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7 Feb 2023, 2:57 pm by Eugene Volokh
From the WIPO Arbitration & Mediation Center Administrative Panel Decision in Polanski v. [read post]
30 Sep 2019, 1:18 pm by Amy Howe
The new term is already full of interesting cases, including the very first one on Monday, October 7: Kahler v. [read post]
6 Dec 2018, 9:57 am by David Super
On Tuesday, the Supreme Court heard argument in an important Social Security Disability Insurance case, Biestek v. [read post]
13 Sep 2019, 1:19 pm by Jason Kelley
I was lucky enough to be at your 20th birthday party and party with John Perry Barlow, whose long-distance vision of the promise and perils of the Internet was prescient, to say the least. [read post]
10 Oct 2014, 4:45 pm by Kent Scheidegger
Dugger (1987) was written by, of all people, Justice Scalia. [read post]
21 Jun 2017, 7:59 am by John Elwood
Before proceeding to phone it in flagrantly, let me pause just long enough to note that with the Supreme Court putting partisan-gerrymander case Gill v. [read post]
26 Feb 2013, 4:03 pm by INFORRM
The judgment may not be the most widely read of his works: it is 281 pages long and runs to 1564 paragraphs. [read post]
4 Jul 2020, 9:56 am
  And so, even as a great many peoples worship the idea of the formless, they cannot help but provide manifestations of that formlessness as a bridge (and then ultimately as the thing itself). [read post]
7 Mar 2023, 2:33 pm by Neil H. Buchanan
  Maybe not, because the law defines compensation as "anything of value," and it is quite valuable to me to be able to write regularly on this site -- and not only psychically, because one could surely make the argument that I attained my current job (and thus salary) in part because of the fame/notoriety of my rather extensive body of work herein.Again, the larger picture matters, because this legislation appears to be designed to chill speech; and if I say that I am not compensated… [read post]
22 Apr 2009, 2:00 pm
The Supreme Court thus needs to review the factual evidence as broadly as possible, with all reasonable inferences in the plaintiffs' favor, and, per long-standing doctrine, the court is to avoid constitutional questions if possible. [read post]
1 Apr 2016, 10:22 am by John Elwood
Who would ever have thought so many people held such views? [read post]
27 Jun 2018, 9:01 pm by Neil H. Buchanan
Income taxes, especially the federal income tax, have long been designed to achieve that goal.By contrast, sales taxes are notoriously regressive, because poorer people spend disproportionately more (compared to richer people) on sales-taxable goods and services, which means that even a flat-rate sales tax ends up hitting poorer people much more significantly. [read post]