Conversations with Tyler - Jamal Greene on Reconceiving Rights
Episode Date: June 1, 2022What does it mean to uphold disability rights, or the right to economic liberty? What framework should be used when rights appear to conflict? Constitutional law expert Jamal Greene contends that the ...way Americans view rights—as fundamental, inflexible, and universal—is at odds with how the rest of the world conceives of them, and even with how our own founders envisaged them. In his new book, How Rights Went Wrong, he lays out his vision for reimagining rights as the products of political negotiation. The goal of judges, he says, should be to manage disagreement in a way that leads to social harmony and social cohesion—and by doing so, foster the ultimate goal of peaceful pluralism. Jamal and Tyler discuss what he'd change about America's legal education system, the utility of having non-judges or even non-lawyers on the Supreme Court, how America's racial history influences our conception of rights, the potential unintended consequences of implementing his vision of rights for America, how the law should view economic liberty, the ideal moral framework for adjudicating conflicts, whether social media companies should consider interdependencies when moderating content on their platforms, how growing up in different parts of New York City shaped his views on pluralism, the qualities that make some law students stand out, and more. To register for the Talking Talent with Tyler Cowen event, please visit the link below: https://www.mercatus.org/events/talking-talent-tyler-cowen Read a full transcript enhanced with helpful links, or watch the full video. Recorded April 5th, 2022 Other ways to connect Follow us on Twitter and Instagram Follow Tyler on Twitter Follow Jamal on Twitter Email us: cowenconvos@mercatus.gmu.edu Subscribe at our newsletter page to have the latest Conversations with Tyler news sent straight to your inbox.
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Hello, everyone, and welcome back to Conversations with Tyler.
Today I'm here with Jamal Green, who is Professor of Law at Columbia University.
He recently has published a very interesting book called How Rights Went Wrong,
why our obsession with rights is tearing America apart.
Jamal, welcome.
Thank you. Good to be here.
We will get to rights, but first,
I have some questions about baseball.
Okay.
Using law and economics reasoning, how would you improve the current organization or laws surrounding
baseball?
I wish I could answer that question better than I can.
And part of it is I don't pay much attention to baseball anymore.
I do think that sometimes I'm also not the best law and economics reasoner, but I can try.
You know, I think sometimes baseball's senses are misaligned, as far as I can tell at least.
I used to be a baseball reporter, and I worked for a magazine that was doing exactly what Major League Baseball is doing, which is having its audience get older and older.
And there's a couple of strategies one can employ in response to that.
You can sort of change the product so that you try to attract younger people and different people, or you can cling to what your old subscriber base in some sense.
And I think the structure of baseball is not really well suited to the modern age.
and they should hold on as long as they can to the people who really care about it.
I don't think you're going to move second base a little bit or put in some robot umps
and then you'll get, you know, 18-year-olds getting into baseball.
I think you have to see the writing on the wall.
Does that mean it's a bigger problem than it used to be that baseball has its historic exemption from antitrust law?
I don't think baseball should have an exemption from antitrust law.
I suppose if it's less popular than it once was, then there's whatever justification there is is diminished.
That sounds right to me.
What do you think is the biggest general problem with law and economics style of reasoning?
You know, I think as long as its limits are understood, it's not a problem, just as any other
form of reasoning has its limits.
I think sometimes we confuse internal debates about interpretation, internal debates about the right
answer to legal problems with the sort of external question of what's the right answer in this case.
And what I mean by that is that it's perfectly sensible to say that the right answer to a legal question should be supplied by specified through law and economics so long as you understand that other methods are also legitimate.
And you're actually trying to stake a claim within a conversation about method.
So long as I think people understand those limits, it's all fair game.
What's the best way to improve America's legal education system?
We put you in charge.
What do you change?
I think there's a small thing I would change, and that's, this is really, sounds really small, but it seems so straightforward to me that law students shouldn't be buying their own textbooks separate from, you know, the ordinary expenses of pay a tuition fee, and the price of textbooks should just be kind of diffused through tuition costs and the ways in which people pay for those should also pay for their textbooks. But that's a small thing. The bigger thing is I would change the calendar for a professional.
hiring in law. This is a little bit esoteric, but it matters a lot to our students, is that if you want to
go into a job at a major law firm and you go to a good law school, those jobs get offered to you
at a time when you have no other alternatives. And so it makes no sense, regardless of one's
sort of individual preferences, it makes no sense to turn down those jobs when you actually
have no alternative. So I think that creates a lot of distortions where you end up with people
who are at these firms who don't want to be there.
And it biases the market so that people who want to go into public interest, for example,
are the ones who are able to take that risk on,
which is not a very good match between who's genuinely interested in other alternative avenues
and who just can't afford to take certain kinds of risks.
So at least in my world, which is the world of a certain kind of law school,
I think that's a major problem.
If we made textbooks free, wouldn't either tuition go up
or the quality go down in some other way.
And at least with textbooks, there's a kind of built-in price discrimination,
so poorer students can buy used copies or older additions.
