<h2>7</h2>
<p>Anyone who has witnessed even so much as a traffic-court trial
cannot help but realize that "government by law instead of man"
is a mere political phrase without meaning in reality. The
ascendancy of me-and-mine over you-and-yours runs so deep in
the human psyche that abstract idealisms must always take second
place where such ascendancy is threatened. Thus we see that
the belly-crawler, meek and subservient to the judge, comes off
with a token sentence while the man who attempts to maintain
his pride, his rights, his self-respect gets the book thrown at him.</p>
<p>No practical attorney is unaware that the judgment of his case
depends largely upon who presides, the whims, the prejudices,
the moods, the viewpoint of the judge; and that the law merely
provides justification for the imposition of those whims, moods,
prejudices, and viewpoints.</p>
<p>And ambitions.</p>
<p>The announcement at E.H.Q. that a Junior E would be given
this problem gave Gunderson's man the opening he had hoped
to find. A hurried call to the capitol and a brief conversation with
Gunderson himself confirmed his conclusions. Perhaps the E was
above all law, and it might not be expedient to challenge that
right now, but immunity did not necessarily extend to the
Junior E.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>In view of the known ambitions of certain judges, it should
not be difficult to make a test case of this—whether the E's had
a right to jeopardize a colony of human beings by assigning an
unqualified man to the problem.</p>
<p>A question, too, of who had jurisdiction over the Juniors, the
apprentices, the students. How far down the line did the mantle
of the E extend to protect those not yet qualified? How far out
did the Administration of E.H.Q. extend to substitute for government?
How much of a state within a state had E.H.Q. become?</p>
<p>Now, while the public was clamoring for action, and E.H.Q.
was, instead, droning on through a mass of inconsequential detail,
now while public sentiment was crystallizing, or could be
crystallized into placing human welfare over science procedures,
now was the time.</p>
<p>It was not difficult to find a judge who was predisposed to favor
the request of the attorney general.</p>
<hr /><p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[50]</SPAN></span></p>
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