Loose cannons

November 7, 1995
Issue 

Virtual morality

"The university of Dallas, a Catholic institution, is considering a rule that would make sex in the dormitory rooms punishable by expulsion ... To avoid creating an incentive for abortion, the rule would exempt pregnant women from punishment." — US Chronicle of Higher Education. ‚

Call of duty

"... it may once have been considered that it was the duty of citizens and residents of a country to make their proper contribution to the revenue so as to enable the government to run the country for the benefit of its inhabitants. However it now seems to be accepted that there is a duty on persons such as accountants and solicitors to advise their clients how they can avoid, as far as possible, making what the government regards as a proper contribution." — NSW Supreme Court, September 14, 1995.

Justice, freedom and the American way

Kevin Weber, a parolee convicted of breaking into a restaurant and stealing four chocolate chip cookies, has been sentenced to 26 years imprisonment under California's "three strikes" law. The law requires a sentence of 25 years to life for the third felony. Weber says he was drunk and does not remember committing this crime. — New York Times, October, 1995 ‚

Their rules

"The unaccountability of government has gone to the point where the very use of the law is the instrument of illegality." — Ralph Nader, US public affairs advocate, in an address to Harvard Law School.

Black pride?

"Louis Farrakhan's message is the very same message as my message. We've got a nation of black wimps and white wimps and we've got to change that." — Norm Olsen, commander of the Michigan Militia, a major paramilitary group.

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