Difference between revisions of "Georgia Ethics Code Does Not Apply To Fulton Judges"
Georgia Ethics Code Does Not Apply To Fulton Judges (view source)
Revision as of 01:29, 1 April 2023
, 01:29, 1 April 2023→History Repeats Itself
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=History Repeats Itself= | =History Repeats Itself= | ||
If there was ever a question as to whether a judge would recuse another judge for violating Georgia's Code of Judicial Conduct, this case has removed the matter entirely from conjecture. We can now be sure ''beyond a reasonable doubt'' that the unwritten rule amongst the fraternity of judges in Fulton County supersedes Georgia’s ethics code. That unwritten rule is: '''No matter the facts and circumstances, a judge shall not remove another judge from a case.''' | If there was ever a question as to whether a judge would recuse another judge for violating Georgia's Code of Judicial Conduct, this case has removed the matter entirely from conjecture. We can now be sure ''beyond a reasonable doubt'' that the unwritten rule amongst the fraternity of judges (at least in Fulton County) supersedes Georgia’s ethics code. That unwritten rule is: '''No matter the facts and circumstances, a judge shall not remove another judge from a case.''' | ||
The same lust for money and power that caused a lack of empathy and respect for human rights and allowed slavery in the South to once prosper is still here—though perhaps incognito. | The same lust for money and power that caused a lack of empathy and respect for human rights and allowed slavery in the South to once prosper is still here—though perhaps incognito. |
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