I will tell you, this one hurt. My book review on INJUSTICE by Carol Leonnig and Aaron C. Davis.
When Everyone Blinks: How Fear, Politics, and Power Gutted American Justice
By Leanne Edwards
There’s a certain myth that Americans like to tell themselves: that justice is blind, impartial, and immune to the tides of politics. It’s a comforting story, but it’s never been entirely true. Even so, the past two decades have seen something more corrosive—a slow, deliberate hollowing out of the very institutions designed to protect the rule of law. Injustice: How Politics and Fear Vanquished America's Justice Department doesn’t just chronicle this decay. It sounds the alarm in a room where almost everyone seems to have already left.
In the book, readers find a detailed post-mortem of the Justice Department’s transformation. Policies once guarded by career professionals—decisions about who gets prosecuted, what counts as a crime, and who is above the law—have become bargaining chips in a game played by politicians and power brokers. The author lays out a pattern: again and again, those with the responsibility to say “no” to power instead said “yes,” or worse, said nothing at all.
But to reduce Injustice to an academic critique would miss the point. The rot it describes isn’t confined to one administration or one party. It’s a contagion that’s spread—slowly, quietly—across the entire landscape of American law and governance.
The Institutions Blink
If the Justice Department was the first domino, the rest fell in quick succession. The American Bar Association, once a proud independent voice, found itself mute. Faced with mounting evidence of political interference, it released carefully worded statements, held panels, and—when it mattered most—shrugged. The group that should have been the firewall instead acted like a fire drill: all noise, no resistance.
You might think a new administration would bring a reckoning. But when the Biden Administration took the reins, the country didn’t get a Rooseveltian crusader. It got something closer to Neville Chamberlain—cautious, conciliatory, and desperate to avoid a fight. The Democratic Party, for its part, kept its powder dry. No alarms were sounded, no lines drawn in the sand. For all their talk of “restoring norms,” the new stewards of justice seemed more interested in maintaining the peace than correcting the course.
Project 2025: The Blueprint Hiding in Plain Sight
If there were any lingering doubts about whether the collapse of American legal norms was accidental or merely opportunistic, Project 2025 should have put them to rest. Here was a detailed, openly published blueprint for dismantling the independence of the Justice Department, remaking the civil service, and consolidating extraordinary power in the hands of a few. It was as radical as it was public: two years before its planned execution, Project 2025 was available for anyone to read.
Yet almost no one in power treated it as the existential warning that it was. The American Bar Association, so quick to issue statements on decorum and ethics, never mounted a campaign to expose the dangers. The Biden Administration, with access to every lever of government and the world’s largest press corps, offered little more than vague promises to “protect democracy.” The Democratic Party, which could have sounded the alarm, instead defaulted to business as usual.
When Project 2025 finally moved from document to reality, the response was not shock but resignation. It was as if the entire political and legal establishment had decided that so long as the threat announced itself in advance, they could claim helplessness when it arrived. The lesson, once again, was simple: the greatest danger to American justice isn’t always a coup in the dark. Sometimes, it’s the slow, public erosion of norms—allowed, even abetted, by those entrusted to defend them.
In the end, Project 2025 was not a secret plot. It was a dare, issued in full view. And America’s institutions, from the Justice Department to the ABA to the highest echelons of political power, blinked on cue.
The Epstein Test
If you’re looking for a single case that lays bare this system-wide collapse, look no further than Jeffrey Epstein. Here was a man with powerful friends, an endless supply of money, and a criminal enterprise hiding in plain sight. When the time came for the law to act, what did we get? A sweetheart deal, brokered behind closed doors, signed off by those tasked with upholding the law. Prosecutors blinked. Judges blinked. The Department of Justice blinked. All the while, the American Bar Association stood by, watching the storm pass.
When Epstein was finally re-arrested years later, it felt less like justice and more like a delayed reaction—an aftershock with no real reckoning. The message was clear: if you have enough money, enough connections, or enough secrets, the law might frown at you, but it will rarely bare its teeth.
Connecting the Dots
It’s tempting to treat these failures as isolated incidents—bad apples, bad timing, bad luck. But the truth is more damning. Injustice makes it impossible to ignore the pattern. When the Justice Department caves, the Bar Association looks away, and political leaders calculate risk instead of defending principles, the whole system becomes complicit.
Even the language used to excuse this behavior—“institutional norms,” “prudence,” “bipartisanship”—is a kind of camouflage. These words conceal a basic fact: when the moment demanded courage, our institutions chose comfort.
Why It Matters
For the average reader—someone who doesn’t spend their days parsing legal doctrine or following congressional hearings—these failures might feel distant, even abstract. But they’re not. Every time the system blinks, it sends a message: there are two sets of rules. One for the powerful, and one for everyone else.
If the people tasked with defending justice won’t do it—if the lawyers, judges, politicians, and watchdogs all sit quietly while the powerful run roughshod—then “justice” becomes just another word. The very idea of accountability dissolves.
The Hard Questions
So where does that leave us? Injustice doesn’t offer easy answers. It doesn’t pretend that a new administration or a few well-meaning reforms can fix what’s broken. Instead, it forces us to ask: what is the meaning of justice when everyone with the power to defend it looks away?
Can a democracy survive when its institutions are this hollow? Is there a way to restore faith in the system, or is faith itself just another casualty?
The Reckoning Still to Come
To write about these failures is to risk cynicism. But cynicism is a luxury we can’t afford. The lesson of Injustice—and of the Epstein case, and the ABA’s silence, and the Biden Administration’s caution, and Project 2025’s open dare—is that the work of defending justice never ends. It demands vigilance, and it demands that someone—anyone—refuse to blink.
For now, the story of American justice is a cautionary tale. The alarm has been sounded. The question is whether anyone will listen.
End Notes
Injustice: How Politics and Fear Vanquished America's Justice Department analyzes the transformation of the DOJ and the broader implications for American democracy.
Project 2025 was a real, widely published plan to overhaul the federal government, with a particular focus on the Justice Department and executive power.
The American Bar Association’s public actions and statements in recent years are a matter of public record and have been criticized for insufficient response to political encroachment.
The Jeffrey Epstein case involved a controversial non-prosecution agreement in 2008, widely reported on and later subject to public and legal scrutiny.
The Biden Administration’s approach to Justice Department independence and its measured posture on institutional reform is well-documented in both mainstream and legal media.
This article is meant as a synthesis and interpretation of public events, legal scholarship, and the arguments of Injustice—with the aim of connecting patterns that, taken together, depict a wider crisis in American rule of law.