If you needed a custom-made suit, how would you go about looking 
for a tailor? Would you try to seek out a republican, or a democrat? 
Would you worry that your jacket would be too tight if he is a liberal, 
or the trousers too loose if he is a conservative?
You won't care.
 Your only concern would be that he knows how to cut right, and sew 
well, the pieces of cloth. Tailoring and politics have nothing to do 
with one another.
The same goes for almost every other human 
occupation. Whether you are an electrician or a plumber, a dentist or a 
baker, the quality of your product has nothing to do with your party or 
your political philosophy.
But there is one profession and one product that are a glaring exception to this rule.
The profession is a judge, and the product is justice.
When,
 while in pursuit of happiness, "we the people" bump into one another, 
or into the superstructure of the state, and need to resolve our 
differences, we go to courts. And while politics means nothing in a 
tailor's workshop, in a courtroom it makes all the difference in the 
world. Unlike the shape of the suit of clothes, the outcome of a lawsuit
 depends entirely on judge's political views. Verdict rendered by a 
republican will likely differ from that coming from a democrat; 
conservative judge's decision will be the opposite of that coming from a
 liberal; and a "strict constructionist" will decide differently from an
 "activist judge."
This is made perfectly clear in the work of the
 Supreme Court, where nine justices examine the exact same case - and 
often come to the opposite conclusions. And to think of it, the "four to
 five" decision means that almost half of the justices, if left to their
 own devices, would render an unjust verdict.
Now, the Supreme 
Court justices are greatest legal luminaries in the land - and if the 
best of the best can go wobbly, how reliable are the judges who preside 
over lower, one-judge courts, and who are neither as bright, nor have 
peers on the bench to straiten them out?
Those can operate in a 
thoroughly bizarre manner. In a recent case where one side presented an 
argument heavily supported by the evidence and the other provided mere 
negative rhetoric, the judge was caught in a dilemma. The simple 
weighing of fluff against substance would have produced a result utterly
 at variance with his politics and "legal philosophy." So what did he 
do? Going back to his lawyerly past, he invented a totally new argument 
for the fluff-supplying party right in his decision, and gave victory to
 his own argument! The substance party protested that it never saw that 
argument until the decision was made, and would have easily defeated it 
if it did, supplying a thorough rebuttal - but the lawyer/"judge" was 
adamant. With his politics and "judicial philosophy" at stake, such 
minor matters as law, fact, logic, procedure, and justice, mattered 
nothing.
And there is no remedy, despite the existence of two 
layers of appellative courts, the Appeals and the Supreme Court. The 
Appeals court has to take for review all cases from all courts on its 
circuit, and so can dole but very little time to each one. 15 minutes 
are given to each party to present its case, with questions from the 
judges making one painfully aware that they do not understand even the 
bare basics of a case they are trying to judge; so no justice is to be 
expected there. The Supreme Court has the opposite problem. It gives 
thorough consideration to the cases it takes, but because of that it can
 only take a few - in fact, its capacity is limited to less than 2% of 
those submitted. So while the Appeals court is accessible, it is of 
necessity so shallow as to be of no use; the Supreme Court may be good, 
but is of necessity practically inaccessible, and hence, is equally 
useless.
With lower courts producing injustice at a rate of 65% 
(the percentage of Supreme Court cases that overturn lower courts' 
decisions - and what is true for less than 2% of cases that the Supreme 
Court is capable of considering, also has to be true for more than 98% 
of cases it has no time to look into), shouldn't we seek a better way of
 generating justice than the one we have now?
Well, the 
cornerstone of present-day judging is judge's "judicial philosophy" - 
judge's perception of what is important for the society. Naturally, this
 depends on judge's political outlook - which is why there is so much 
partisanship over selection of federal judges, and the appointment of 
every Supreme Court justice is such an entertaining political show.
But
 reliance on "judicial philosophy" is totally at odds with rendering 
justice. As if the appalling statistics of unjustly-decided cases were 
not enough, proponents of the "judicial philosophy" approach explicitly 
tell us that rendering justice is, to them, of a very low priority. 
Roscoe Pound, a dean of the Harvard Law School in the early twentieth 
century and a legal scholar touted as "the schoolmaster of American 
bar," had this to say about the formative, pre-Civil War years of the 
American legal system: "For a time it was meet that John Doe suffer for a
 commonwealth's sake. Often it was less important to decide the 
particular case justly than to work out a sound and just rule for the 
future." Quite apart from Mr. Pound's obvious inability to reason that 
is evinced by this passage (it is impossible to arrive at a sound 
general theory from fallacious particulars), the passage unmistakably 
states that a "judicial philosophy" has nothing to do with justice. Mark
 Twain aptly summarized the "free contract" "judicial philosophy" 
prevalent during America's "Gilded Age" as follows: "the meanest of us 
would not claim that we possess a court treacherous enough to enforce a 
law against a railroad company." Not much justice here. And any other 
"judicial philosophy" simply passes court favoritism to some other group
 of players, and consequently subjects someone else to injustice.
But exercising justice through enforcing "judicial philosophy" is not the only method of judging there is.
Look
 at any symbolic representation of Justice and you will see a 
blindfolded woman holding a scale. The blindfold symbolizes impartiality
 (that is, the absence of a "judicial philosophy"), and the scale is to 
weigh the sides' argument so as to determine a winner.
That method
 of judging is very straightforward, and very reliable indeed. The judge
 first examines each side's argument separately, checking it for 
relevance and for logical consistency. Then, he matches opposing 
arguments that pertain to the same issue. Finally, he compares them one 
by one. The party with the stronger arguments wins.
To use such 
procedure, one does not need to have a legal background at all. A judge 
has to be a trained logician rather than a legal scholar. Logic being 
judge's only tool, personal politics will have as little place in 
generating justice in a lawsuit as they have in tailoring a suit of 
clothes; and the decision in each case would fit that case only, and fit
 it as precisely as a tailor-made suit fits a person it is made for. The
 decision will be judged and appealed on the quality of its logical 
analysis, and the judge with poor skills in logic reprimanded and 
shunned just as if he were an unskillful tailor.
The switch from 
"judicial philosophy" to logic in generating justice will undoubtedly 
change the social status of judges. They will no longer be venerated as 
augurs officiating at deep mysteries in the high temple of Law, but will
 become white-collar professionals, like accountants or computer 
programmers; and in fact, their work will become heavily computerized, 
the future Bill Gates and Steve Jobs undoubtedly creating electronic 
tools that would largely automate judicial decision-making.
Yet, 
the loss in judicial prestige will be a gain for the society. After all,
 we go to courts not to get a dose of philosophy, but to find justice, 
and providing justice is the only reason why the courts exist. At the 
present, their rate of success is abysmal; they will do their job 
incomparably better when our antiquated system of "judicial philosophy" 
goes the way of equally ancient, and equally useless, astrology and 
alchemy.
The light of logic and reason will hopefully prevail over
 the medieval darkness of the present-day American justice system, which
 provides perhaps for social stability, but has a very hard time indeed 
producing the one and only thing it was ever meant to produce - justice.