Justice ReDesigned Podcast

Beyond the Business Case — From Correlation to Institutional Architecture

37 min · 4 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio Beyond the Business Case — From Correlation to Institutional Architecture

Descripción

In this episode of Justice ReDesigned, Steve Teske moves the DEI conversation beyond its most familiar—and most flawed—argument: that diversity increases profits. For years, proponents relied on studies showing correlations between diverse leadership and financial performance. Critics responded with a valid critique: correlation is not causation. But as Teske explains, that debate misses the point entirely. The real question isn’t whether diversity magically produces profit. It’s whether poorly designed systems are quietly wasting talent. This episode reframes DEI not as a moral slogan or political talking point, but as institutional architecture—the systems organizations use to identify, retain, and elevate talent. When those systems fail, companies don’t just lose diversity. They lose performance. This episode explores: * Why the correlation vs. causation debate is the wrong fight * The critical difference between diversity as an outcome and inclusion as a system * How bias, narrow pipelines, and opaque promotion processes create costly “talent leakage” * Why inclusion is best understood as engineering, not ideology * And how organizations that reduce waste outperform those that ignore it Teske also tackles a common misconception: that DEI is simply a modern version of quotas or affirmative action. Instead, he explains how properly designed inclusion systems operate like any other performance system—measured, refined, and accountable. At its core, this episode delivers a simple but powerful insight: Inclusion doesn’t work because it is politically correct. It works because inefficiency is expensive. And when organizations stop wasting talent, something predictable happens: Performance improves. Because the real issue was never whether diversity causes profit. The real issue is whether your system is designed to waste less human potential. Steve Teske is a retired judge who served in the juvenile and superior courts, presiding over delinquency, child abuse and neglect, termination of parental rights, and adult civil and criminal matters. He has testified before Congress and numerous state legislatures on policy development related to racial disparities. He has published several articles in scholarly and professional journals. Thanks for reading Justice ReDesigned! This post is public so feel free to share it. Get full access to Justice ReDesigned at steventeske.substack.com/subscribe [https://steventeske.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

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44 episodios

Portada del episodio The Measure — Part I: The Wrong Question

The Measure — Part I: The Wrong Question

For weeks, I thought I was asking whether America is a Christian nation. Then I realized I was asking the wrong question. In this opening episode of The Measure, I explain why a debate that began with Vice President J.D. Vance’s call to restore Christian values ultimately became a deeply personal journey into the meaning of justice, leadership, and moral responsibility. Rather than asking whether America is Christian, I began asking a much more searching question: What makes anything Christian? Is it a label? A political movement? A cultural identity? Or is it measured by whether it reflects the teachings of Christ? That simple shift changed everything. As a former judge, I spent more than two decades learning that justice is never determined by labels. Courts don’t decide cases by what people claim. They examine conduct. They ask whether actions match the standard. I began wondering whether Christians should do the same. This episode is not an argument for a Christian nation. Nor is it an attack on Vice President J.D. Vance or those who agree with him. It is an invitation to examine a deeper question: If we ask America to embrace Christian values, are Christians—including me—faithfully practicing the teachings of Christ? Along the way, I share the moment a pastor’s brief sermon completely changed my perspective, why I believe justice and faith begin with asking better questions, and why the standard by which we judge others must also be the standard by which we judge ourselves. Whether you are a Christian, a member of another faith, or someone who professes no religious faith at all, I hope you’ll join me on this journey. Because this series is not about persuading anyone to become Christian. It is about asking whether all of us are living according to the highest values we profess. If justice begins anywhere, perhaps it begins there. In this episode: * Why I believe justice always begins with the right question. * What prompted my reflection on J.D. Vance’s argument about America’s Christian identity. * The distinction between measuring America by the Constitution and measuring Christians by Christ. * Why labels never substitute for conduct. * The question that transformed this project from a political discussion into a personal pilgrimage. This is Part I of a seven-part series exploring justice, moral formation, leadership, and the responsible exercise of power. Because before we redesign systems… we must first ask what is redesigning us. Get full access to Justice ReDesigned at steventeske.substack.com/subscribe [https://steventeske.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

