Stephen Sachs on the wrong way to criticize originalism; Short Circuit: A roundup of recent federal court decisions; New York Court of Appeals to hear argument in ‘In re 381 Search Warrants’ case; Did Yiannopoulos secretly send more than 100 thugs to Berkeley to break up his own speech?; Why Trump’s refugee order is unconstitutional;
 
The Volokh Conspiracy
 
 
Stephen Sachs on the wrong way to criticize originalism
The problem with judging originalism by its consequences, as Cass Sunstein would have us do
ADVERTISEMENT
 
Short Circuit: A roundup of recent federal court decisions
A stark reminder on unchecked executive power, a stark remand to a new judge, and a jaunty vocabulary quiz.
New York Court of Appeals to hear argument in ‘In re 381 Search Warrants’ case
Can Internet providers bring pre-enforcement challenges to warrants for customer records? I don't think Facebook is making the best argument that it can.
 
Did Yiannopoulos secretly send more than 100 thugs to Berkeley to break up his own speech?
While some bizarrely worry that Milo Yiannopoulos organized 100 agitators to disrupt his own speech at Berkeley, the real focus of concern should be why police have been unable to arrest even a single one of the criminals.
 
Why Trump’s refugee order is unconstitutional
Trump's thinly veiled Muslim ban violates constitutional prohibitions against religious discrimination.
 
ADVERTISEMENT
 
Recommended for you
 
Fact Checker
Count the pinocchios. A weekly review of what's true, false or in-between.
Sign Up »
 
     
 
©2017 The Washington Post, 1301 K St NW, Washington DC 20071