
With more than a million lawyers and 70,000 lawsuits a day, the
U.S. civil justice system has been corrupted into a gigantic get-rich-quick
lottery – a new national pastime played 20 million times
a year by a growing army of self-styled “victims”
and their increasingly powerful and predatory attorneys.
No
one is excluded from the The
Lawsuit Lottery. In today’s greed-driven, none-for-all-and-all-for-one
society, Americans are suing each other for every conceivable
complaint – regardless of merit or the common good -- in
a dysfunctional tort system that is no longer civil or just.
At
stake is a payout bigger than all the legitimate state and national
lotteries combined – a “tort tax” of almost
$1 trillion in the past five years alone, plus at least another
$3 trillion in court judgments and settlements in the next decade.
Gone
is the public’s sense of responsibility and accountability.
These have been replaced by self-serving feelings of entitlement
to the wealth of others and a cynical, paralyzing fear of a legal
system where too much law is practiced and not enough justice
is dispensed.
New
Book Available Summer 2004
The Lawsuit Lottery is a social commentary that attempts
to shed light on the hijacking of Justice in America by the world’s
costliest tort system. In so doing, the book exposes the devastating
harm being inflicted by a broken legal system on the nation’s
economy, the character and freedom of its citizens, and the legitimacy
of the United States in the international community.
Among
the most urgent reforms suggested by the authors is the reestablishment
of our civil courts as havens for reasonable redress of legitimate
disputes, where the Rule of Law – the backbone of America’s
legitimacy – once again can be relied upon to dispense justice
equitably, and where attempted abuse of the tort system can be
quickly and strongly discouraged by judges rededicated to ensuring
Justice is served instead of assessing liability.