Archive for April, 2009

Länsiväylä 1.02.21, 2nd again

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Following Petri Saavalainen, the eventual winner. Picture: Tuomas Lunttila

Ran the legendary Länsiväylä today despite a sore throat. Went ok as I did not even try to push to the limit. Too bad because I was second once again… My time means something like 3.35/km avg. So quite modest speed. Last year I was 30 secs faster, and two years agoa full minute. This just says I’m in ok condition. — Legs felt ok for the first 10K, and after that I felt just minor pains here and there.

Published in: Sports | on April 26th, 2009 | Comments Off

Muscle issues

Running doesn’t look good at the moment. Tried miles last night in Matinkylä: 5.27, 5.33, 5.37 and my leg muscles ached to say they are completely done. It was difficult to “run” home, the pace being perhaps 5.30/km or something. — The muscle problems originated from the 10K. Last Saturday did some stupid exercise at a friend’s bachelor’s party, which escalated the situation. I had to take Sunday and Monday completely off, and was lucky to “run” without interruption 6K on Tuesday…

Published in: Sports | on April 23rd, 2009 | Comments Off

Cocks takes over HC West and cultures clash

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Thanks to Esa Ranki, I was lucky to witness the decisive game four where Riihimäki’s Cocks beat down Kauniainen’s HC West in the Finnish handball league. Cocks took the championship for a third time in a row. The first victory came in 2007.

What we saw were two very different teams. HC West looked like a well-behaving team of innocent-looking swedish-talking student boys. Cocks looked like a noisy gang of guilty-looking finnish & other eastern-european dialects talking tattooed bodies, most of whom work as guards in the Riihimäki county jail. You could see and feel the difference.

There was in the 1990s a lone graffiti welcoming new guests in the Riihimäki railway station. It said: “Welcome to Riihimäki, the ugliest town in eastern europe.” For some reason, that graffiti stayed there for several years.

* * *

Over the period break I met Jani Peltonen, my old running rival from the Riihimäki years. We once clocked in exactly the same time 4.39-something in a school meet’s 1500m when we were like 15. Not even the cameraman was able to tell a difference. Now that was competitive running…

Published in: Culture, Sports | on April 22nd, 2009 | Comments Off

10K in 34.10

Season opener in Sjundeå. Excellent weather, bad running. Definitely worse than what I did a month ago in Oakland… Now first half in 16.43, and second took almost 17.30. It was bad from the beginning. Felt stiff, muscles were not ready. Just couldn’t take the speed. To add insult to to injury, I lost 30 secs to uncle-Marko. Now that’s a lot against a 41-year-old guy. Feels like I am not going to participate in any races anytime soon…

I have had after the 30K some issues with the right achilles. So no tempo runs, just easy 10Ks and days off.

Published in: Sports | on April 15th, 2009 | Comments Off

Constitutional law in the Finnish courts and academia

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Gained exceptional court victory on Thursday: our Supreme Administrative Court found last fall’s e-voting experiment unlawful and ordered new elections.

Some afterthoughts. The decision came after a vote. One judge out of five would have accepted the lower court’s opinion. A three judge panel of Helsinki Administrative Court said in January unanimously that losing 2% of votes cast was not critical and cited “state’s constitutional rights” as a legal argument to maintain flawed results. On this background, I feel disappointed the Supreme Administrative Court made a narrow legal decision, citing mainly paragraphs from the election statute and without discussing the constitutional rights basis at all. The decision’s value as a legal precedent is thus seriously limited.

Why? We did argue the constitutional basis of the case in length. We cited and quoted German Constitutional Court’s and European Court of Human Rights’ decisions. We cited and quoted Council of Europe’s report, with the basis on constitutional law. No impact. Nothing.

As a practicing lawyer, my own hunch is that constitutional rights remain a forbidden or worthless legal source in the Finnish courts. Any kind of more “practical” written source — be it parliamentary preparatory material, prior case or scholarly commentary — beats all constitutional law argument hands down. Our courts and judges are not prepared to assess constitutional law arguments as they require open pro & contra argumentation. These things were not teached at law school. These things cannot be learned from prior Finnish cases or tradition.

I am also sceptical that our courts would change their existing practice anytime soon. At the very same date we got the winning decision, I also received the latest issue of the leading Finnish law journal Lakimies. No matter our courts do not recognize constitutional rights, there are a bunch of academics writing about them and their application in every other issue in that particular journal alone. Once more there is a 20+ page theoretical piece assessing some high-level options (mainly parliamentary and judicial) to review constitutional rights. That article, like so many others in this debate, has absolutely no connection to the Finnish courts. The article is too theoretical and thick in academic jargon for anyone who tries to actually use constitutional rights arguments before the courts. Also, it gives no guidance for a judge who must face the question: how the hell do I write a legal opinion on a constitutional right argument without losing my credibility?

Published in: Culture, Law, Tech | on April 11th, 2009 | Comments Off