Let me finish tonight with this.
We see in our politics today why those who are guilty in a matter are wise to choose a jury over a judge. A judge rules on the law and the facts. Juries rule on the all kinds of bases: compassion, forgiveness, group loyalties, attitude toward authority, toward human frailty. Juries are unpredictable for the very reason no one, outside the jury room, knows the basis of its decision.
Bill Clinton was impeached for lying about his behavior with a young woman. The public, the national jury, judged the proposed punishment—removal from office—disproportionate. A censure would have been in tune with the times. Were the public to rule on his conduct today, he wouldn’t get that.
As in a courtroom drama, it depends, too, where you draw your jury. A congressman from Massachusetts has sex with an male intern and continues to be re-elected. A colleague of a different party from Indiana is run out of office for having with a female intern. It depends who’s calling the shots.