But if the quality of food in the cafeteria declines or tuition goes up,
everyone bears that.
And in that sense, the change would be regressive.
That's possible.
You know, I think it would be folded into tuition.
And so I think part of it is students make different choices
when they perceive it to be something that's a baked-in cost
versus perceive it to be something that they have to pay for separately.
And if some students are buying used books or some students are buying only digital copies just because of their perception of cost, that seems to me to have some real unfairness to it.
Now, it's possible that there's not that big of a difference.
It's not a significant enough difference that we should care about the distributional consequences.
But I tend to think that just as other law school costs are not a la carte, I think textbooks shouldn't be there.
You could say the same thing about courses, right?
Sure.
How would you improve the LSAT system?
I think I would just use it less. I don't know that I would eliminate it entirely, but the idea that people should be admitted to law school, you know, 50% or 60% or something based on LSA T scores seem to me likely to be problematic. There's problems on either end, right? If you get rid of tests like that, then people who are very good at succeeding at things are going to succeed in other ways. And so there is a certain transparency about the LSAT that I think is maybe not something you'd want to fully eliminate. But it does.
bother me that your performance on a three-hour test has such a profound influence on which schools
one is able to go to. It would surprise me if there are not better ways of doing it, but I'm not
deep enough in admissions offices to launch a strong criticism. Do you have a sense there's a better
predictor of success as a lawyer? You know, schools are trying to optimize for different things.
I don't know that schools should necessarily be, or that there's any reason schools need to
pick students on the basis of who they think will be good lawyers.
as such. Schools have a lot of different goals that they might have in mind. They might want to
have a certain kind of community on campus. They might want to produce certain kinds of lawyers,
which isn't just about a kind of abstract view of lawyerly quality. So it just depends on what
the output is, and that's going to vary both across schools and within schools, right? So you're
looking for a certain kind of professional diversity in addition to a kind of Tom Cruise at the firm,
kind of top-notch lawyer. I do think that the LSAT predicts for a certain kind of
lawyerly skill. I don't doubt that. But what I do doubt, and I think this is true to internal
policy choices of law schools, that that's not the only thing they're trying to produce.
Should law reviews be edited by students? Yes. But are they good at it, right? What do the
students know? They probably couldn't publish in those law reviews themselves.
I think that there's something to be said for peer review of which articles actually get selected.
And that's a different function of law reviews selecting articles than the editing process,
where I actually think students on balance, they're not always good at it, of course, but on balance,
they, I think, add a lot of value to the editing process.
And the fact check, for example, which I think we resist it because we think we know it all,
but it's actually very valuable.
I also think it's, you know, when you see some institution that seems to be inefficient, right,
you have to think about what it's actually trying to produce.
And I think part of what law reviews are doing is giving a certain kind of experience to law students.
They're not just about producing scholarship.
And the second thing I'd say is, you know, there's always going to be a tradeoff.
You could have, you know, highly professionalized, highly elite gatekeepers.
And then you keep out a lot of good stuff because it doesn't go through the right gate.
On the other end, right, you have not very efficient gatekeepers.
You have lots and lots of law reviews and it's kind of hard to do sort of quality control.
But you get a lot more stuff out there.
And I think given that law has always has one foot in practice and one foot in the academy,
I think there's really a lot of value in getting a lot of stuff out of there within our particular field.
Should there be blind review of the articles?
That is, the editors don't know who wrote them.
I think generally that's a good practice.
I think given the volume of law reviews submissions, it maybe can be a little bit hard to actually operationalize that.
But I think it's a good aspiration.
But just make people send it in without the name on the cover.
So you could have a system set up.
Some assistant handles the initial submission, and then it's handed to the editors who this way they can't look and see, oh, this is a famous person.
This is Richard Posner.
Of course, we have to take it.
And they judge it more on its merits.
You could do a version of that.
I think given the citation practices in law, it's hard to fully anonymize.
But I think that's the right aspiration.
When I was a law review editor, we mostly did that at Yale.
And I think a number of law reviews try to do that.
Sometimes, again, it's hard to avoid.
But I think that's the right goal.
What is the question we should be asking Supreme Court nominees that we're not asking them now?
Should is a funny word. I think in an ideal world, maybe we should be asking them nothing, right, because the confirmation process doesn't actually serve that much of an informational value. It's political posturing and so forth. But I think if one were actually to try to design a confirmation process that was useful, I think you would just ask them their views about cases that have been decided, ask them if those cases were correct. You know, they say that that biases them in some way or conveys bias. I just don't buy that. One can have a view about something decided in the past and change them.
one's view based on new information. And there's no necessary bias. And so the idea that they
haven't thought about these things or have no formed views or that we shouldn't be aware of what
their views are seems to me to be profoundly undemocratic. If I'd bergod and could control the process,
I would have a conversation about Supreme Court's docket. But the court itself is undemocratic
by design. So it's funny for me to hear you say some practice in the confirmation process is
undemocratic. I mean, isn't that the whole point? Well, the confirmation process is not undemocratic, right?
