This is the sixth Multiple Monkey adventure. They meet a stranger, a new monkey and have to decide to make him welcome or give into their fear. What will they do?
Readers may be surprised to learn that this protest begins with the following statement: “If you are called for jury duty, and are reasonably able to serve, it is important that you support your fellow Americans by serving to the best of your ability and with complete honesty, even if serving is inconvenient or unpleasant.” Having said that, the premise of the protest is as follows: America’s jury duty system, much like American society in general, has degraded to the point where it is essentially defunct. The system (i.e., summoning random citizens to appear in court) is essentially the same as it has always been, yet over the course of just the last 50 years, American society and the average American citizen have completely changed. By any reasonable standard, America has become a completely new country, and its citizens have devolved into a less advanced species. The majority of people summoned for jury duty are not qualified to serve—at least not by any reasonable standard. Being the proverbial “warm body” (albeit one who is a non-felon American citizen and at least 18 years old) is not sufficient. At minimum, a juror must be able to completely understand everything that transpires in a case, and be intellectually capable of doing more than simple keyword matching. Compliance with juror summonses is low. Some are wastefully sent to people who have moved or are deceased, but the concern is that many people toss their summonses in the garbage while likely thinking, “I never got it. I never signed for it. It wasn’t sent with delivery confirmation. They can’t prove anything. Let’s see them waste their limited budget to come after me.” Even though the overwhelming majority of court cases are not handled by a jury, we can’t have a system in which criminals are set free because they were entitled to a trial by a jury of their “peers,” but no such people were available. We also can’t have a system in which people who have been falsely accused of wrongdoing are left with no other option than to plead their case to a judge. If someone mentions the phrase “jury duty” at a social gathering, many people chime in with “horror stories” (perhaps secondhand) about bad experiences, and share excuses and tactics they’ve used (or have heard were used) to get out of attending or serving on a given case. Some people are uncomfortable deciding whether to sentence a potentially innocent person to a long, harsh prison term (if not death), or awarding a large sum of money in a civil case. Others have anxiety about the logistics or financial ramifications of serving, and are concerned about losing their job, being punished by their employer, or falling behind on work. For the self-employed or unemployed, the concern may be lost wages or opportunities. The book includes sections addressing the minimum age and education level required of jurors, volunteering for service, references to religion in courthouses, jury nullification, plea bargaining with alleged criminals without juror approval, grand jury duty, mandatory jury service, the juror handbook, juror safety, the penalty for perjury, jury duty scams, a list of things the government can do to improve juror turnout, and a list of reasons why people are giving up on America’s justice system. Jury duty was, is, and hopefully always will be integral to America's system of justice. Having said that, our current system has become horribly outdated, and a great deal of change is needed. Hopefully, this book will serve as a model of how someone can express his/her viewpoints on a matter in a non-violent, non-destructive, and non-disruptive manner. The power to change laws, policies, and the collective consciousness of The People is best accomplished through the written or spoken word, and as a last resort, through non-violent, non-destructive, and non-disruptive demonstrations or acts of civil (as in “civilized”) disobedience and resistance.
Can you imagine a world where everybody is confined to a wheelchair? Witness the first wheelchair on the moon and see how scary Vikings can be even when in wheelchairs. This is a hardcover version of the book, slightly larger than the paperback version and designed for library use.
The unforgettable finale to the Twelfth Doctor's first year is here! With Earth's Sun ringed by vast and deadly Hyperion technology, set to drain our star of all energy in the ultimate solar extinction event, the Doctor and Clara must face their most challenging adventure yet ¨C to save humanity's future!
The Doctor and Clara face impossible odds as the Hyperions - a race of sentient suns who scorched the universe until the Time Lords brought their reign of terror to an end - have returned, and, worse, have come to Earth, in an epic, four-part season finale! Plus - the pair face a marooned creature in a stately home, and visit San Diego Comic Con! Collects Doctor Who: The Twelfth Doctor #11-15 and the 2015 SDCC-Exclusive Short
“Nothing short of extraordinary. Doctor Who: The Twelfth Doctor just keeps getting better.” – Snap Pow The Twelfth Doctor has just regenerated – but the universe won’t give him a minute’s rest! Not when there’s a violent, sentient star on the warpath on a terraformed ice planet – or an ancient celestial murdering her way toward resurrection. From an enemy who can slide between the cracks of the universe, to an alien invasion in 1960s Las Vegas, and on to a battle for the future of the solar system, the Twelfth Doctor and Clara have their work cut out for them if they’re going to survive. Writers Robbie Morrison (Drowntown, Nikolai Dante), George Mann (Warhammer 40,000, Dark Souls) and Cavan Scott (Vikings, Tekken) join an astounding team of artists, including Dave Taylor (Batman: Death by Design), Brian Williamson (Torchwood), Daniel Indro (Vikings) and Mariano Laclaustra (Torchwood), in this complete collection of the Year One adventures of the Twelfth Doctor, as played by Peter Capaldi, and Clara, as played by Jenna Coleman. Collects Doctor Who: The Twelfth Doctor Year One #1-16.