Sussex, I've waffled on enough in this thread already

, so a bit pointless saying much more, so won't bother going back up the thread to work out precisely what point you're asking about regarding jury trials etc.
But, in the round, it's horses for courses, kind of thing. So a judge/sheriff/magistrate/JP should be held to slightly different standard to jury members, because the latter are supposedly ordinary members of the public, end of.
And, to that extent, I think matters that disbar someone from becoming a member of the judiciary shouldn't be the same as that pertaining to a jury.
And, as the list posted by Mr XH558 demonstrates, there's a whole list of occupations etc which mean people can't (or needn't) serve on a Scottish jury, but obviously the rules will differ slightly between jurisdictions, even in the UK

Another angle, of course, is that jury members
can be challenged if there's a perception or possibility of bias (although I don't know much about the exact rules), so it's not as if jury membership is absolute in terms of possible bias or prejudice. And, as many will know, there's a whole little industry associated with jury selection and challenge in the good old USA, for better or worse.
In this regard, an interesting development in Scotland in the past few years has been the proposal to abolish jury trials in rape and serious sexual assault cases. No point going into the details of it all, but basically the impetus behind it seems to be that juries normally get rape cases wrong, and to that extent the assumption is that juries are prejudiced, at least as regards that particular crime.
(Not sure precisely what's happening to this, but it seems to have at least stalled as leading law firms have refused to take part in a pilot scheme:
https://news.stv.tv/scotland/scottish-l ... of-justice )
Which again reminds me of our quasi-judicial licensing committees, which I view as a kind of combined judge and jury, because normally there are quite a few councillor members, they aren't professional members of the judiciary, but yet they're not really members of the public like the juries.
But that's kind of why I don't think local politicians should be serving in a quasi-judicial fashion
Because they're politicians, the prejudice is built-in, sort of thing
Anyway, one particular example is the Alex Salmond trial; of course, he was acquitted of all charges.
(And I think the judge-only rape trials proposal in Scotland was linked to the Alex Salmond stuff...)
But I know of at least two former licensing councillors in Scotland, who on social media make it plain they think he was obviously guilty as sin, which underlines why I don't think they should be on licensing committees
(And an obvious example nearer the coalface recently was the councillors in Ayrshire who clearly thought they knew the truth better than the criminal process which had recently twice banned the applicant for drink driving offences...)
And at an even wider level, the whole Salmond thing can be linked to the whole perpetrator/victim dynamic as compared to the likes of the grooming gangs - Salmond the privileged white male vs the Pakistanti Muslim rape gangs on the perpetrator side, while the latter victims were working class, but the complainants in the Salmond case were high status and privileged senior civil servants, politicians and government advisers.
So the grooming gangs were covered up for decades, while Salmond was relentlessly pursued by dozens of police investigators etc because he'd touched one of the complainant's knees etc.
And, of course, this kind of bias and prejudice is everywhere these days - in the police station Samantha Kerr used the term 'white and privileged' against the police officer, thus assuming he was the one who was biased because of that, and it looks like the jury agreed on that point (although the particular phrase under scrutiny in the trial was 'white and stupid').
Anyway, I can't even remember now what the actual question was
But I don't have any particular view on it all anyway
