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With Liberty and Justice for Some: How the Law Is Used to Destroy Equality and Protect the Powerful Hardcover – Illustrated, October 25, 2011
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From "the most important voice to have entered the political discourse in years" (Bill Moyers), a scathing critique of the two-tiered system of justice that has emerged in America
From the nation's beginnings, the law was to be the great equalizer in American life, the guarantor of a common set of rules for all. But over the past four decades, the principle of equality before the law has been effectively abolished. Instead, a two-tiered system of justice ensures that the country's political and financial class is virtually immune from prosecution, licensed to act without restraint, while the politically powerless are imprisoned with greater ease and in greater numbers than in any other country in the world.
Starting with Watergate, continuing on through the Iran-Contra scandal, and culminating with Obama's shielding of Bush-era officials from prosecution, Glenn Greenwald lays bare the mechanisms that have come to shield the elite from accountability. He shows how the media, both political parties, and the courts have abetted a process that has produced torture, war crimes, domestic spying, and financial fraud.
Cogent, sharp, and urgent, this is a no-holds-barred indictment of a profoundly un-American system that sanctions immunity at the top and mercilessness for everyone else.
- Print length304 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherMetropolitan Books
- Publication dateOctober 25, 2011
- Dimensions5.5 x 0.81 x 8.5 inches
- ISBN-109780805092059
- ISBN-13978-0805092059
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Customers find the book engaging and well-researched. They describe it as a must-read for high school history or civics classes. The book provides a well-documented critique of the legal system.
"...Anyway, With Liberty and Justice for Some is an excellent book in spite of this complaint, and telecom immunity and the financial crisis are only..." Read more
"...With Liberty and Justice for Some is a well-researched and well-argued book about how politicians and large business owners very literally rule our..." Read more
"Genn Greenwald has written a masterpiece, must-read book. Every word in it is true...." Read more
"...Whether or not you fully agree with Greenwald's politics, it's a great and quite quick read." Read more
Customers find the book informative and well-documented. They appreciate the intelligent writing and analysis. The author presents the subject with objectivity and simplicity, making it interesting and informative.
"...Support Greenwald. He argues from fact and his facts are trenchant." Read more
"...There is a lot of important material packed into this book and I recommend it for anyone who cares about the direction our country is taking, but I..." Read more
"...He lays out in exquisite detail evidence that there exist two tiers in our justice system whereby the rich and powerful are immune from prosecution..." Read more
"...him soft peddling on the Democrats nor Republicans and he provides enough context and factual examples to make hard hitting and important points on..." Read more
Customers find the book well-written and engaging. They appreciate the author's direct commentary and precision in expressing views. The book is described as readable and well-documented.
"...It turns out, he's a great author as well...." Read more
"Genn Greenwald has written a masterpiece, must-read book. Every word in it is true...." Read more
"...Greenwald, as always, is a skillful writer and columnist. His words ring true and research proves his point: the justice system is broken, but we..." Read more
"Greenwald is disciplined, courageous and tireless in his detailed indictment of American justice and the degradation of the rule of law...." Read more
Customers find the book well-written and enraging. They describe it as an excellent piece of journalism by a true patriot. Readers praise the book for its solid critique of the executive branch and eye-popping account of the lawlessness and unaccountability of elites.
"...An excellent piece of work by a true patriot." Read more
"Genn Greenwald has written a masterpiece, must-read book. Every word in it is true...." Read more
"...is yet another example of why Glenn Greenwald is the most important investigative journalist of our day...." Read more
"Eye-popping account of the lawlessness and unaccountability of our elites contrasted with the harsh treatment accorded by our judicial system to the..." Read more
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on November 22, 2011Glenn Greenwald's With Liberty and Justice for Some is an extremely important book. I don't exaggerate when I say it's a book everyone in the United States should read, something I don't normally say about even my favorite books.
Greenwald makes the case in the United States today, rule of law is disappearing. Instead, we have what he calls "The Principle of Elite Immunity,"-the idea that political and business elites are never to be punished for their crimes, except perhaps if their crimes harm other elites. Greenwald blames the current mindset on Ford for pardoning Nixon and justifying the pardon on the grounds that prosecuting Nixon would be too divisive.
Now, personally, I don't think the pardon of Nixon would have been such a bad thing if it had been a one-time thing and the country had gotten back on course afterwards. However, Greenwald convincingly argues that the Nixon pardon was the beginning of a pattern of bad excuses for forgiving any and all high-level wrong doing in this country. Thus, we get pardons for Iran-Contra criminals, Bill Clinton suppressing inquiry into Regan and Bush's illegally providing of weapons to Iraq in spite of having promised investigations, and Obama's failure to prosecute the crimes of the Bush administration.