So the way in which they're chosen is not undemocratic. Yes, their decisions are not,
are not democratic in the same way in which elections are democratic, although they do vote.
So in that sense, they're democratic. But they're political appointees, and they're political
appointees for a reason because they make law for society. And so people who do that should be
chosen through democratic means, and they are chosen in that way. So as long as we're talking about
the selection process, yeah, we should know who they are, we should know what their views are,
we should debate them, and we should make decisions on the basis of the conclusions
we reach. On average, how many non-judges should be on the Supreme Court at any point in time?
Basically, we're picking from former judges, right?
Yeah. So, why do that? I thought you were asking something slightly different, which is whether
they should be lawyers or not. Oh, that too, of course. Which is another question. I don't have
an apiary answer to that. I do think there's value in having people who are lawyers. I actually,
I think I'm okay with mostly lawyers, or maybe even all lawyers, but they don't have to come from
judging. Elena Kagan didn't come from judging, and I think she's a terrific Supreme Court
Justice. Eugel Black didn't come from judging. I think he was a terrific Supreme Court justice.
So people who come from politics, people who come from academia, people who come from other
forms of lawyering, but not straight from the judiciary. It's a different kind of judicial
role at the Supreme Court. The cases are closer. They're not just strictly bound by precedent.
They're often deciding serious political moral questions. And so I think having some exposure to
other forms of decision-making is perfectly sensible.
But it happened so rarely, when was the last time a non-lawyer was on the Supreme Court?
Oh, non-lawyer.
So there haven't been any non-lawyers on the Supreme Court.
Ever.
There have been people who didn't complete law school, but back then, you know, you could
become a lawyer in other ways.
So no one in the U.S. Supreme Court, who is not understood to be a lawyer at the time,
I don't think it would be disastrous to have a non-lawyer on the court.
There are non-lawyers on the Judiciary Committee, some of whom ask good questions.
who are smart people who could figure it out.
But a lot of the court's docket is quite technical.
And I happen to think that the court should have panels and not everyone should hear every case.
And so if you did something like that, maybe you could have a sort of non-lawyer panel or something.
But, you know, outside of the big ticket, your affirmative action cases, your abortion cases, you know, these big controversial things, I don't think you need lawyers to decide those questions.
But I do think it's pretty hard to be a non-lawyer and decide a technical statutory interpretation case.
But isn't that a main way in which court is especially undemocratic?
That is, most people in America are not lawyers.
There's a general sense whether correct or not that the law plays too strong a role in society.
Many people will say there are too many lawyers, there are lawyer jokes, especially if we're going
to expand the numbers on the Supreme Court, as you've argued for.
Wouldn't that be a great time to introduce, say, three to five non-lawyers, have a philosopher,
have an economist?
So I wouldn't be opposed to that necessarily.
I'd have to think about it more, but I wouldn't necessarily be opposed to that.
Again, I do think there are a number of kinds of cases the court hears that are not well-suited to people who are not lawyers,
but there are also cases the court here that are not well-suited to people who are lawyers,
or at least not uniquely suited or especially suited to people who are lawyers.
So I would not be totally opposed to that idea.
I resist a little bit the idea that the reason for that is grounded in democracy in some serious sense or representation in some sense,
insofar as I do think.
that the court plays a role that's different from other democratic institutions.
But again, I don't think it has to be played by lawyers. I think that's a fair criticism.
But I'm not just saying it doesn't have to be, but why clearly shouldn't it always be played by lawyers?
So if I look at antitrust cases, it seems to me a pretty high percentage of justices historically
don't understand antitrust very well because they're not economists, which is fine, not to be held against them.
But again, it's an argument for having people with, say, business experience on the court,
People who work with children.
I think that's fair.
I wouldn't want to get too specialized, but there's a good argument that we're already
too specialized in a technical legal sense.
I believe, and I've said before in writing, that the court should take what we call
social facts or legislative facts into consideration more in their decision making.
They should be more empirical than they are.
I think it makes sense to accompany that kind of call with serious consideration of whether
some of them should have other competencies.
I think that's perfectly fair.
So to turn to your book, How Rights Went Wrong by Jamal Green, but the same arguments can be found in your articles.
You argue that the American conception of rights is quite different from that, say, found in Western Europe or indeed other parts of the world.
And what is it in your opinion that is upstream of that American difference?
Is it that we're a more ideological nation?
And thus, we put a lot more emphasis on a smaller number of rights.
What's the cultural determinant of the difference that you're pinpointing?
I think there are multiple cultural determinants. I think our experience with race is maybe, if I had to point to a single one, it would be that insofar as we associate rights with a particular history of racial, race-based pathology, right? That people have rights in the same way that African Americans have rights to not be forced to go to a segregated school. And that association of rights with pathological governance, I think, leads to a certain kind of binary understanding of what rights can do.
In my view, rights in a constitutional sense can arise in lots of situations, whether the government's acting well or not acting well, because rights, I think, are just a byproduct of pluralism.
So other countries don't have the same historical baggage that we do when it comes to race.
There's also some issues around, you know, on the one hand, we think that rights should be understood in really strong terms.
