Defense Attorney Regrets His Prosecution

All of my legal career involved defending someone charged with crimes or offenses against the law. I worked 20 years as a lawyer, trying more than a hundred jury trials, winning more than half of them.

But to be honest, my first taste of arguing the law came not as a defense lawyer, but as a prosecutor, one appointed by some colonel to bring charges against a buck private who broke a law and faced a summary offense for some minor infraction.

      I knew the young man. He was in the company in which I served as a training officer in Fort Polk, LA.

     I even liked the kid.

 

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    I was “Out of Order.”

I disliked having to “go after” him, but I took my oath to defend the US Constitution seriously. And I zealously presented the facts before a JAG lawyer serving as a judge.

I can’t tell you how many times the judge — someone actually trained in the law as opposed to me, a Second Lieutenant with no college degree not to mention no law degree — admonished me for walking around the makeshift courtroom, pretending I was a Perry Mason cross-examining a witness. I was ordered to remain within three feet of a podium.

That restriction initially chilled my presentation, but I used my arms to wave and point into the air to get my thoughts across.

     I secured a conviction. Something I fought against some twenty years later as a Philadelphia public defender.

But there was no celebration. And if I had to do it all over again, I wouldn’t have taken the assignment but feigned an illness, if at all possible.

     And that’s the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth, So Help Me God!

Cause of All Wars Questioned in Confederate Flag Controversy

     President Barack Obama may have raised an issue on all wars when he eulogized a fallen comrade on June 26, 2015, at the funeral for the pastor of the AME Church in Charleston, South Carolina.

     While never detracting from the valor that Confederate Soldiers fought with in the Civil War, he offered a plain and simple truth.

The Cause they Fought For was Wrong.

     The cause their leaders created to secede from the union was wrong. Wanting to uphold slavery as the economic foundation for the South’s way of life was wrong.

     It was wrong hundreds of years ago in our nation, just as it was wrong thousands of years ago when Jews, Greeks, and other defeated people were enslaved by others. It was wrong in the time of the Moses as it was in the time of Lincoln.

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Symbols like the Confederate flag, which support slavery, should be removed from all public places. They’re wrong to ever be displayed.

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What about other wars that leaders of powerful armies ordered their soldiers to fight in? Were any of them “wrong,” and can we as a God-fearing country ever admit to it?

I’m speaking about the Vietnam War in my time. I fought for what my leaders convinced our nation was the right thing to do. I never questioned their reasons or the basis for their belief.

But history has shown that they were wrong. The cause was wrong. And that the leaders of the resistance movement in Vietnam were right. Their cause was right. Admitting this does not detract from the bravery “our side” showed in the war. Nor does it prevent my prodigy from honoring my efforts in battle.

We can honor the veteran who placed himself in harm’s way at the same time we correct the mistaken belief the infallibility of a government, any government.

Just as we can honor the veterans of the Iraq War while agreeing that our reasons for the invasion and occupation of that land were wrong. Dead wrong.

It’s the right thing to do!

——-

(The Confederate flag flew for the last time at the South Carolina state grounds on July 10, 2015 when it was removed and placed in a museum following an order signed by the governor and passed by an overwhelming vote by the state senate and the legislature.)
(In addition, Mississippi became the last state in our nation to remove the Confederate emblem from its state flag in June 2020.)

Listen for the ‘Wisdom You’re Born With’

Listen to Yourself.

     Close your eyes and go within and listen to the Sounds of Silence. 

     Disregard the constant jabbering of the Monkey Mind that doesn’t seem to know when to shut up. Pay no heed to it, and it will dissipate like a cloud on a windy day.   

      Let yourself drift like a feather gently seeking its way to the ground without the help of anything or anybody.

     While softly settling in, focus on your breath. Feel it as it expands in the upper body area and then leaves through the inhalation of the nostrils. Be aware of the movement in the chest, the abdomen, or just in the cavity behind the nose, the mouth, and the eyes.

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Source of Goodness Is Within

     Use that breath as an anchor. Become so familiar with it so that you can gently nudge your attention back to it when your mind slips from the silent stillness and seeks to cling to a thought, an idea, or a concept.

Let Them All Go.

———-

     It is in this “Deep Silence” that you can discover the Source of Life. You’ll know it when you touch it. Like magic, you’ll realize that for a moment you have no worries and no desires. You will be exactly where you need to be and know that everything is just right — right now — now in the moment.

     By stilling the mind and touching the Source, you’ll be able to contact the Wisdom You Were Born With. It is the wisdom of love and compassion with an understanding that we are all one, all together in a universe that works in union with us and all other sentient beings. This wisdom offers unconditional love and acceptance and provides the creative spark your intuition can tap into once you seek its counsel and guidance.

     Got the message?

     Now try it again and again.

     Practice it daily and then share it with friends who are seeking to find their true selves. It will help you and me attain the happiness we’ve been yearning for all of our lives.

True Love Passed Over for a Child’s Sake

   

     Peggy sat at the table of the Blue Jay Restaurant, staring out the window and wondering where her life had gone and what she should do with her new condition. 