It's important to stress that the excuses really are ridiculous-read the book for the full recitation, but here's one especially bad example, both in terms of the flimsiness of the rationale and the fact that it was given by a member of our government's alleged watchdog, the media. When Bush pardoned Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger for multiple felony counts of perjury and obstruction of justice in connection with Iran-Contra, Richard Cohen, on the grounds that Cohen had run into Weinberger quite a few times at Safeway, and he seemed like an OK guy to Cohen.
One of the strongest sections of the book is the coverage of the NSA wiretapping scandal and the decision to grant telecoms immunity for breaking the law on behalf of the Bush administration. Previously, I had known about the scandal, but had simply filed it away in my brain as one of the lesser crimes of the Bush administration. However, Greenwald explains how by granting the telecoms retroactive immunity for breaking the law, Democrats (and Congress was controlled by Democrats at the time) passed on a rare opportunity to get an actual investigation into Bush's crimes.
Several other things stick out about the telecom immunity story. First, Congress' actions can't be defended on the grounds that the telecoms thought what they were doing was legal, because under the original law that was a valid defense. Second, the telecom immunity bill was written with heavy influence from corporate lobbyists, a troubling example of how, in Greenwald's words, "major corporations literally write our nation's laws." Third, as a senator Obama went back on an initial promise to help block telecom immunity. Had I known that fact when Obama was elected, his other lapses in office would have surprised me less.
By comparison, the discussion of lawbreaking in relation to the 2008 financial crisis was a bit weak. It includes quotes from a number of authorities, including Alan Greenspan saying that much of what happened was "just plain fraud," and cites one case where a former CEO was found to have committed fraud but was allowed to settle his case with a fine of $67, a fraction of the half-billion dollars he made while the fraud was going on. However, unlike most parts of the book, the laws that were supposedly broken are never explained clearly.
In fairness to Greenwald, part of his point is that the financial crisis was never thoroughly investigated, making it hard to know what crimes were or were not committed. Still, given all the anger at Wall Street right now, the book could have benefited a lot from more clarity on that point. Also, Greenwald's focus on lawbreaking means that his mention of how lobbyists managed to get important regulations repealed doesn't have a clear place in his narrative, and I wonder if that wasn't the bigger problem (though it would still be a sign of how corrupt our government is).
Anyway, With Liberty and Justice for Some is an excellent book in spite of this complaint, and telecom immunity and the financial crisis are only two examples of the problems Greenwald covers. So go buy the book, even if you think you know all about these problems. Looking at any one incident in isolation, it's tempting to say, "Okay, that was bad, but I'm sure it won't happen again." Greenwald, however, makes clear that we suffer from a recurring pattern of elites committing serious crimes and getting de facto immunity for doing so, a pattern that will likely continue until we do something to stop it.
- Reviewed in the United States on October 21, 2014I became aware of Glenn Greewald because of his involvement with Edward Snowden. It turns out, he's a great author as well.
With Liberty and Justice for Some is a well-researched and well-argued book about how politicians and large business owners very literally rule our country and are not bound by the same laws as us. Several examples are used to support this argument: The Bush administration wasn't punished for torturing people, communications companies weren't punished for selling user information to the government. The book touches upon many ideas that Snowden would confirm later on.
Be a responsible citizen and read this book. Support Greenwald. He argues from fact and his facts are trenchant.
- Reviewed in the United States on November 10, 2011Glenn Greenwald's subtitle, "How the Law Is Used to Destroy Equality and Protect the Powerful", is an apt summation of the thesis of his book. He argues that, despite the intent of the Founders (admittedly not always applied in reality) that no one should be either above or below the law, American jurisprudence as it now de facto exists, creates two tiers of "justice": one level for the elite (government and business leaders and other rich and powerful individuals) which allows virtual immunity from all prosecution or consequences from nearly unlimited law-breaking, and another level for the rest of us.
For Greenwald, the Watergate scandal and President Ford's pardon of Richard Nixon represented a fundamental break in American history. He doesn't argue that government and business elites never broke the law before that or even that they never got away with it, but in theory at least, the law was supposed to apply equally to everyone. Ford's pardon set the precedent for, and provided the justification of, immunity for the highest officials and defended such immunity as a good thing. The pardon raised the idea that reconciliation and prevention of future problems outweigh and overshadow punishment for past misbehavior (as if the former can happen without the latter), the idea that prosecution is too "messy" and divisive for the country, and the idea that certain positions are just too important to undermine for our national unity and security.
