But this is really the tip of the iceberg.[/qtuoe]
What iceberg? You haven't established that plea bargains are unjust, only that you don't like them.
Bureaucrats can bend laws to a point that no one really knows what the law is. For instance, how many guns does it take to be a gun seller that requires an FFL? They don't say. The bureaucrat can make it up as he goes along and punish some people severely for doing nothing wrong in reality, but wrong by the letter of a law that no one can know.
I read a quick federal guide on the point. It noted that federal and state laws apply and that facts control the answer, which may seem ambiguous, but it follows it with,
"As a general rule, you will need a license if you repetitively buy andsell firearms with the principal motive of making a profit. In contrast,if you only make occasional sales of firearms from your personalcollection, you do not need to be licensed.
...federal law explicitly exempts persons “who makeoccasional sales, exchanges, or purchases of firearms for the enhancement of apersonal collection or for a hobby, or who sells all or part of his personal collectionof firearms.” Do I Need a License to Buy or Sell Firearms?, U.S. Dept. of Justice Guide
And the problem is even bigger than that. It doesn't include the people that are afraid of a law that depends on the whim of a bureaucrat and so they don't do something out of the fear of tyranny which could well be described as "rule by whim, frequently harsh."
Complicated laws aren't a tyranny or evidence of one.
And then there are other vast injustices. Like prisons.
How is a prison an injustice, let alone a vast one?
And many of the drug laws.
Sounds like you're conflating what you believe are bad or useless laws (hard to say which without more from you) with unjust laws. There's nothing unjust in making alcohol legal, by way of...or making pot illegal.
And welfare paid with taxes.
Has nothing to do with the justice system...and isn't inherently unjust. God commanded Israel to set aside a portion of income for those in need. There's nothing unjust in making provisions for the poor.
They put laws into the system that are just plain wrong.
Our system of laws (a larger thing than the criminal justice system) is made so that bad law can be reviewed and rejected by either the courts or the people, through legislative process. That's no guarantee you'll get every law you want on the books or every law you want off the books. Not getting your way isn't inherently injust.
In fact, a whole system based on situational law will always become more unjust as time goes by.
You'll have to tell me what you mean by that. Murder is still murder. Theft remains theft. And our Constitutional principles/protections are still in place. In fact, you could argue the Civil Rights Movement and result contradicts your notion, if you see our system as being wholly situational, as did the abolition of slavery and recognizing the equality of women before the law and in relation to rights.
A system based on principle would be much better.
We have one of those. One of the principles of criminal law is the presumption of innocence. Mitigation brings in the idea that the facts or situation is important. Self-defense, by way of, looks a lot like murder until you read in the facts.
:e4e: