EPA/Army Corps Propose to Formalize Waters of the United States Definition
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and Environmental Protection Agency proposed last week the third updated definition of “waters of America” over the past six-years. The […]
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and Environmental Protection Agency proposed last week the third updated definition of “waters of America” over the past six-years. The […]
Will Baude and Steve Sachs wrote last year about the Bluebook proposal that required slave parentheticals. The Bluebook has adopted the proposal and it is […]
From an interminable project about AI bias, and the biases associated with the stories and research that surround it, my fourth cartoon cyber comment is […]
Rumours that one or more Supreme Court opinions will be issued tomorrow have fueled speculation about whether we might get a decision on one of […]
11/21/1926: Justice Joseph McKenna died. Justice Joseph McKenna Reason.com’s Today in Supreme Court History, November 21 1926 originally appeared on Reason.com.
So self-defense is an affirmative defense. Producing evidence can be a difficult taskA defense attorney must provide evidence to support his claim. Then, the Proof […]
Many derogatory and even unjustifiable criticisms are treated only as opinions, which is why they cannot be legally brought to justice. For example, the claim […]
False allegations of facts may be defamatory, however opinions about others aren’t. Are you referring to “Kyle Rittenhouse a killer” or “O.J. Is it a […]
[1.] Yes. Yes. First, the acquittal resolves only that guilt couldn’t be proved beyond a reasonable doubt (requiring, say, a >90% confidence level); the standard […]
The Dickinson Press (Adam Kurtz) reported in September, and The College Fix (Christian Schneider) just publicized it yesterday: University of North Dakota President Andrew Armacost has […]