From that foundation, Greenwald touches briefly on the Iran-Contra scandal and the pardons and immunity granted to high level actors (which such protections, conveniently enough, protected those even higher on the food chain). But mostly Greenwald focuses his attention on the events of the past ten years. He spends a great deal of time examining the Bush administration's warrantless wiretapping program, including spelling out the laws which make such wiretapping clearly illegal. Despite the clear illegality, however, neither anyone in the Bush administration nor the private companies which actually did the spying was ever prosecuted. Greenwald details exactly how such immunity came about, especially through lobbying groups and large campaign contributions.
From there Greenwald details a number of other executive abuses and the private influences which support them and the revolving door between - or, rather, the merger of - private industries and the government agencies which, supposedly, regulate them. Among others, Greenwald details the Bush administration's rendition, detention and torture regime and the financial collapse of the late 2000s, led by banks "too big to jail". In each case, Greenwald details how the elite behavior in question was clearly illegal, how such elites fought for immunity, and how such immunity was sold to the public. Many of these abuses took place during the Bush administration, but this is not a partisan hit piece. Greenwald also details how many of such abuses have continued (and even expanded) under Obama, and, perhaps more importantly, how Obama, despite his campaign promises of transparency in government and rule of law, has actively stifled any attempt to investigate, prosecute or even learn about such abuses. The motive, of course, is simple: if Obama investigates his predecessor's abuses, he dramatically limits his own ability to commit the same (or worse), while increasing his own chances of himself being prosecuted. Protecting one's predecessor is an act of self-preservation.
Over two-thirds of the book is dedicated to elite crimes, cover ups and immunity, but Greenwald also shines a brief light on the "second tier": what "justice" is like for the rest of us. He demonstrates that with the growing gap in income and power between the immune elite and the rest of us, the full weight of the "justice" system has been brought more and more to bear on the rest of us, especially those with the least money, resources and power. He looks at the war on drugs, racial inequalities, prison populations (and the relationship of those three factors), the war on terror and indefinite detention, and Obama's war on whistleblowers. This chapter felt very rushed and jam-packed. This section could have been fleshed out to at least double its length to more fully connect the dots and cement Greenwald's point.
Also, without entirely realizing it, Greenwald begins suggesting that there are actually three tiers of justice. Those in the (albeit dwindling) middle classes are certainly subjected to more of the weight of the criminal justice system than elites are (Greenwald jokingly suggests that next time you are pulled over for speeding you should suggest to the officer that this is a time to "look forward, not backward" and see how that works for you). But the ones who really bear the brunt of the system are the poor and minorities, those with the least power. In fact, if the middle classes were forced to endure the indignities of the "justice" system that the poor and minorities deal with on a daily basis, there would be revolt in the streets. Greenwald doesn't quite make the leap, but it is the presence of this relatively content middle class which allows the multi-tiered system to endure and elite immunity to continue.
I've long been an admirer of Greenwald and I read nearly every one of his blog posts. He has a rock solid sense of integrity and, despite having supported Obama himself, he is the first to call out liberals and Democrats for their hypocrisy in cheering Obama even when he commits abuses they used to excoriate Bush for. Greenwald is perhaps an ideologue, but hardly a partisan.
Unfortunately, however, Greenwald is a better blogger than he is a book writer. His blogs are succinct and concise with plenty of evidence to back them up point by point. It is, however, difficult to keep concise over the course of a 270+ page book, and the book often felt unfocused. Too much was packed into each chapter, which left some ideas and arguments not fully developed. Also, some of his quotes don't entirely add to his point. At times he simply quotes fellow liberal bloggers and journalists who are saying the same thing he says. Finding like-minded people saying the same thing you say doesn't really make you any more right. This criticism, however, applies to a minority of the quotes - most do in fact add to his point. It is worth noting that he does not include any sort of bibliography, end notes or footnotes. All his sources are referenced in the text itself.
There is a lot of important material packed into this book and I recommend it for anyone who cares about the direction our country is taking, but I'm afraid Greenwald is preaching to the choir. I don't know how much will be new to the average reader. Greenwald has a strong following (which such following will make up most of the readership of this book, I suspect), but I don't know how far out of that following his influence extends, and those within the following are already too well aware of everything he's written. Almost all of the information Greenwald presents is readily available and has been discussed, albeit rarely in the mainstream media. Those unaware of such information are those who chose to be unaware (or perhaps merely unconcerned) and, unfortunately, they seem to make up the larger share of the public. I don't know the solution, other than that sooner or later many more people will become aware the hard way. Greenwald argues that the multi-tiered "justice" system is unsustainable. I just fear for how it will end.
