Today in Supreme Court History: December 17, 1910
The Volokh Conspiracy Mostly law professors | Sometimes contrarian | Often libertarian | Always independent ...
Absolute Immunity Puts Prosecutors Above the Law
When a storm flooded Baton Rouge in 2016, Priscilla Lefebure took shelter with her cousin and her cousin's husband, Barrett...
Commonplace Book: “It Is Characteristic of Most Reform Work”
Editorial, 27 Journal of the American Judicature Society 133 (1944): "It is characteristic of most reform work that the reforms...
Twitter Files: The FBI Frequently Flagged Joke Tweets, Asked for Moderation
FBI agents communicated regularly with content moderators at Twitter, and frequently asked for tweets to be taken down for allegedly...
Still No Redaction of Filings Based on Speculation That They’ll Lead to “Harassment and...
I wrote in October about the decision by Magistrate Judge Michael Hegarty in Luo v. Wang: Plaintiff requests that the...
A shift in the most popular remote-work days has puzzled the experts
Hybrid workers are settling into a pattern of staying home twice a week, but it’s not the days you’d expect. ...
TikTok banned on Georgia and New Hampshire state devices
Govs. Brian Kemp of Georgia and Chris Sununu of New Hampshire on Thursday immediately banned the use of TikTok and popular...
Today in Supreme Court History: December 16, 1936
12/16/1936: West Coast Hotel v. Parrish argued.
The post Today in Supreme Court History: December 16, 1936 appeared first on Reason.com.
Elizabeth Warren’s Crypto Bill Targets Financial Freedom, Not Fraud
Beyond politically connected scammers and frothy valuations, the attractiveness of cryptocurrencies lies in their potential for doing what cash does,...
Review: Is Andor the Most Political Live-Action Star Wars Release?
Star Wars has always been an epic myth about a rebellion ("the Rebel Alliance") against a tyrannical government ("the Empire")....