Assistant Professor, Cleveland State University College of Law. Previously Chicago-Kent; Yale Law & ISP. Working primarily on the First Amendment, constitutional law, and constitutional / democratic theory.
Jacob Schriner-Briggs
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Musk buying twitter, Bezos buying WaPo, Ellison buying CBS—all are less profitable now. But they’re political investments that increase the value of the new owners’ portfolios
Wealth concentration makes this possible, and that’s one mechanism by which inequality destroys democracy
In the Kansas Law Review: Anti-McCarthyism and the Right to “Fair and Just Treatment” in State Constitutions
People treated unfairly during executive or legislative investigations often lack a remedy. But two state constitutions guarantee "fair and just treatment."
papers.ssrn.com/abstract=687...
Quinn Yeargain
Jake Grumbach
A problem with authoritarianism and media conglomeration is that the owners of these media companies don't care if they are profitable so they use them rather to send signals to the authoritarian who wields control over their profit-making businesses.
Ryan Enos
The ultimate boss of failing upward.
Pleased to post my draft article, “Discovering the Historical Anglo-American Constitution.”
I study the history of birthright citizenship from the 1100s to the 1700s. The English common-law rule of natural-born subjects was always tied to territory and jurisdiction. papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers....
No textual reason why not.
A very helpful (if disconcerting) thread on what today's FCC decision represents re: the relationship between the Court and the administrative state.
CBS News boss Bari Weiss is likely to gain editorial oversight of CNN if and when Paramount Skydance’s acquisition of Warner Bros. Discovery is approved, according to a report.
As a Cavs fan, it helps to know that they simply ran into a Team of Destiny
Mike Boylan-Kolchin
Working on a proposal for Court expansion in which, for every voting age adult in the U.S., there is exactly one (1) Supreme Court justice. The justices cast their votes at local precincts, subject to time, place, and manner regulations passed by Congress.
In fact, the only way to win a constitutional claim against racial gerrymandering is if the the state was doing it to comply with the Voting Rights Act.