That's the title of this Atlantic article. And here's another article, this time by the N.Y. Times, about the traps of telling your opponent to be civil:
Mannered civility, in other words, can operate as a trap: order without
justice, comity without commitment. It can pit you against an opponent
who will happily fight dirty while insisting that you abide by
Queensberry Rules.
Today's 11th Circuit en banc denial, in which Judges W. Pryor and Newsom attack Judge Rosenbaum's opinion for not being civil, reminded me of these articles. Judge Rosenbaum wrote a dissent in which she states her view, which was joined by three other judges (Wilson, Martin, and J. Pryor). She wasn't being personal, and she even feels the need to apologize to Judges Pryor & Newsom and says that her dissent isn't personal:
I am truly sorry that Chief Judge Pryor and Judge Newsom seem to have taken my concerns personally. I do not believe this dissent to be personal. I have great respect for all my colleagues, and I value this Court’s collegiality. But I also have great respect for the rule of law and the need for our Court to maintain its legitimacy. And I don’t agree that defending these things or pointing out what I think is wrong with Keohane and explaining why I view it as such a big problem makes me “[un]collegial[]” and “[un]charitable,” see Newsom Op. at 22, or is an “attack[ on] . . . the integrity of judges or their commitment to the rule of law . . . [or] the legitimacy of this Court,” W. Pryor Op. at 5. Nor do the labels and characterizations the W. Pryor and Newsom Opinions feel a need to impose provide a good enough reason to remain silent in the face of the threat Keohane represents to our judicial norms. I am aware of no other way to oppose what I see as the failure of our Court to require the Keohane panel to comply with the prior-precedent rule, other than by writing a dissent that candidly discusses that problem and its significance.
I respect Judges Pryor and Newsom a great deal. They are two of the smartest judges in the country. And they are beautiful writers who often use colorful language. So I don't see why they are so upset that Judge Rosenbaum uses the very same words and arguments that they have used in numerous opinions. Do they feel the same way about Justice Scalia's opinions when he went after Justice Ginsburg or his other colleagues? Here are some examples from the
L.A. Times of Scalia's opinions:
When the U.S. Supreme Court ended its term July 1, Justice Antonin
Scalia was more vindictive and isolated than ever. As the court’s most
publicly confrontational justice, he repeatedly berates his colleagues.
“The court must be living in another world,” as he put it. “Day by day,
case by case, it is busy designing a Constitution for a country I do not
recognize.”
*** Besides biting personal rhetoric, Scalia’s opinions sound certain
constant refrains. Positions he disagrees with are typically derided as
“demonstrably false,” “incoherent” and “terminal silliness.” They are
invariably debunked as acts “not of judicial judgment, but of political
will.” He is just as likely as GOP presidential contenders Patrick J.
Buchanan or Bob Dole to decry the Supreme Court’s “judicial
dictatorship"--in spite of the fact that seven justices were appointed
by Republican presidents.
Attacks against an opponent's writing style or arguing for civility is just a distraction from the merits.