Back to Results

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_017417.jpg

Source: HOUSE_OVERSIGHT  •  other  •  Size: 0.0 KB  •  OCR Confidence: 85.0%
Download Original Image

Extracted Text (OCR)

4.2.12 WC: 191694 I’ve been to many prisons and on numerous death rows, but I’ve never experienced so grim a place as this “life or death row,” where every inmate saw every other inmate as a competitor in the quest to remain alive. The warden invited me to play basketball with the inmates and I agreed. No one fouled me, trash- talked me or in any way misbehaved, as the warden watched, notepad in hand. I was conscious throughout the 30 minute game that anything a player did or didn’t do could become part of their score of death—or life. I tried hard to make everyone look good in the eyes of the warden. The changing consensus regarding human rights By the mid-1970s, the consensus regarding human rights was beginning to change. Although the Soviet Union had long used the language of “human rights” (as well as the language of “civil rights”) as a club against western democracies, few serious people gave this hypocritical ploy any credence. “There they go again” was the general response when Soviet diplomats at the United Nations postured against the imperfections of the United States, while their Communist masters locked up dissidents, made a mockery of justice,” and kept entire nations in subjugation behind an iron curtain. By the early 1970s, however, the Soviet ploy was beginning to be expropriated by the hard left in the United States and Europe. Hard left intellectuals such as Professors Noam Chomsky of MIT and Richard Falk of Princeton were claiming that the United States was the worst human rights violator in the world.'°? Some hard left lawyers, such as William Kunstler, refused to say anything critical of the human rights records of the Soviet Union, China, Cuba or other “socialist” countries, while railing against the human rights violations of the United States and its allies. As I previously mentioned, Angela Davis, who I had helped to represent in the early 1970s, refused to speak up for Soviet dissidents and in fact supported Soviet repression of “fascist opponents of socialist democracy,” i.e., dissidents and Refusenicks. Another client, Abby Hoffman, also turned against me. I was part of the legal team in the Chicago Seven case that grew out of demonstrations during the Democratic National Convention of 1968. Abby Hoffman, who was one of the defendants, had allegedly made some crude remarks about how his “Jew lawyers” cared more about Israel than America. I called him out on his comments in a brief note, to which he responded with an angry handwritten two page letter which included the following: “T never made a remark about my ‘Jewish Lawyers.’ I might have spoken more positively about the PLO but I would never make an anti-Semitic juxtaposition such as you think you heard. If you read my current autobiography you will see I flaunt my ‘Jewishness’ at every turn of the road.” At the time Hoffman penned these words, the PLO was a terrorist gang that was hijacking airplanes, murdering civilians and blowing up synagogues, and Israel had not yet established any settlements in occupied areas. » An old Soviet dissident joke went this way: The leader of Czechoslovakia asked his Soviet masters for money for a Department of the Navy. The Soviet replied, “But you’re a landlocked country and don’t need a department of the Navy.” The Czech leader replied: “Well you have a Department of Justice.” 10 Tget cite] 330 HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_017417

Document Preview

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_017417.jpg

Click to view full size

Extracted Information

People Mentioned

Organizations

Document Details

Filename HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_017417.jpg
File Size 0.0 KB
OCR Confidence 85.0%
Has Readable Text Yes
Text Length 3,407 characters
Indexed 2026-02-04T16:31:33.254792

Related Documents

Documents connected by shared names, same document type, or nearby in the archive.

Ask the Files