PLEASE HELP ME SPREAD THIS ARGUMENT AGAINST TORT REFORM:
Why can juries be trusted to decide life or death -- but not monetary damages?
This only makes sense to someone who values money more then human life.
George Bush is calling for litigation "reform" that would limit non-economic damages (pain and suffering) in medical malpractice cases to $250,000 (
http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/ssistory.mpl/nation/3032339).
Let's try to follow the logic here. A doctor negligently injures or kills someone and, out of concern that the jury is somehow going to *screw up* and make an incorrect determination, the jury's authority to place a value on the resulting suffering is limited by statute to $250,000. A jury can, however, render the ultimate penalty in a criminal case - death. Why not the same concern about a jury screw up in death penalty cases?
This is a "greater includes the lesser" problem. If the jury is fit to exercise the greatest power, the ultimate power, to decide that a life should be ended, does it make sense that a jury would not be fit to determine how much money pain and suffering related to a death (or grievous injury) is worth? Such a limitation seems nonsensical.
And as we all know, George Bush, proponent of life when politically convenient, was also an enthusiastic supporter of the death penalty while governor of Texas.
Why does George Bush think that juries are fit to decide death but not to determine an amount of monetary damages for pain and suffering? If a jury is not competent to figure out an amount of money to award, certainly the jury is not competent to decide to end a life. Shouldn't we value life more than money? Shouldn't we therefore place the greatest safeguards on the process that could end life, not the process to award money?