Ladas wrote:
shuyung wrote:
The analogy doesn't quite hold up. Nobody is forced to become a public defender.
Who said anything about needing to be a public defender? All attorneys (except for a few specific cases such as prosecutors) can be appointed by the judge to represent someone that cannot afford representation. Which honestly, is assinine, since not all attorneys practice the same law, or even try cases in a courtroom and would be familiar with the relevant procedures/etc. Unless it is a capital punishment or federal case, in which case the attorney has to be certified to practice, so not anyone can get appointed.
That is true, and more importantly, criminal justice with any real fairness is essentially impossible without doing so. You need to have prosecutors in order to prosecute criminals, but putting a defendant up against an experienced lawyer is wildly unfair. In fact, before we mandated the ready availability of defense counsel to defendants (who frequently didn't understand they had a right to it) that was probably the biggest weakness of our justice system.
You're not making a "slave" of the lawyer by mandating that he do this. A slave is someone else's posession in his entirity; a master has sole claim to
all his labor and controls his
entire life, with him being the property of the master
in every respect. People like to claim that having to give up some of your labor or money is "slavery" for the same reason that some people like to refer to any military actiont hey don't like as "terrorism". They want the emotional impact of the term because they think it makes their position stronger.
As for the "no one is forced to be a public defender" thing, no one is forced to be a doctor, either, nor is court-appointed defense counsel work limited to public defenders. More importantly, public defenders are just a convenient way to provide access to the criminal defense that people have a right to. If no one became a public defender, we wouldn't just say "**** it, people aren't entitled to criminal defense anymore", we'd just make lawyers participate in some sort of system that gave access to criminal defendants who were indigant in the same way that everyone else is subject to jury duty.