Maybe The Guardian Should Leave The Clarence Thomas Exposés To Pro Publica
Better luck next time. We're like two weeks off another Clarence Thomas scandal at most.
Better luck next time. We're like two weeks off another Clarence Thomas scandal at most.
Between threatening Facebook and suing Wachtell, the Chief Twit is pretty active. We also talk about the end of the Supreme Court Term and the struggles in bar prep.
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He really enjoyed this sandwich.
Members of the club got rare access to the Supreme Court.
Just a few of the dumbest things people are saying about the Supreme Court.
The Supreme Court's decision on race-conscious affirmative action has created challenges for promoting racial diversity in the legal profession. Legal recruiters play a vital role in mitigating the impact and driving progress while ensuring a diverse and inclusive legal community.
LexisNexis sat down with John Ursin, Managing Partner at Schenck Price, to learn how the firm is using legal AI to strengthen client service and daily legal work.
* Federal judge wants the dysfunctional Federal Circuit to go to couples therapy -- or mediation as he called it. [Bloomberg Law News] * California decides it's far too difficult to hold employers liable for exposing employees to COVID so it just... won't. [Law360] * Judge in trouble for lip synching. Like you'd WANT to hear a judge's singing voice? [ABA Journal] * Supreme Court looks to make it safe for violent domestic abusers to stockpile guns again. Maybe they'll bother to read the cases they cite... unlike the circuit court. [Reuters] * Top ten highest paid CEO list reveals it's good to be in legal tech. [CNBC]
Questions, questions, questions, and I have no answers, answers, answers.
If you wanna get weird, let's get wild.
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Something's got to give when it comes to student loans... but how, and when?
Throughout this Supreme Court term, the student loan cases were probably the most closely watched and talked about.
I'm betting on the next case being called 304 Creative. There, they'll fabricate the plaintiff too.
* Ken Paxton will not testify at his impeachment trial. I mean... why add perjury to this list? [Reuters] * The revelation that the attorneys in 303 Creative tried to create fictional standing can't force the Court to revisit the case, but could be the basis of ethical claims against the attorneys. Just because the Supreme Court is in on the fraud doesn't make it any less of a fraud. [Yahoo Sports] * Federal judge who had already become a go to judge for the "let's all die of COVID" lobby, blocks White House from communicating with social media platforms, complaining that the government had done too much to push back against anti-vaxx misinformation. [Business Insider] * It will shock you to learn that a core Trump business interest is slapped with an $18 million SEC fine. [Law360] * The morass of web-scraping laws and the future of AI. [Bloomberg Law News] * While everyone focused on the Supreme Court's broad-based assault on constitutional and statutory norms last week, they also quietly kicked to the curb a challenge aimed at a law explicitly created as part of Jim Crow voter suppression. [The Guardian] * Lawyer accused of murdering lawyer father. [NY Post]
This is gaslighting, plain and simple.