She had hoped that the signs she felt from her body were false and that she was simply sick. But she knew from what happened to her older sister that there was no getting around the truth.

     Peggy was pregnant. The man she surrendered her virginity to had helped her to conceive a child. It was a dream she had had since childhood and nursed along since reaching puberty.

But he was not the man she had hoped for. He was much older than her. She was 21 years old and got to know him while working at the pizza store, he operated along Girard Avenue in the heart of North Philadelphia, where Peggy was raised and hoped to leave someday.

Plans Change when Reality Changes

Romantic love discarded for the sake of child-rearing

Now her plans for the immediate future would change. She’d be forced to make choices that would alter her dreams and the bright tomorrow she had hoped to see on reaching adulthood.

No, she would not seek an abortion. Peggy was raised Catholic, and she would not consider such an action, which the church considered a mortal sin. Even if she wanted to, she wouldn’t know where to seek such a procedure, having little or no contact with any women’s movement that could possibly guide her with her situation.

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Give birth to a child out of wedlock? No. Place the child somewhere through an adoption agency? No.

She’d get married to a man who she knew could be a good provider and a good father. If all went well, he’d be a good friend.

Still in Love With Her Old Boyfriend

So, what if she didn’t love him? So, what if she still cared for her old boyfriend, the one she and others believed would one day get married and settle down? He was in the Army awaiting orders to go to the  Vietnam War, and who knew if he would ever return, or if he did, whether he’d still be the boy she had given her heart to.

No, she knew it was better this way.

Better for all concerned, better for all parties forever more.

     Wasn’t it?

‘Do’s’ and ‘Don’t’s’ of Radiating Wisdom

 Today’s meditation showed us that we all have a profound and innate wisdom. How have you experienced this in your life? Write about a time that you spontaneously said the right thing at the right time to someone. What did that communication feel like for you? — Deepak & Oprah 21-day Meditation Experience.

Wisdom Flourishes from Deep Within

As I struggle to come up with a satisfactory answer for this question, let me focus instead on what Deepak had quoted William Blake as saying in reference to wisdom. Wisdom is “organized innocence.” What a concept! In order to have or to cultivate wisdom, I know that I must be in awe of something; I must see that thing with wonder, with the eyes of an innocent child.

It is only when I perceive it this way, that is, when I use what Zen Buddhists call my “beginner’s mind,” that I see the true writing on a wall I offered up for its clean slate to be imprinted upon.

Wisdom is not something confined to those growing old. Nor is it only for the professor-types in ivory towers, although we can revere what many tell us because of the learning they achieved and can pass on to us. No, wisdom is something that – I believe – we’re born with . . . We have it inside of us, and one of the few ways that we can tap into it is through meditation.

Very Wise to Experience Things from Within

In other words, I don’t have to have lots of experiences to be wise. I need only to experience things from within and be able to see things from the child’s point of view. Then I can feel the richness in witnessing.

Now, what was that question that I just dodged?

     “Write about a time that you spontaneously said the right thing at the right time to someone. What did that communication feel like for you?”

I told a young woman, Rita, that our relationship would have to come to an end, and that we had to enjoy it while we were together. We were both married at the time. I’m not proud of it, but we had an affair. I was twenty-three and she was twenty-one or twenty-two. We came together as troubles had developed in both of our relationships at our separate homes.

      We had fun and we grew, sharing ourselves in a way that we couldn’t with our spouses at that time. We both got divorces. She is much quicker than me. That angered her. I guess she felt that I should have joined her upon her break-up with her husband. I did not, for I was Catholic, and I knew instinctively that I would not.

That’s what I meant when I said our relationship was impermanent and that it would not last. Nothing does.

———–

     I guess another time that this occurred was more recently, but it feels like several lifetimes ago. I had predicted to a young woman whom I had fallen in love with that we would only be together for six months. I actually told her in June that we could learn from each other and then finish what we needed to do by December.

No Good in Trying to Cling to a Relationship

That’s exactly what happened too! But this time, I was the one who didn’t want to pay attention to my own advice. I wanted permanence. I wanted to cling to the relationship, to hold onto something that had already ended, but I couldn’t and didn’t want to see that my earlier premonition was correct.

In each case, I was prophetic with the wisdom.

Achieving wisdom and following it, however, are two things I have learned that don’t necessarily come together all the time . . .

Enlightening Chant Charms Meditation

After chanting a non-English mantra for some time, I finally learned its definition and discovered a gem of wisdom while contemplating its meaning. Meditating will never be the same, and I want to share with others a little of the enlightenment it’s provided me.

Om Mani Padme Hung. Continue reading

Writing Reveals Truth Flowing Within

     Why do I write?

     The answer is: because I have to. I need the therapy to look deep inside to provide me. I’m not talking about surface writing. You know, the kind a reporter might type when covering some disaster, a meeting, or a political event that might include both. I write only after communing with some sort of truth that bubbles up from within.  Continue reading