- Reviewed in the United States on July 22, 2012
Amazon CustomerGlenn Greenwald forces us to acknowledge what we already know and are reluctant to admit: the rule of law no longer exists in our country. He lays out in exquisite detail evidence that there exist two tiers in our justice system whereby the rich and powerful are immune from prosecution for almost any crime while the plebes are subject to ever more draconian punishments via the very same system where equal justice is supposed to be meted out to all. After reading this book, one wonders how any citizen can even bother voting when the very representatives we elect to represent our interests exert themselves to rewrite laws to provide protection for their paymasters. A vote is essentially an endorsement; is it really one's civic duty to to endorse by voting for him the questionable behavior of a politician? This is not a question raised in this book but the facts presented are indeed so disturbing that it is a valid question. An excellent piece of work by a true patriot.
Top reviews from other countries
Firdaus VogtReviewed in the United Kingdom on August 19, 20204.0 out of 5 stars A shocking exposé of criminality on high in the US
Glenn Greenwald’s book, albeit rather dry in places, is an excellent exposé of the shocking nature of criminality on high in the US, and the profit-driven, prejudiced, compassionless persecution of the lowly, little man. It details the sociopathic nature of a country that has become all too evident on the world stage, and which has demeaned it hugely even further since the book was published in 2011. Even though it fails to mention some of the most egregious conduct of the US, such as the School of the Americas (which trained its students to torture, murder and politically repress throughout Latin America), complemented by Operation Condor (a US-backed campaign of political repression and state terror), it is a sad indictment of the leading nation of the so-called free world. Because it sees itself beyond the reach of domestic and international law, the US has descended, in many respects, to the level of a banana republic, while hypocritically professing to uphold the rule of law. Something which Noam Chomsky expatiated on in his “Failed States”; but which Greenwald shows has become bipartisan and deeply entrenched by, amongst other things, subverting fundamental legal principles. Worryingly, it is a perverse model that other nations increasingly feel justified in copying.
LAURENCE MACKENZIEReviewed in Canada on October 3, 20135.0 out of 5 stars should be taught in school
I witnessed Rudy Giuliani dismissing Mr. Greenwald as someone who "hates America". This book reveals a man who loves both the U.S. constitution and the rule of law. These being the very foundation of America, one might conclude that Mr. Giuliani and those elites who share his opinion have lost sight of the higher purpose - were it not for the undeniable argument put forward in the book that the current trend of unaccountability and preferential treatment at the top is completely by design and blatantly self-serving.
Due to the fact that the media has largely morphed from watchdog to lapdog and easily misinforms the public as much as it informs, my utopian wish would be to see the schools of the nation truly educate those who will eventually be electing the future servants of the country - because it is the servants who bear the responsibility for allowing such travesties to flourish. Mr. Greenwald's infuriating and important book would go a long way to fulfilling such a curriculum.
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mcgrouchReviewed in Germany on January 16, 20145.0 out of 5 stars Man glaubt es nicht, das amerikanische Gesetz gilt nicht für alle.
Dieses Buch ist ein Augenöffner. Man kann es leider sehr kurz zusammenfassen. In der obersten Etage der Wirtschafts-- und Politikelite gilt das Gesetz nicht. Greenwald, der auch an den Unterlagen von Edward Snowden arbeitet und mit ihm in Kontakt ist, ist ein Fachmann, den man sich, falls die Englishkenntnisse ausreichen, auch auf youtube ansehen sollte.
MrDowntown45Reviewed in Canada on August 9, 20165.0 out of 5 stars A Well-Written Case for Reforming the Legal and Political Systems of the U.S.
I really enjoyed reading this account of how Gerald Ford's pardon or Richard Nixon set the stage for our current absence of an equal and fair rule of law for all Americans. While we've always suspected that the rich and well-connected do not pay the same price for their crimes as the poor and minority offenders, Glenn Greenwald's book documents the historical and legal facts that prove this suspicion to be accurate. Clearly written and passionately described, the arguments in this book cry out for reform of the legal and political system to accord with the Constitution and American values of equality and fairness.
Matt GallagherReviewed in the United Kingdom on February 26, 20144.0 out of 5 stars A sobering read
This book shines a light on the growing inequality between the rich and poor in the US, and how the rule of law is being eroded, with the threat this poses to equality and liberty. It contains worrying parallels with developments here. Recommended.


