Tuesday, May 5, 2009

What Happens When Your Ideology Gets in the Way of Clear Thinking

Link to April 29 ABA Journal online article, "Fordham Law Class Collects Personal Info About Scalia; Supreme Ct. Justice Is Steamed".

Excerpt: Last year, when law professor Joel Reidenberg wanted to show his Fordham University class how readily private information is available on the Internet, he assigned a group project. It was collecting personal information from the Web about himself.

This year, after U.S. Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia made public comments that seemingly may have questioned the need for more protection of private information, Reidenberg assigned the same project. Except this time Scalia was the subject, the prof explains to the ABA Journal in a telephone interview.

His class turned in a 15-page dossier that included not only Scalia's home address, home phone number and home value, but his food and movie preferences, his wife's personal e-mail address and photos of his grandchildren, reports Above the Law.

And, as Scalia himself made clear in a statement to Above the Law, he isn't happy about the invasion of his privacy:

(And it's just the type of pissy response you'd expect to hear from our most insufferable Supreme Court justice.)

"Professor Reidenberg's exercise is an example of perfectly legal, abominably poor judgment. Since he was not teaching a course in judgment, I presume he felt no responsibility to display any," the justice says, among other comments.

Bravo, Professor Reidenberg!

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