."  

(Never mind the lack of all evidence that professional athletes are dialogically inclined or adept.  In any event, calling something "dialogue" doesn't necessarily make it a good idea, not even in this post-Vatican II Church).    

 

UPDATE:  A reader helpfully called my attention to an address Pope Francis delivered in May 2, 2014, to Italian soccer players and officials in which he warned that "today soccer is turning into a big business: advertising, television, and so on. But the financial factor must not prevail over the sporting factor because it risks polluting everything, both at the national and local level."  A story about the address is here

I'm not sure exactly what the Pope meant to rule out when he stated on May 2nd that "the financial factor must not prevail over the sporting factor."  Speaking a week later to the U.N. officials in Rome, the Holy Father set off a firestorm by speaking far more bluntly when he called attention to governments' responsibility to effect "legitimate redistribution" of wealth.  By challenging modern governments to concern themselves with legitimate redistribution, the Pope was doing no more than commendably echoing basic tenets of traditional Catholic social doctrine.  One wonders, therefore, how the Pope would urge experts to apply that doctrine to the mega-wealth amassed by the beneficiaries of the professional sports industries.    

 

Saturday, July 12, 2014

Tragedy and Irony: Constitutional System, Political Suasion, and History (ADDENDUM Appended)

Here's another one for the Berg-DeGirolami exchange on the subject. For previous entries, see this, this, this, and this from my buddy Tom, and this and this from me. This post focuses on matters of constitutional system, political suasion, and my own appeal to history. 

But before getting to that, I want to address the much less central attitudinal or dispositional point about clever detachment. Tom's interlocutor interprets the passage I quoted from Shaffer in a very creative and appealing way, and Tom also notes that the ironic disposition can be turned inward as well. I don't wish to contest any of these points. I am not a Niebuhr scholar, and these are elegant defenses against my criticism. I guess the reason for my criticism is that I thought it was an important part of the ironic approach to point out to others that that their viewpoints and outlooks are partial and often incapable of seeing what's really true, that they have missed some self-deflating hypocrisy in their own position, and that if they only saw the missing piece, they'd be much more reasonable and would probably alter their views on some deeply held matter. If I have stated this view correctly (Tom, please tell me if not), whatever its merits, this is different than a tragic approach, which begins with the presumption that differences of opinion on deep questions among contestants really are what the contestants say they are, and then goes about explaining why they are so intractable. But I am happy to accept the rejoinder that tragedians can exhibit their own sins. Almost certainly one of these is a too-quick-and-easy pessimistic retreat. 

Onto more substantive matters.

1. Constitutional System: the Abstract and the Particular.

You say that you doubt that a tragic approach reflects "our constitutional system." The reason is that there is a shared, core consensus about certain basics of constitutional rights. Of my skepticism about deep, shared attachments, you write: "The same things could be said about even the most basic rights of religious freedom—or to pick a value that seems to be accepted across the constitutional spectrum today, the most basic rights of freedom of speech. The other side's ability to congregate even in private, or to exercise the most minimal ability to express its views, also “inevitably detracts from the larger moral vision” of its opponents. Is it the situation that there is no commitment in principle to any shared meaning of freedom of speech, even at the core—that every protection of even the most basic ability to speak reflects no more than a case-by-case compromise?" 

It is instructive (and sad, at least to me) that you must move so quickly away from religious freedom and to the freedom of speech. That move suggests that perhaps the ambit of tragedy is expanding, as the common core that you reference inexorably diminishes seemingly by the year. And for the first time at least since I have been writing (not a long time, I admit!), I am seeing serious arguments made by serious scholars who are contesting the core values of the freedom of speech as well. In a very few years, I would not be surprised in the least to see that these arguments (like those about religious freedom) have become more mainstream as well.

But I think I can agree with the basic point you are making, even as to religious freedom, if phrased in something like this way (I make the fuller argument in Chapter 4 of my book): It is quite possible to decide whether a certain set of values corresponding to a constitutional right (like the freedom of speech) is good in the abstract, without being able to decide in advance whether it is powerful enough in a specific situation to defeat another conflicting value. But it is only in the value's embodiment in a particular, real-world struggle that we can make judgments about how strong it really is. Take values like equality, law-abidingness, autonomy, the authority of conscience, liberty, and tolerance.

Continue reading

Friday, July 11, 2014

A troubling development

The Boston Business Journal reports that Gordon Collegem a "Christian college on the North Shore[,] faces scrutiny from the body that accredits colleges and universities in New England."  This "scrutiny" is a result, according to the report, of the fact that "Gordon College President D. Michael Lindsay thrust the college into the spotlight a week ago by signing a letter to President Barack Obama requesting that he exclude religious institutions from an executive order barring organizations that take federal money from discrimination in hiring based on sexual orientation."

Why might this be, as I suggest, troubling?  Because, as this post describes, "the federal government relies on accrediting agencies to decide which colleges qualify for the $157 billion of federal funding provided annually to colleges and universities[.]"  Those who care about institutional pluralism and diversity should be concerned that a college President's request that a coming policy change take account of religious freedom results in such a not-so-subtle threat of punishment.

Please nominate MOJ for a spot in the Best 100 Legal Blogs

More info here.  I feel confident that nominations will be appropriately appreciated by Our Lady, Mirror of Justice!