And on the other hand, there are a bunch of economic rights that within our legal culture are understood as being very, very weak.
So you have this kind of binary where you're kind of choosing whether you're talking about something very weak or something very strong, instead of talking about rights much more contextually.
But there seems to be plenty of American exceptionalism that extends far beyond race or doesn't boil down to race or it pops up in issues that are quite non-racial or appear to be non-racial.
So race might be one factor.
Doesn't it stem from something very fundamental in the nature of American society?
We're more literal. We hold ideas more strongly or more suspicious of state power. So all those other non-racial upstream factors, is it that you want to change and reform those or you want to change our notion of rights but keep all the upstream factors in place?
I think the upstream factors are maybe a bit more contingent than you're suggesting. So the way in which Americans understood rights before the 1960s was, I think, generally quite different or the middle of the 20th century.
was quite different from how we understand rights today. We often tie our rights arrangements to the founders or to the Bill of Rights or something in our ancient constitutional arrangements, but that's certainly not how the founders thought about rights, not in the quasi-absolute sense that we do. I do think suspicion of state power. I think that's accurate as to Americans. I think we're more classically liberal-minded than Europeans say. But I don't think that that's an obstacle to saying that. So part of what I'm urging is a recognition.
that rights pluralism is inseparable from pluralism full stop, right? So part of it is being
accepting of pluralism in a way that I think it's right, that there's partly a culture of resistance
of that. But I think that's destructive. I think pluralism is something we need to embrace.
And embracing it requires us to understand that we're different from each other in important
ways and we have to reconcile those differences.
At least as you state the argument in that paragraph, it would seem you'd be sympathetic to a lot
more federalism, which could allow for the creation of a lot more rights of intermediate strength,
a lot of diversity, pluralistic approaches across different states, as say we've seen with the
treatment of COVID. But you don't seem to go in that direction. Why not?
I am sympathetic to federalism. Part of the reason it may be perceived that I don't go in that
direction is because historically federalism has been used in large part to defend white supremacy.
It doesn't need to be used in that way. And if we're not identical,
not recognizing that kind of pathology, I think federalism is entirely compatible with and
makes sense in the context of rights. In fact, I think that we sometimes say that rights have to be
universal in some sense. I'm not sure why that's true. I think rights are constantly a subject
of contestation, just as governance is constantly a subject of constestation. And there might be
lessons to be learned from having some flexibility and how we think about those in different
institutional context and across geographic space.
What do you think of the critique made by many supply-side progressives, such as Ezra Klein,
that there's an accretion of too many veto points in our legal system?
So no one would say that snail daughters have absolute rights, but they have some claim to a
level of review before you can build something that pushes them out.
And if you have a lot more, let's call it non-racist federalism, a lot more intermediate
layers of rights, you just accrete more and more reviews.
reviews, more delays, things don't get built, things don't happen. We can't fix global warming
is a problem because it takes seven years to get your wind farm approved. Isn't having a proliferation
of the number of rights in the middle, actually the problem we face? Well, no, I don't think so.
So when I talk about rights federalism, I don't mean sort of creating more rights in the sense
in which we associate rights with a certain kind of absolutism, and that's not what I mean.
And what I mean is rights are not just about things that courts say.
Rights are grounded in political negotiation.
And I think the number of sites where that political negotiation is possible should be greater.
I think that that gives people leverage in political negotiation in ways that they don't have when you say, okay, you've got a kind of absolute free speech right that applies the same way everywhere.
And anyone who wants to stop something speech grounded, let's say, can invoke this absolute universal speech right.
I think that that's as destructive, more destructive of government effectiveness.
I think government effectiveness is itself something that can and should be understood in
rights terms.
We have a right to democratic participation and to the fruit of that participation to bear fruit.
How long does the median political negotiation take in terms of months or years?
Well, I don't mean political negotiation at a congressional level.
I mean, in our day-to-day interactions with each other, right, there are a lot of different
sites for politics, right, not just in some legislature or some.
such. What the call is is a call for there to be less Trumps, in that sense, less veto points
because nothing's ever quite a trump. And people knowing that they're not going to win in court
are less likely to go to court or not being sure they're going to win. As someone who lives in
New York, surely you're familiar with how hard it is to get new subway lines built, right?
Yes. It can take many decades. It costs far too much. Maybe it doesn't ultimately get
stopped, like the Second Avenue line has opened, even though it was first planned in the
the 1970s. And it's not Congress at fault, right? It does seem there are just too many interaction
points, too many rights relevant claims that can be made to slow things down. And isn't that
the problem we need to solve if we want actual democratic accountability, that the things you
choose from your democracy can then actually happen? Well, if we're talking subway infrastructure,
right? It depends on what you're talking about. So different cities are good at different things.
