Courts, Cash, and the Panic Button
The loudest people in politics love “law and order” right up until the order is for them to explain the money. That’s the contradiction…
The loudest people in politics love “law and order” right up until the order is for them to explain the money. That’s the contradiction here: the same crowd that treats oversight like a mugging suddenly acts personally wounded when judges ask who got paid, who got frozen, and why the paper trail looks like it was routed through a blender.
And that’s why the panic matters. A calculator is rude in the face of spin. Courts do not care about cable-news foam, donor perfume, or the flag pin you slapped on before lunch. They care about receipts, deadlines, and whether a power game was hiding behind patriotic wallpaper. I smell the grift every time a politician says transparency is fine — as long as it happens to somebody else. Give me one honest judge and a pen that still works, and the whole confidence act starts to look like what it is: committee-chair flop sweat with better lighting.