We study elasticity of spontaneously orientationally-ordered amorphous
solids, characterized by a vanishing transverse shear modulus, as realized for
example by nematic elastomers and gels. We show that local heterogeneities and
elastic nonlinearities conspire to lead to anomalous nonlocal universal
elasticity controlled by a nontrivial infared fixed point. Namely, at long
scales, such solids are characterized by universal shear and bending moduli
that, respectively, vanish and diverge at long scales, are universally
incompressible and exhibit a universal negative Poisson ratio and a non-Hookean
elasticity down to arbitrarily low strains. Based on expansion about five
dimensions, we argue that the nematic order is stable to thermal fluctuation
and local hetergeneities down to d_lc < 3.Comment: 4 RevTeX pgs, submitted to PR