‘The Surprisingly Weak Reasoning of Mohamud‘; Richard Nixon’s exploitation of political ignorance; Making Defamation Law Great Again: Michael Mann’s suit may continue; Congress should act to reclaim its war powers; Cato podcast on Nelson v. Colorado and the presumption of innocence;
 
The Volokh Conspiracy
 
 
‘The Surprisingly Weak Reasoning of Mohamud
A closer look at the Ninth Circuit's recent Fourth Amendment decision on email surveillance.
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Richard Nixon’s exploitation of political ignorance
A new paper shows that Richard Nixon adopted wage and price controls even though he knew they were harmful. He did it to exploit public ignorance. Sadly, he was far from the last political leader to manipulate the public in this way.
 
Making Defamation Law Great Again: Michael Mann’s suit may continue
A D.C. court's refusal to dismiss Michael Mann's defamation suit, even in the face of D.C.'s anti-SLAPP law, may make it too easy for activists to sue their political opponents.
 
Congress should act to reclaim its war powers
It should not allow the president to initiate wars without congressional authorization.
 
Cato podcast on Nelson v. Colorado and the presumption of innocence
My Cato podcast about the upcoming Nelson v Colorado case now available for your listening pleasure.
 
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