“I hope you issued him an apology for the way you treated him. I hope you were just having a bad day and this is not your typical judicial temperament.”
Florida Workers' Comp
Musings of David Langham on the workers' compensation world
Thursday, May 14, 2026
Tech Frustration and Outburst
Tuesday, May 12, 2026
Oradour-sur-Glane
This is a name I had never heard. A small town in the south of France. It is not easily accessible, a bit off the beaten path. I am a long-time student of history, and yet I persistently find myself learning new things. Studying history is frankly similar to studying the law.
Years ago, I saw a poignant story of an 80th anniversary. No, not of the vaunted and celebrated landings at Normandy. Those were June 6, 1944. I previously worked through some news from the D-Day celebration. See Memorializing (June 2024). Sure, such historical discussions are a departure from the core of workers' compensation. And yet, it is about law and order and our basic humanity.
D-Day was a shock to the National Socialists and their global plans. As unfortunate as it is, such world domination efforts have persisted throughout history. There have been imperialists, monarchists, communists, and even democracies that have perpetrated conquest and delivered human suffering. The world will always face the potential of the next violent threat. There are limited resources, and man will persistently fight to control them.
The shock at Normandy caused the National Socialists to draw troops toward the Allied forces. On June 10, 1944, the "2nd SS Panzer Division Das Reich" rolled into Oradour-sur-Glane, a small rural village north of Bordeaux. The National World War II Museum does a fine job of telling its story. The Division was battle-hardened in the east, against the Communists. It was ordered to "support German forces fighting in northern France." Its secondary mission was to "intimidate" the French and "reassert German control."
On June 10, the Division surrounded this little village with "somewhere between 120 and 200 soldiers." They strove to gather the inhabitants to the town center, even from farm fields in the area. The people were segregated, and "197 men were ... forced into six separate barns" and then machine-gunned down. "240 women and 205 children... were forced into the village church," into which grenades were thrown before the building was set afire.
Essentially, the town was massacred. "Only seven people survived." A senseless and brutal massacre. Efforts to explain the actions of the German Division and its leaders have frustrated historians. Some conclude that there was no reason, but simply, Oradour was just "an unfortunate stop the Division made on the way to Normandy."
Is Oradour special? Unique? Some would say no. There were a great many villages and municipalities destroyed by the National Socialists and the Allied response. But Oradour remains today to be viewed. Purportedly on the orders of Charles de Gaulle, the site has been "preserved, and the remains were to become a national memorial." A new village was built nearby, but the original Oradour remains today in much the same condition that it was left by the Socialists in June 1944. It is said to be "a village frozen in time."
On May 12, 2026, I stood in that town. I experienced their memory. I reflected on the violence of the Socialists. We pause periodically in remembrance. We are reminded of the adages like "war is hell," Sherman, 1879, and "those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it," George Santayana.
Sunday, May 10, 2026
Drive Carefully
There is an element of society that engages in not-so-appropriate activity. In that, there is too often some human tendency to believe "it cannot happen to me" or "cannot happen here." This is an optimism bias or predisposition. See Langham, Unseen Influence: Unconscious Predisposition in Dispute Resolution (2025). We all suffer from predispositions.
"Only about half of the violent crimes and a third of the property crimes that occur in the United States each year are reported to police."
"46% of the violent crimes and 19% of the property crimes reported to police in the U.S. were cleared."
Thursday, May 7, 2026
Extraneous and Inappropriate
"failed to consider how his comments could be interpreted in light of the historically demeaning stereotype associating Black people with picking cotton."
- There is some chance the judge intended the comment as light-hearted; the uncle reportedly laughed. But there is no room in judicial proceedings for humor, and increasingly no room in society. See My Way (December 2025).
- Intent is not ever the point. Comments are interpreted by the listener, not the speaker.
Tuesday, May 5, 2026
Assisted Suicide News
Sunday, May 3, 2026
Everyone Gets a Trophy
Thursday, April 30, 2026
Ineffective Assistance
Tuesday, April 28, 2026
Out in California
Sunday, April 26, 2026
The Pre Law Club Debate
Thursday, April 23, 2026
First Principles
"Sixty-two years ago, the Second District invented a requirement for trial courts to receive expert testimony before granting an award of attorneys’ fees."
"Our duty, however, is to faithfully apply the plain and ordinary meaning of the enacted text."
“[t]he proper question becomes whether there is a valid reason why not to recede from that precedent.”
- Why does the evidence code apply in workers' compensation?
- Why are repetitive trauma injuries considered under an accident/disease hybrid?
- Why can an issue be barred if claims for it are dismissed voluntarily twice?
- Why must a worker show an exceptional exertion to demonstrate the compensability of a heart attack?
- Why are statutory provisions of "arising out of" subject to interpretation?
- Why is medical mileage a benefit in Florida workers' compensation?
