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28 Sep 2009, 10:12 pm
  The Court has upheld nearly everything that Congress has done under the rubric of the Commerce Clause but, following an argument first articulated by Thomas Jefferson and lately revived by Justice Clarence Thomas, one might think that the Court got it wrong. [read post]
13 Jul 2011, 1:28 am by Kevin LaCroix
  Parting Thought: Am I the only one that finds the new nickels, with Thomas Jefferson’s oversized and distorted face looming off to one side, weird and creepy? [read post]
21 Aug 2020, 2:40 pm by Steven Green
For much of the book, Rakove uses James Madison and Thomas Jefferson as our guides – an approach that will likely draw the ire of conservatives who argue that the attention (and credit) given to these two Founders is overdone. [read post]
18 Mar 2013, 6:30 am by Benjamin Coates
Thomas Jefferson, for one, imagined the rise of a series of allied republics in North America. [read post]
22 Jan 2018, 4:00 am by Harry Litman
(The other presidential appearances in civil cases don’t really apply, and even there, the record is checkered: Thomas Jefferson ignored a subpoena from Aaron Burr to appear for the defense in Burr’s treason trial.) [read post]
11 Jul 2023, 4:19 am by SHG
If the view that diversity is malarkey crosses the line, what of the view that white people should be castrated or Asians should be denied entry into Harvard or Thomas Jefferson High? [read post]
5 Jul 2022, 8:01 am by Eugene Volokh
Earlier still, at the time of the universally unlamented alien and sedition laws, Thomas Jefferson's party was attacked and its members were derisively called "Jacobins. [read post]
18 Feb 2016, 10:59 am by Margaret Wood
Even after joining the bench Justice Scalia often taught at law schools, either as a visiting professor (Stanford 1980-1981), or by participating as a member of a summer study abroad program (Thomas Jefferson School of Law). [read post]
7 Aug 2020, 6:57 am by Richard Garnett
The first was the constitutionalization — indeed, the fetishization — of a James Madison pamphlet and a phrase in one of Thomas Jefferson’s constituent-service letters. [read post]
25 Mar 2020, 10:38 am by Jack Goldsmith, Ben Miller-Gootnick
“Behind the constitutional arguments [in both Congresses] loomed the political fact that the Secretary of State was Thomas Jefferson,” David Currie has noted. [read post]