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by jfengel 1957 days ago
And a win will look great when they go for re-election (why is that even a thing?).

You would prefer that they not be elected? That they would be appointed by some politician, with the public having no recourse?

The fact is that the public like prosecutors who convict people. That's deeply unfair. But it's also deeply democratic.

1 comments

You already elect politicians. If that system is producing people you don't trust to manage the affairs of state, why would electing prosecutors lead to different results?
Hard to say, really. It's one of those compromises, quis custodiet and all that.

I very much agree with you: a government has a monopoly on violence and ultimately we all end up trusting it. Too many checks and balances lead to gridlock. Too few lead to oppression. Much of it ends up being decided on inertia. We do it both ways in different jurisdictions, with successes and failures in both.