Adrian Spratt

Stories, Essays and Commentary.

  • Home
  • Blog
  • Stories
  • Essays
  • My novel Caroline
  • Contact me
You are here: Home / Archives for morality and justice

Morality and justice

Why Must the TSA Target Disabled and Elderly People?

November 10, 2016 Tags: annoyances, disability, morality and justice

Hip, knee and other joint replacements are made of metal, and so anyone who has an artificial joint triggers metal detector alarms. The alarm results in an automatic pat-down or full-body scan. Who is most likely to have replacement joints? The

Heart and Mind

October 8, 2016 Tags: crime, friendship, in memorium, memoir, morality and justice, people in my life

In 1981, when I was representing criminal defendants on appeal, Vicky, a girl I’d known since childhood, was murdered. Vicky was the youngest daughter in the family that my family was closest to when we lived in Sheffield, England, between 1964

The Ophthalmologist

April 7, 2016 Tags: annoyances, disability, morality and justice, well-being and medical

I’ve come to dislike articles by blind people that expose the insensitivity that sighted people can display. They tend to be one-sided, with the sighted offender looking stupid while the blind character is all innocence. But once in a while such a

Early Spring

February 25, 2016 Tags: history, morality and justice, nature

It’s still February, but on Saturday we were given a glimpse of spring here in the improbably rural ambiance of a ninth floor terrace in Brooklyn Heights, across the East River from Wall Street. Already for a few days, a mourning dove had been cooing

How Can We Talk About Race? Thoughts Based on How We Talk About Disability

January 7, 2016 Tags: censorship, charity, disability, history, morality and justice, politics, race

Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia is quoted in the December 10 edition of the New York Times as saying: “I don’t think it stands to reason that it’s a good thing for the University of Texas to admit as many blacks as possible.” He went on to say

Compliments

October 22, 2015 Tags: annoyances, charity, disability, empathy, humor, memoir, morality and justice, people in my life, race

It can be hard to take a compliment gracefully. Sometimes we feel undeserving. Other times we wonder if we are being manipulated. There are times we feel a compliment is discordant with our actual achievement, such as when veterans of recent wars

More Posts

  • Previous PagePrevious
  • Page 1
  • …
  • Page 9
  • Page 10
  • Page 11
  • Page 12
  • Next

Subscribe to Blog via Email

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Comments Policy

I am delighted when visitors leave comments, whether observations, criticisms or praise. Requests to withhold identifying information will be honored, but in that case, please give yourself a pseudonym to use in case you leave other comments in the future.

Disclaimer

A lawyer can hardly resist an opportunity for a disclaimer or two. No statement on this website constitutes or is intended as legal advice. Also, resemblance of any person, living or otherwise, to any of my fictional characters is strictly coincidental. Even in my nonfiction, names have been changed and biographical details altered, and often traits of several people are combined into a single character. The exceptions, apart from myself, are inescapably my parents and brother, and I can only hope I’ve done them justice. Any other exceptions are noted.
  • Home
  • Blog
  • Stories
  • Essays
  • My novel Caroline
  • Contact me

Social Media

  • facebook iconFacebook
  • instagram iconInstagram

Copyright © 2025 Adrian Spratt · All Rights Reserved