17 de jul de 202614 min
Portada del episodio The Measure Before the Policy | Series Prologue

The Measure Before the Policy | Series Prologue

What began as a response to Vice President J.D. Vance's book *Communion* unexpectedly became something much more personal.I set out to examine Vance's argument that America has become divided because it has drifted away from its Christian roots. Along the way, I found myself asking a much deeper question—not whether America is a Christian nation, but whether Christians, beginning with myself, are truly practicing the teachings of Christ.In this opening episode of **The Measure**, I explain why this series is different from any previous episode of *Justice ReDesigned*. This is not an argument for a Christian nation, nor is it an attack on Christianity or on Vice President Vance. It is an invitation to examine what it means when political leaders invoke Christian values as the foundation for public policy.Together, we'll explore the difference between Christian identity and Christlike conduct, why truthfulness matters before policy, and why I believe the real measure of leadership is not what we profess—but how we exercise power over others.Whether you are a Christian, a member of another faith, or someone who claims no religious faith at all, this series is for you. The virtues of humility, compassion, mercy, truthfulness, justice, forgiveness, and respect for human dignity are not the exclusive property of Christianity. They are shared across many faith traditions and embraced by countless people of no religious faith. My hope is that this series encourages all of us to ask whether we are living according to the highest values we profess.Over the next seven episodes, we'll explore justice, leadership, immigration, the Constitution, "Render unto Caesar," and the moral responsibilities that accompany every exercise of public authority.Because before we debate policy and justice, we should first ask a more fundamental question:What kind of people—and what kind of leaders—are we becoming?If this conversation encourages you to think more deeply rather than simply agree or disagree, then it has accomplished exactly what I hoped. Steve Teske Get full access to Justice ReDesigned at steventeske.substack.com/subscribe [https://steventeske.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

Ayer17 min
Portada del episodio Update: The Prediction Comes True

Update: The Prediction Comes True

A federal judge has now put into the permanent judicial record many of the constitutional and professional concerns examined throughout The Teske Brief’s **Bar Card series**.I n this breaking update, Judge Steven Teske discusses a 56-page federal court opinion scrutinizing the settlement negotiated between President Donald Trump and the Department of Justice in the IRS lawsuit. At the center of the ruling is a fundamental constitutional question previously explored on this program:**Can a president effectively sue his own administration when both sides are pursuing the same outcome? **Judge Kathleen Williams concluded that the parties had become a “fully realized unitary interest”—raising serious questions about whether a genuine constitutional “case or controversy” ever existed. The court also refused to allow the judiciary to be used to legitimize an agreement that, in the judge’s view, attempted to confer immunity through the appearance of litigation. The opinion went further. Judge Williams referred one attorney to the Florida Bar for possible disciplinary proceedings and stated that she would forward the opinion to New York disciplinary authorities in connection with their ongoing investigation involving Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche. These referrals are not findings of guilt or professional discipline. They mark the beginning of a process in which the lawyers involved will have an opportunity to respond, and disciplinary authorities will evaluate the facts. For listeners who followed episodes such as **The Bar Card**, **Target First, Crime Later**, **The Prosecutor’s Dilemma**, **The Cost of Collapse**, and **The Bar Is Watching You**, this ruling represents an important development: the constitutional and ethical concerns discussed throughout the series are no longer merely theoretical. They are now receiving formal judicial and professional scrutiny. Political power may provide temporary protection. But a lawyer’s professional obligations—and the reputation attached to a bar card—last far longer. ** Political protection has an expiration date. Professional accountability does not. ** Subscribe to **The Teske Brief** for clear, independent analysis of the courts, constitutional government, prosecutorial ethics, and the institutions responsible for protecting the rule of law. #TheTeskeBrief #BarCard #LegalEthics #RuleOfLaw #Constitution #DepartmentOfJustice #JudicialIndependence #ProfessionalAccountability #ToddBlanche #Trump Get full access to Justice ReDesigned at steventeske.substack.com/subscribe [https://steventeske.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