New York is very bad at subway infrastructure, for sure. I don't have a story to tell that connects
that to veto points, the costs are much higher in the cost of construction are much higher in New York
than other places. And I don't have a good story for exactly why that's the case. But other places
that think about rights in much more flexible ways have perfectly good public infrastructure,
Canada, much of Western Europe, for example. I'm not sure how much of a story one can tell
in that sense. I think generally, we should constantly be concerned about the ability of government
to be effective. And if some particular rights regime, whether the one I'm describing or the one
I'm criticizing a standing in the way, that's a problem. I'm not suggesting any kind of
essentialism about this. But what I observe is that people use the putative absolutism of rights
to prevent government from being effective on quite a regular basis.
What do you think is the most worrisome unintended consequence of implementing your vision
of rights for America? Well, I think the biggest potential problem is an inability of courts
and other political actors further down in the system to know what their rights and obligations
are.
So the U.S. Supreme Court is an apex court.
It sits on the top of a pyramid, a hierarchy of other courts, and all of those courts have
constitutional jurisdiction, right?
So you have the potential for chaos that is not present in many other jurisdictions,
although some, Canada, for example, has the same basic structure.
A kind of deep legal uncertainty is, I think, something that one should be concerned about
and should watch out for. I think it's overstated. As I've said, I think some flexibility and some
inconsistency in the law is not as bad as sometimes we say it is. But I do think that that can upset
expectations. It can make it hard to plan. So I think that's the thing to watch out for.
There's a kind of crude view in popular American society, you know, even possibly correct,
that simply American society is too legalistic. So there's that book, three felonies a day,
right, if you have expired prescription medicine in your cabinet, you're committing a felony,
people who are very smart will just tell me, like, never talk to a cop, never talk to an FBI
agent. And I'm, you know, an upper class white guy who's literally never smoked marijuana once.
And they're telling me, don't ever speak with the law. Isn't something wrong there and is the common
intuition that we're too legalistic, correct? I think that we're too apt to submit political
disputes to legal resolution. I think that for sure. I think what your friends are telling you about
police officers is slightly different. Insofar, one could have a deeply non-legalistic culture
in which the correct advice is to not talk to police officers if those people are corrupt,
if those people are abusive. I think that that's, at least when I hear that advice, and I might
be differently situated than you, that's what people are saying, is someone might be out to trick you.
And that might be a mistrust of state power, as you mentioned before. Maybe it's a rational
mistrust of state power. But I don't know that that's about legalism, which again, I think
is a separate potential problem in that we tend to formulate our problems in legal terms, as if
the right way to solve them is to decide how they are to be resolved by a court or how they are
to be resolved by some adjudicative official as opposed to thinking about our problems in
terms of just inherent in, again, pluralism, which has to be solved through politics, has to be
solved through conversation. But we still have all this, whatever is upstream of the American
law, the steep historical and cultural background. So anything we do is going to be flavored by that.
So we're not ever going to get to a system where the policemen are like the policemen in Germany,
for instance, or that the courts are like the courts in Germany. And given that cultural upstream,
again, isn't the intuition basically correct? Just be suspicious of the law. We should have fewer laws,
rely less on the legal process. In essence, deregulate as many different things as we can.
Why isn't that the correct conclusion rather than building in more rights?
I'm skeptical of the cultural premise, or at least I think it requires more specification.
I do think that Americans have a history of being paranoid about various things.
But this idea that there's something that state building is somehow un-American or something, I don't buy it.
There was an inflection point, I think an important inflection point in the 1960s and around the response to the great society that I think one can't separate from race quite as cleanly as one might wish to.
that associates big government with helping out racial minorities in particular.
And there was a reaction to that.
I'm not conceding.
I won't concede at this moment, at least, that we just have to accept that that's just an inevitable
feature of the American people, that the solution to which is some kind of deregulation.
It's hard for me to draw a line from what I see as the problem to that solution.
But say we consider the notion of making disabled people, either a protected class or a partially
protected class, and you've written about this, aren't we in that sense forcing them much more
into the legal system? So you have to get a legally valid diagnosis, right, to count as some
particular kind of disabled, autistic, ADHD, whatever it may be. Doesn't that legalistic
requirement itself infringe on the rights of many disabled people who may not even think of themselves
as disabled or may not wish to be labeled or they don't want to get a diagnosis because it will work
against them when their divorce case comes up or for some other reason in the workplace.
Isn't that a case where making it more legalistic is going to infringe on a lot of people's
rights and lead to great harm?
No, I don't think so.
I don't think that providing more openness than the law to disability claims requires
people to be in some kind of registry or something of disabilities that's stigmatizing or
something.
Rights are for those who wish to exercise them, not for those who don't.
But as a matter of actual evidence, you have to show you have the disability, right?
