-
5 votes
-
Danish general election called after PM faces mink cull ultimatum – Mette Frederiksen bypasses vote of no confidence by calling 1 November ballot
3 votes -
Jair Bolsonaro, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva headed to runoff after tight Brazil election
11 votes -
Assessing Vladimir Putin’s most recent nuclear threats
15 votes -
How to make class action lawsuits more meaningful to the public
Have you ever received notice that you might be eligible for something from a class-action settlement? Ever notice that the effort required to recover is significant, and the recovery perhaps...
Have you ever received notice that you might be eligible for something from a class-action settlement? Ever notice that the effort required to recover is significant, and the recovery perhaps insultingly miniscule?
I don't know of any data, but I suspect that's true of nearly every class action lawsuit, even those that win in court battles. Maybe the original plaintiffs get a decent recovery, sometimes there's injunctive relief (which means the court forces the defendant to do or not do something). Every once in a while, individual members of the class get a meaningful outcome (vw's dieselgate comes to mind).
The public interest justification for the outcomes where the recover for class members is really small, if one is even ever really offered, is that the cost of the action to the defendant serves as an inducement to all defendants to keep their act together. But see, Tyler Durden's explanation of the actuarial function from Fight Club.
My thought is that instead of any recovery for the individual class members ("fuck 'em, right?"), their portion of the money should go to a public interest fund dedicated to consumer protection. My reason for this is that these small recoveries don't make any useful change for the individual class member consumers. But collectively, might add up to enough to make a meaningful difference to the future activities of producers.
Of course, all the usual caveats about corruption and accountability come into play. But there's a few reasons it might help, if those can be overcome. First, it might prompt faster, lest costly settlements. The payouts would be lower, and also the transaction costs. This shifts the litigation process from focussing on big recoveries to high volume of suits, bringing in more defendants. It would also enable smaller firms to bring suit, the hope being that smaller firms would take on more marginal cases and get more action.
Second, it might actually create a feedback loop. If the fund gets large enough, it could lobby and investigate, providing more information more new suits, and identifying the worst actors, and encouraging useful regulation. Imagine if Consumers Union could return to its glory of the 80's and have a big lobbying fund?
Or, we could just have decent government level consumer protections (hahhahahahahahahah!)
9 votes -
Chartbook #153: The South Asian Polycrisis
3 votes -
Former President Trump suggested to his aides that the United States could trade Puerto Rico to Denmark for Greenland while he was president, according to a new book
9 votes -
Far right's triumph in my country reveals a very Swedish brand of intolerance – political parties proved that our supposed liberalism is only skin deep
8 votes -
The three longest days of February. The beginning of the great war which no one thought would come
15 votes -
CBS News poll: Of 2,085 adults polled, majority favor maximum age limits for elected US officials
13 votes -
What is the European Union really doing in Africa?
3 votes -
Emmanuel Macron’s new roadmap for education
3 votes -
Much ado about nothing – Sanna Marin and a very Finnish scandal
10 votes -
California first US state to offer free meals to all public school students
24 votes -
Jon Stewart on PACT Act being blocked in the Senate
6 votes -
America’s self-obsession is killing its democracy
11 votes -
How do politicians keep getting so rich?
7 votes -
Recordings within eight feet of police illegal in Arizona under bill signed into law by Ducey
20 votes -
Former leader of a religious right organization said he recruited and coached wealthy volunteers to wine, dine, and entertain conservative Supreme Court justices while pushing conservative positions
12 votes -
California lawmakers reject ballot proposal that aimed to end forced prison labor
10 votes -
The conservative Supreme Court's favorite judicial philosophy requires a very, very firm grasp of history — one that none of the justices seem to possess
16 votes -
Scottish independence: 19 October 2023 proposed as date for referendum
9 votes -
Former federal judge warns of danger to American democracy
11 votes -
Naftali Bennett, Yair Lapid agree on dissolving Knesset; Israel heads for fifth election in three years
7 votes -
United Nations committee finds Finland violated an international convention on racial discrimination when it comes to the political rights of Sámi
5 votes -
The hunger
14 votes -
How the next election will be stolen
10 votes -
Why Denmark is voting on its defence relationship with the EU – and what it says about democracy in Europe
5 votes -
Charlie Kirk and "head empty" fascism
6 votes -
The esoteric social movement behind this cycle’s most expensive House race
12 votes -
German state elections show populism in decline on left and right
9 votes -
Asylum in Denmark – is the country guilty of double standards?
5 votes -
Inside Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s world
4 votes -
How “Z” became Putin’s latest propaganda meme for the war against Ukraine
5 votes -
Denmark says it is in talks with Rwanda about setting up a reception centre for asylum seekers
3 votes -
War in Ukraine: The Economist interviews Tony Blair
4 votes -
EU triggers mechanism to strip Hungary of billions worth of budget funds
11 votes -
The Council on National Policy - a shadowy but powerful ultra-right leadership institute
5 votes -
Texas is quietly using redistricting lawsuits to launch a broader war against federal voting rights law
5 votes -
War with Russia? Finland has a plan for that.
6 votes -
America needs a better plan to fight autocracy
12 votes -
Nuclear Posture Review (USA DoD 2018)
5 votes -
Six people who were part of a failed 1950s social experiment have won compensation from Denmark's government and will receive a face-to-face apology from the prime minister
5 votes -
So you want to reform democracy (2015, with updates)
2 votes -
Belgium to decriminalise sex work
19 votes -
Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau invokes Emergencies Act to address trucker protests
22 votes -
Dispatch from the Ottawa Front: Sloly is telling you all he's in trouble. Who's listening?
14 votes -
Decrying “bounties” in Texas’ S.B. 8 is a political trap
2 votes -
Gary Chambers - Scars and Bars - Political ad
11 votes -
A funny thing happened on the way to the gerrymander - Democrats may actually gain 2-3 seats on net rather than losing
8 votes