And Don't Call It Loper
The name of the company is Loper Bright Enterprises.
The name of the company is Loper Bright Enterprises.
But after a second, a third, and a fourth read, all of the fancy veneers and window dressing start to come off.
How much will actually change after Loper Bright?
Ending the Epicycles of Chevron.
He really doesn't care what we think.
Notre Dame law Prof. Patrick Reidy argues that religious organizations are entitled to faith-based exemptions from zoning restrictions preventing them from building affordable housing on their land.
The Chief Justice retconned Federalist Nos. 37 and 78.
China's free speech record is bad, but the federal government's isn't so great either.
Fischer and Snyder both ducked this issue.
"The past is there to teach us what can happen," the Hardcore History podcaster tells Reason's Nick Gillespie.
Justice Kavanaugh is very, very upset about the Sackler bankruptcy case.
Donald Trump had a point before his campaign walked it back.
Her concurrence is a reminder that the application of criminal law should not be infected by personal animus toward any given defendant.
The Supreme Court's recent rulings limiting the powers of the administrative state are a blessing for liberals who might not control the White House for much longer.
The decision also negates two counts of the federal indictment accusing Donald Trump of illegally interfering in the 2020 presidential election.
Abortion should have been an easy win for Biden, but his incoherent answer during Thursday's debate allowed Trump to come out on top.
Overloaded fireworks, behavioral coaching, and makeshift pockets.
Biden's performance at Thursday's debate made clear that he should have bowed out after a single term, but many politicians stick around long past their sell-by date.
Like a good neighbor, State Farm is there.
It won't end the administrative state or even significantly reduce the amount of federal regulation. But it's still a valuable step towards protecting the rule of law and curbing executive power.
Homeless advocates say the court's decision in Grants Pass v. Johnson gives local governments a blank check to "to arrest or fine those with no choice but to sleep outdoors."
The Court says Chevron deference allows bureaucrats to usurp a judicial function, creating "an eternal fog of uncertainty" about what the law allows or requires.
Costner stars, directs, and writes in what amounts to a three-hour prologue for a better movie.
Monday, Monday, Monday! Trump, NetChoice, Corner Post!
War and peace are the most important decisions a country can make. No politician wants to level with Americans about it.
Plus: Newsom's fantasies, Scandinavia's ghettos, online betting markets, and more...
The best way to promote liberty is by reducing the government power, not by harnessing it on behalf of supposedly conservative or populist nostrums.
The Harm Reduction Gap argues for individual autonomy and meeting drug users where they're at.
Hosts Noah Kulwin and Brendan James explain how proxy war fighters can become America's enemies.
Justice Barrett adamantly resists the suggestion that she keeps leveling up the burden on plaintiffs, but it is becoming more difficult to deny.
And you have to admit, he's got a point.
Biden's incoherence and Trump's comparatively cogent lies demonstrate just how poorly the two-party system serves supporters of small government.
The topic was reduced largely to border crossing numbers, dubious claims about migrant crime, and enforcement bona fides.
The Supreme Court held today that the Seventh Amendment right to a civil jury trial in fraud cases was violated when an administrative law judge of the S.E.C. decided the case.
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