Right? Well, it depends on what we're talking about. Right. So I'm not someone who believes that one's
right should necessarily turn on one's individual claim to an exemption from some scheme, right? So part of when I
talk about disability rights, a couple of things to say. One is that we should respect political
processes that protect disability rights. And right now we don't fully. And that's not necessarily
a matter of presenting oneself as disabled, a business having to make a reasonable accommodation.
helps anyone, regardless of anyone who needs the accommodation, regardless of what their particular legal
designation might be. But there's also another point, which is that when we're talking about
disability rights, there's genuine injustice that I think many of us recognize as injustice,
that people who are less able or less able to thrive, is something that it's not just a matter
of kind of a legal technicality that we think that these people should have rights. It's that we think
they should have rights. And so there shouldn't be legal formalisms that get in the way of that. And that's
my objection. But say an autistic person says, well, I hate fluorescent lighting. You need to change
the lighting in the workplace. And the employer comes back and says, well, at least I need to know
you're autistic. Where's your diagnosis? That seems like a pattern we might expect, whether we
like it or not, right? So there's not some accommodation that simply helps everyone. The lighting
is one way or another. Should that be a right that has partial recognition? I think if we're
talking about individual claims, let me back up. It is the case that.
that if you make more claims legally available, people may argue about whether those claims
should be recognized.
In the particular context of disability, the problem that I see is that there are genuine claims
of right, genuine claims of justice that are unrecognized, right?
So the fact that someone who has a disability is not being accommodated is something that counts
as a cost for me.
So the fact that it also means that legal claims will be involved is something that I think
is overcome by the connection between the actual accommodation and what we think justice requires.
The other flip side of that is there are lots of rights that we have in our culture that are not
actually connected to any deep conception of justice, right?
I have a right to watch pornography in my home.
If the state said that I don't have that right, that's costly to me, but the connection
between that and I think many of our conceptions of justice, I think is much weaker than the connection
when it comes to disability rights, right?
So it's not that I'm saying we don't have many rights now and we should have many more.
It's that there's a misalignment between the rights that we think are worth it and the rights that we don't think are worth it.
Now, I'm a fan of Robert Nozik, though not in the absolutist sense, but nonetheless, I believe there's some right to economic liberty.
So if a state set up, say, occupational licensing for interior designers, I would want at least a state court to strike that down and say,
that's a violation of the right of economic liberty and that there's no other overriding concern.
what would be an example where you would want a policy struck down for violating economic liberty?
I also would say as a tentative matter, right, that occupational licensing for interior designers would be a policy that I would think should be struck down.
As you do, our current system doesn't allow that kind of claim to be struck down.
In some ways, this is analogous to the disability situation where if you've got no good reason for a particular law, it's not fully analogous.
If you have no good reason for particular law, that law shouldn't be in place.
I say tentatively because I think that all of these kinds of cases shouldn't turn on some
major premise about economic regulation or some such.
It should depend on the facts.
And I don't know enough about interior design to know whether there's some good reason to have
occupational licensing.
It doesn't seem like there's a good reason.
But I'd want to know factually, right?
So the empirical record matters.
Sure.
You might think there could be some particular kinds of frauds would proliferate in the less
regulated regime.
but you still at the same time might hold the opinion.
There's a right to economic liberty
and you can contract for your interior design
with the persons you want.
It's not creating any overriding danger to the polity
or it's not like eliminating all licensing for all doctors.
It's just something one can live with
and that if you want to make your living that way,
that's your right to do so.
Why isn't that just prima facie correct?
I wouldn't deny that that's prima facie correct.
I would phrase it slightly differently
or frame it slightly differently,
which is to say that I think people do have a basic right
to the government justifying when it regulates them.
So I don't feel a need to label that as a right.
Labeling it as a right carries some baggage
and maybe makes people have greater expectations
of how far they can go than I think is healthy.
But yes, absolutely.
If there's no good reason to regulate,
then the government shouldn't regulate.
There are some issues with a regime of that sort.
And as a U.S. lawyer, you know, people will throw,
you know, Lochner versus New York at that kind of system.
But to my mind, the problem in the Lochner case, which is this famous legal case from
1905, about maximum hours law, which the court struck down, is not that the court should never
struck down maximum hours laws.
It's that that particular law was well justified.
So I think the battle over these things should be a battle over justification, not a battle
over whether people have rights.
I think people do have rights to contract and economic rights and so forth.
As you probably know, for minor league baseball, a lot of labor law just doesn't apply.
So people can work.
If works, even the right word, all sorts of crazy hours at very low pay, and nothing from the state intervenes.
It's considered partly an apprenticeship for many people.
I think there may well be context in which we are willing to tolerate that as a society, but I think it has to be contextual.
This is partly a political conversation, right?
So I might have my own views about this and others have their views.
And I think it's okay for those views to be worked out through politics, through forms of dialogue,
Maybe you strike down something at the margins and you see how the state responds.
You see how people respond.
I think courts should be part of a broader political conversation about these balances of values that we all disagree about.
Now, you yourself emphasize that these partial rights, they often conflict with each other, sometimes by their very nature.
If I put on my Henry Sidgwick philosopher hat and I ask, what's the ultimate moral standard you use as a moralist when rights conflict to arrive at a decision?
How do we solve the problem of pluralism is another way to put it morally?
What would your answer be?
I think the most important value for an adjudicator of a case involving competing rights is humility
and the recognition that the adjudicator doesn't have superior knowledge, superior moral knowledge,
about the way of resolving these kinds of conflicts, are political conflicts.
