The New York Times’s worshipful 1935 obituary for Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes; Et vir; Unanimous Supreme Court throws out former Governor Bob McDonnell’s conviction; Byzantine art and history; When Justices Thomas and Sotomayor dissent together; Star Wars, science fiction and the Constitution – my review of Cass Sunstein’s “The World According to Star Wars”; N.Y. Senate passes bill banning funding for university student groups that “encourage” “hate speech” [UPDATE discusses party breakdown of the vote]; Judge Posner’s bizarre swipe at the late Justice Scalia (UPDATED); “Forbes” interview about my book “Democracy and Political Ignorance”; Supreme Court voids Texas abortion regulations as “undue burden” on abortion providers (Updated);
 
The Volokh Conspiracy
 
 
The New York Times’s worshipful 1935 obituary for Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes
"Others so fortunate as to be invited to his home were apt to consider themselves thereafter as men set apart."
Et vir
What does this mean, and what is its flip side?
Unanimous Supreme Court throws out former Governor Bob McDonnell’s conviction
In the final opinion of the term, the Justices speak with one voice, and draw again upon the late Justice Scalia.
 
Byzantine art and history
Congratulations to my dear friend Sharon Gerstel, an art history professor at UCLA, on her Runciman Award, which she just got for her book, "Rural Lives and Landscapes in Late Byzantium."
 
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When Justices Thomas and Sotomayor dissent together
The court's most liberal and most conservative justice urge a more narrow interpretation of a federal law barring gun possession by those previously convicted of violent crimes.
Star Wars, science fiction and the Constitution – my review of Cass Sunstein’s “The World According to Star Wars”
My Jotwell review of Cass Sunstein's "The World According to Star Wars," which focuses on Sunstein's treatment of the portrayal of constitutional and political issues in the Star Wars universe.
N.Y. Senate passes bill banning funding for university student groups that “encourage” “hate speech” [UPDATE discusses party breakdown of the vote]
But such viewpoint-based exclusions from funding programs violate the First Amendment, as the Supreme Court has repeatedly held.
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Judge Posner’s bizarre swipe at the late Justice Scalia (UPDATED)
I find Posner's posthumous swipe at Scalia revolting.
“Forbes” interview about my book “Democracy and Political Ignorance”
Jared Meyer of "Forbes" interviews me about the new edition of my book "Democracy and Political Ignorance: Why Smaller Government is Smarter."
 
Supreme Court voids Texas abortion regulations as “undue burden” on abortion providers (Updated)
Justice Kennedy again votes with the liberal justices in a contentious decision. Dissenting justices echo the concerns of the late Justice Scalia.
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