Fast Incoming Tide
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I’m delighted to be able to pass along this item from my Stanford colleague Prof. Michael McConnell (Stanford Law School), one of the nation’s leading scholars on the Religion Clauses: The Supreme Court has a unique opportunity this Term (or next) to hear four cases with major implications for religious liberty. One case is already on the merits docket—Catholic Charities Bureau v. Wisconsin Labor and Industry Review Commission, which involves a challenge to Wisconsin’s determination that Catholic Charities […]
Even though we are two weeks into 2025, I want to suggest some more New Year’s resolutions. The Federal Reserve should resolve to stop enabling excessive federal spending by purchasing Treasury bonds, thus monetizing the federal debt. The Federal Reserve’s monetization of federal debt enables the federal government to amass trillions of debt while running a global empire abroad and a welfare state at home. The American people feel the effects of the Fed’s debt monetization in the […]
American higher education, which is supposed to be about learning truth, has become a bastion of untruth. As higher education loses accountability, it simultaneously is corrupting other institutions, especially journalism and even the business world.
Cato Institute The Cato Institute has several scholars available to comment on the deadly wildfires in California. They can touch on policy errors that helped contribute to the destruction, including restrictive land-use policies and inefficient forest management practices. They are also able to speak to the impediments to response and rebuilding, including insurance and why governments should leave recovery efforts to the better-equipped organizations like the American Red Cross. They can talk about the need to invest in […]
Seleção da Minha Biblioteca contempla obras que ensinam teoria e prática para aplicar a IA na vida e no trabalho
I was looking at a list of law journal articles published since 1990 that were most heavily cited by courts (generated using HeinOnline), and saw that #10 on the list was a student-written Note, Powers of Congress and the Court Regarding the Availability and Scope of Review (Harv. L. Rev. 2001), cited by over 100 cases. As with many heavily cited articles, this one got many follow-on cites stemming from some early appellate court cites; but that itself […]