At some level, if we think the politics are acting in a perfectly sensible way, then maybe there's not much of
role for the adjudicator. Maybe you just let politics work itself out in the way it should. If we
think that there's something that politics is missing, and when I say we, again, I think people are
going to have different views about this. If you think something's missing, if you think that someone's
not fully taking account of the full dignity of someone, if you think the government is
acting grossly disproportionately, then that's when you step in. Those words you're using
sensible, grossly, they're in a sense parasitic on some independent moral standard. So I'm not
suggesting you should be utilitarian, but if you said, well, I'm a utilitarian,
Lysbentham was, that would answer the question, how you reconcile the claims.
So if it's not utilitarianism, then what is it exactly?
I hesitate to label it. I would say proportionality, which means, in this sense,
that one is constantly concerned with, and proportionality as to a set of values that are
embedded within the existing legal tradition. So within our legal tradition, we value freedom of
speech, we value racial equality, we value a certain degree of independence and autonomy,
and those are differently affected by different kinds of laws. Laws also protect some of those
values, right? So it's a constant negotiation, and of course democracy is also a value, right? So there's
multiple competing values. I don't have a key because the key presupposes some hierarchy
between the values that I reject. I think that in each individual case, those values are going to be
affected to different degrees. And that's part of what the judge's job is, is to figure out whether
there is some disproportionality in the way in which values that we all share are being respected.
But then how do you ever know if you're right? I'm not sure at the margins, there are values
we all share. There's disagreement, right? Proportionality is just saying there's some waiting scheme
behind this all that we judge by some standard of whether we're offended, but then that's getting
back to what lies behind all that. And I just, I don't see what the answer.
is? I don't think there is an answer because I don't think the question is whether we're right. I think
the question is whether we're managing disagreement in a way that leads to social harmony and social
cohesion. So the problem, again, is not a problem that some of us are getting rights wrong.
The problem, you want abortion rights, I don't, or vice versa. You want labor rights, I don't
or vice versa. And one of us is right and one of us is wrong. The problem is that we disagree.
We don't agree on the way of resolving our disagreement either. The job of the job of
the judge under those circumstances is to manage disagreement, is to manage pluralism.
And that's not something that lends itself to being right or wrong.
Now you're one of the leaders on the Facebook Oversight Board.
What is the optimal correlation between the content moderation policies of different social
networks?
So some people worry like, oh, it's okay if Facebook takes someone off the platform, the company
matter, but Facebook the page.
But if Twitter and YouTube do the same thing at the same time, then people start to
getting worried. So should individual social media companies consider the interdependencies here or just
each act separately? Well, I think it depends on the content. So generally speaking, yes,
I won't speak for the oversight board. I'll just speak for myself. Generally speaking, yes,
I do think that one should generally be concerned with whether the market for users is a
competitive market or not. So if Facebook's the only game in town, as it is in many countries,
I think one is right to be more concerned about its content moderation practices.
under those circumstances than under circumstances of genuine competition.
And so it would then follow that if all the companies are doing the same thing,
whether or not they're coordinating their behavior, one should be more worried about that.
But it's hard to be abstract about that because some content comes down because there's good reason to take it down.
Facebook is a big player in the market.
You don't have to think it's either collusion or that Facebook is a monopoly.
But it's just like if one employer fires you, a lot of others will be reluctant to hire you.
They'll think, oh, something went wrong.
So if Facebook takes down a content poster, then Twitter and YouTube must think, well,
Facebook looked into this.
Facebook even has this oversight board, right?
A lot of smart people on it, a lot of diverse points of view.
Shouldn't that make you much more reluctant to argue for something not being on Facebook?
I'm skeptical that that's, in fact, how YouTube and Twitter behave, that they take
things down because Facebook takes something down.
But I'd also say it's complicated because there are things that,
come down because there are good reasons to take them down.
And so, yes, as I said, I think one should be concerned with market concentration and market
power.
One should be concerned if there is speech that should be proliferating but isn't.
One should be concerned that the decision makers are private actors, right?
And one should also be concerned with the harms of certain kinds of speech and the ways in
which those harms can be amplified in the social media context.
One should be concerned about the particular rights of the platform, right? These are private companies,
but also have their own views about what their speech environment should be. So there are a number of
other factors that count in addition to whether some particular piece of content should get spread.
Now, you've argued in the past that there's no constitutional right to privacy. And I think
I agree with everything you have written on the topic. But if I introduce a new angle, I'm wondering
if I agree with you. So right now, facial and gait surveillance are.
much more prominent than when you wrote your original articles. And if someone said, well,
I'm worried about facial and gait surveillance, these are genuinely infringing upon a right to
privacy in the literal sense of that term that's much more literal than the other contexts
where the right to privacy has been invoked. Would you still say there's no right to privacy?
I don't think there's no right to privacy. So I think that the Supreme Court no longer
grounds the sorts of things that we associate with the constitutional right to privacy
in a right to privacy. So we think of that in terms of birth control and abortion rights,
and that is no longer the language and hasn't been for many, many decades, hasn't been the language
the court uses. So I mean there's no right to privacy in a descriptive sense. I do think
privacy is an important value to people. When it's being infringed by private actors, there are
other important values that are also relevant, namely the economic rights of the private actors.
