Perfect due process is impossible for the reasons you describe. But there’s a difference between “not perfect” and “egregiously bad”, and if you focus too narrowly on the inability to make the process perfect, people are going to get away with processes that are egregiously bad.
If you wrote this in February, it preceded the Nonlinear accusations. From what I can tell from what I read here, they’re a lot closer to “egregiously bad” than to “not perfect”. Do they change your opinion of due process to any extent?
Perfect due process is impossible for the reasons you describe. But there’s a difference between “not perfect” and “egregiously bad”, and if you focus too narrowly on the inability to make the process perfect, people are going to get away with processes that are egregiously bad.
If you wrote this in February, it preceded the Nonlinear accusations. From what I can tell from what I read here, they’re a lot closer to “egregiously bad” than to “not perfect”. Do they change your opinion of due process to any extent?