The Law
from Civizilation in The United States
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Narrated by:
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Brett Carter
In this incisive essay from *Civilization in the United States*, renowned Harvard law professor and civil-liberties advocate Zechariah Chafee, Jr. examines the widening divide between America’s democratic ideals and the legal system experienced by ordinary citizens.
Writing in the aftermath of World War I, Chafee confronts a nation in which political dissent could be prosecuted, minority viewpoints suppressed, and constitutional freedoms sacrificed in the name of security and social order. He challenges judges who place property and precedent above human consequences, exposes the machinery of justice as slow and inaccessible, and questions whether the law truly serves the people it governs.
Yet this is more than a critique of outdated courts and cumbersome legal procedures. Chafee presents civil liberties—especially freedom of speech and open public debate—not merely as personal rights, but as essential tools of a functioning democracy.
Thought-provoking, historically significant, and strikingly relevant, *The Law* invites listeners to consider whether justice is defined by rigid institutions or by the freedoms those institutions are meant to protect.
Narrated by Brett Carter.
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