there's always the "constitutionality" landmine, but that's a problem with judges, not big law
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look at France for example. civil law system; civil procedure is statutory. hasn't made the code du travail any better.
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Replying to @cultofunreason @jkomrade
Yeah, I know that's not better. The problem is more about where authority lies than statute vs. civil. Also both suffer from what I might
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call Talmudism. Spiraling out of reality into long arguments over trivialities
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again, the root of the problem is statutory language. if our congress tried to pass a bill with definite language...
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Replying to @cultofunreason @jkomrade
Nope, that's not the problem at all. Congress has tried. Things get reinterpreted Talmudically. We need a king.
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"lets make this complicated as hell" is not a good business model. big law firms doing so would be out-competed.
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the independent judiciary is an awful idea, but if a King passed an obtuse law the result would be the same as it is now
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Replying to @cultofunreason @jkomrade
Law itself, in the way you're thinking of it, is the problem.
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Does a small tribe spend its time on this stuff? Of course not. They go to the tribal elder and a decision is made efficiently.
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You might say that scale requires this sort of law, and that may be at least somewhat correct. But reducing scale is also conceivable
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