If we're talking about government surveillance, right? I'd want to know why is the government
surveilling? What is the value that it's serving? Is it ham-handed? What are the possibilities
of abuse? Could it achieve these objectives in some way that doesn't involve the privacy infringement?
So I think privacy is a right should be treated in the same way as other rights.
Our final segment, the Jamal Green production function. What did you learn collecting
insects with your dad in the backyard? Gosh, I don't know where that came from. It's true,
but maybe nothing other than that I like my dad. I think he's a good guy. I think it showed something
about my interest in taxonomy, which I think is probably not unconnected to later becoming a
baseball reporter as I became a kind of stathead in high school and in college. So there is probably
a story to tell there. Intellectually, the different parts of New York you lived in growing up,
how did that shape your views intellectually? So you move from Queens to Park Slope, right,
among other moves? So I was in Brooklyn for all my childhood, in Park Slope, for part of it and a place
called Flatlands for the rest of it. And since adulthood, I've basically lived in Manhattan.
And, you know, one thing I'd say is just an appreciation for pluralism that is still a part of
my work. I think comes from, you know, going to school in the Upper East Side and laying my head,
you know, an hour and a half away from that across lots of different communities, lots of
different neighborhoods, and learning to just appreciate human diversity, learning to get used
to it, the ways in which my high school community was very different.
different from my family and seeing the value in each of those communities, I think was a very
important part of formulating my values so that I could never labor under the fiction that
there is any one value that we all pursue.
Your brother aside, who is the best rapper of all time?
The best rapper of all time depends if we're talking about lyrics or something else.
I'll go with Black Thought, who is probably who my brother would say as well, who's the lead
rapper for the roots.
And what makes him especially interesting?
prolific, he's extremely productive, he's very smart, he's not lazy in the way in which he
constructs his lyrics. And he manages to be both musical and a poet. This is something that my
brother has struggled with early in his career, is that he's a poet. He's not a musician,
and he had to learn to be a musician. Trying to combine those things is a rare gift.
What was your favorite music from your father's extensive music collection growing up,
which is a bit earlier, so there's less rap in it proportionally?
Yeah, so my father's not a rap fan. He was a big jazz fan. So, you know, Coltrane, Miles Davis,
were, you know, people he grew up loving. And he also was into sort of classic rock of his
generation. So, you know, you're Bob Dylan, you're Jimmy Hendrix, the Beatles. You know,
nothing exotic, but good music. What is your oddest or most unusual effective work habit?
I don't know that it's so unusual, but certainly my most effective work habit is to use
the entire day to work. I get a lot of work done late at night. Most of my time during the day
is spent teaching classes or meeting with students and all writing and reading and preparation
and everything is much later. And that means, you know, I don't watch television shows. It's a really
extended work day. I work during soccer practices. I work sitting in the car. All my kids are doing
something or other. So I don't segregate times of the day where I can't work.
When you teach a law class, what does it you feel that you do different?
from most of your colleagues. What is special about taking a class with you?
I teach constitutional law. That's not the only thing I teach, but it's one of the main things I teach.
And one thing that I try to communicate to students is that it's okay if they go into the class and then come out of it really jaded about constitutional law and its relationship to politics.
And we're very open about the challenge of trying to understand law as an autonomous discipline and sort of, what are we doing here?
If we all know that there's a realist core to what courts are doing, you know, I don't know that that's so unique to me, but it is a very self-conscious journey that we all take together to say, is there a place you can arrive at where you're comfortable with what your role as a lawyer is and what your role as a constitutional lawyer is, where, you know, what you have to do is to learn a certain kind of language.
that is self-consciously, you know that this is not just a shallow fiction, but a really deep fiction about how change is made.
You're playing a certain role, and you have to sort of justify that and figure out for yourself why that role is valuable to you.
Last question. You meet plenty of students, and surely you wonder, will they someday become important producers of legal ideas?
As professors or as judges are in some other capacity, and other than the usual hard work, intelligence, open-minded,
what is it you look for as a marker of their talent for the future?
Well, other than the usual.
But there's plenty of people who have the usual who don't do something important, right?
There's some extra spark of something.
I think it's just a combination of two things.
And they're not unusual in the sense that it's some kind of esoteric thing.
It's a combination of being genuinely a self-starter and also being genuinely curious.
Curiosity goes hand in hand with a certain degree of humility,
not knowing that you're right about things and just wanting to know more and more
more at all times, but also being someone who seeks out ideas on their own, who doesn't need
someone to tell them something who sees, who hears something, and says, oh, that's interesting
to me intrinsically.
I'd like to know more about that, as opposed to wanting to know how it's instrumental to
them getting to some other step.
Jamal Green, thank you very much.
And again, everyone, here's Jamal's book, How Rights Went Wrong, Why Our Obsession
With Rights is Tearing America Apart.
Thank you.
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