Conrad Black
Conrad Black is a graduate of Carleton, Laval, and McGill Universities, the author of biographies of Maurice Duplessis, Franklin D. Roosevelt, and Richard M. Nixon, was the publisher of the London (UK) Telegraph newspapersand Spectator from 1987 to 2004, and founded the National Post. His columns and reviews frequently appear in a large number of publications in Canada, the US, and the UK, especially the National Post and the National Review, and he has been a life peer in the British House of Lords as Lord Black of Crossharbour, since 2001.
Bio last updated April 30th, 2018.
Articles by Conrad Black
First, We bar all the Lawyers
By Conrad Black
February 1, 2014
Conrad Black makes a serious point with his trademark wit
While I did not wish to practise, essentially because I did not wish to work for others but rather for myself and for my own account, I care for the law, and despite what I am saying about the legal and other professions, I think that society functions well, given that it is run by people In the intervening years, I have engaged a very large number of lawyers, including many of the best known and most capable lawyers in this country, the United States, the United Kingdom and Australia With that said, precisely the motive that caused me not to practise law, I think, afflicts many people who do: They resent the client, and specifically resent the fact that though the law is one of the premier learned professions, it exacts its income from clients who, for the most part, lawyers do not regard as their intellectual peers This is a scandalous state of affairs; many lawyers are concerned, but where is the professional outrage? And where was the Supreme Court when the Bill of Rights was put to the shredder? Simply stated, a great many lawyers extract their livelihood purporting to follow instructions from people they do not intellectually respect The blindfolded lady holding the scales of justice, the truisms we were all brought up with about one's day in court and all of us being equal before the law, of what is legitimate and not just what is necessary, and what is morally right and socially best, and has to be obeyed — it is what distinguishes civilized human society from barbarism, lower orders of animals and the jungle Less fortunate people are ground to powder when the legal system and the media crucify them
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The Conversation
Raymond J. de Souza with Conrad Black
August 1, 2013
Conrad Black meets Father Raymond J. de Souza in Calgary for a chat in which any topic is but a suggestion for digression
I think and I believe my actual very last words were something to the effect that when they see it plain and see—as a great many Americans are very uneasy and all the polls show that—when they see just how completely incompatible the conduct of public policy is with the requirements of a great natio...