15 de jul de 202611 min
Portada del episodio The Illusion of Precedent

The Illusion of Precedent

In this episode of Justice ReDesigned, we examine The Illusion of Precedent—a story about executive power, legal deception, congressional backlash, and the one institution political loyalty cannot fully control: the legal profession itself. The episode follows Todd Blanche’s attempt to defend an extraordinary IRS settlement by wrapping it in the language of precedent. But the comparison to the Obama-era Keepseagle settlement collapses under scrutiny. Unlike Keepseagle, this deal was not the product of years of adversarial litigation, judicial review, or public accountability. It was negotiated in secrecy, designed to bypass the courts, and structured to protect political power under the appearance of legal normalcy. What followed was not just outrage from critics, but bipartisan alarm from Congress. The episode explores why even members of the President’s own party recoiled at the idea of using taxpayer dollars to fund a politically branded “Anti-Weaponization Fund,” and why the controversy exposed a deeper constitutional problem: the executive branch may enforce the law, but it does not own the Treasury. At its core, this episode is about the limits of political protection. Presidents may pardon. Parties may defend. Administrations may shield their own for a season. But lawyers answer to something older and more permanent than political office: their oath, their ethical duties, and their bar card. This is the story of what happens when law becomes loyalty, when precedent becomes camouflage, and when the final check on abuse may come not from Congress or the courts, but from the profession that promised to uphold the rule of law. Get full access to Justice ReDesigned at steventeske.substack.com/subscribe [https://steventeske.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

10 de jul de 202621 min
Portada del episodio ACT V: The Verdict

ACT V: The Verdict

Every trial reaches a moment when the evidence has been presented. The witnesses have testified. The arguments have been made. And all that remains is the verdict. Act V is that moment. In the concluding chapter of the five-act adaptation of The Collapse of the DOJ and the Suicide of the Bar, retired Judge Steven Teske steps away from the daily headlines and delivers a closing argument—not against any individual, political party, or administration—but on behalf of the legal profession itself. Drawing upon more than four decades as a prosecutor, judge, educator, and attorney, Judge Teske reflects on the enduring principles that have sustained the American justice system since the nation’s founding: judicial independence, professional integrity, constitutional fidelity, and the solemn oath every lawyer takes upon entering the profession. This final act explores: * Why the Framers deliberately insulated the judiciary from political pressure. * The distinction between loyalty to public officials and loyalty to the Constitution. * Why trust is the true currency of justice. * The unique responsibility entrusted to prosecutors and government lawyers. * Why every generation of lawyers inherits the duty to leave the profession stronger than it found it. More importantly, this episode asks the question that has quietly guided the entire Bar Card series: When history looks back on our profession, what kind of lawyers will it remember us to have been? This is not a verdict on one administration. It is a reflection on every administration. It is not a judgment upon one lawyer. It is a challenge to every lawyer. Because elections come and go. Administrations rise and fall. But the Constitution endures only so long as men and women of integrity are willing to defend it. The series began with a simple piece of plastic called a Bar Card. It ends with a timeless reminder: Honor is beyond politics. Honor is beyond power. Honor is the promise every lawyer makes to the people. Act V concludes the five-act podcast adaptation of my Justice ReDesigned essay, The Collapse of the DOJ and the Suicide of the Bar. Together, the five acts form one continuous closing argument exploring the constitutional, ethical, and professional responsibilities that define the legal profession—and the enduring obligation of every lawyer to place principle above power. “Dedicated to every lawyer who has quietly chosen principle over pressure, ethics over expediency, and the Constitution over convenience. The rule of law endures because ordinary lawyers make extraordinary choices every day.” Steven Teske Get full access to Justice ReDesigned at steventeske.substack.com/subscribe [https://steventeske.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

9 de jul de 202615 min