In a New York Times op-ed, Harvard law professor Noah Feldman argues that Korematsu v. United States, the notorious 1944 ruling upholding the wartime internment of Japanese-Americans, should not be ...
Revisiting Clinton v. Jones
Last night on Fox News Channel’s “Special Report with Bret Baier,” former New Jersey judge Andrew Napolitano, during a discussion of the trouble Hillary Clinton might find herself in from ...

Not a Path but a Cul-de-Sac
In today’s Wall Street Journal, lawyer Scott Gant and political scientist Bruce Peabody have offered the most hilariously dumb essay you will read today. If that seems harsh, consider: Gant ...
Substantive Due Process Conference Postponed
Regretfully, I must report that the Substantive Due Process conference organized by the James Wilson Institute and scheduled for next Thursday, October 6 at Georgetown Law Center in Washington has ...
Talking About Substantive Due Process
Ten days hence I will be participating in a day-long conference at Georgetown Law Center, hosted by Professor Randy Barnett, and featuring Professor Hadley Arkes and yours truly on the ...
South Dakota Event
This Wednesday, September 21, I will be speaking at the University of South Dakota School of Law on “The Problem of Judicial Supremacy.” My thanks for this opportunity to the ...
Just When You Thought You’d Heard the Last Word on Campus Diversity
A friend of mine at a nearby university has a grievance to take up with the local Assistant Deputy Vice Provost for Diversity and Inclusion. It seems there is a ...
Taking Gratuitous Offense, Chapter Umpteen
In yesterday’s New York Times, Sheryl Gay Stolberg reported on the uncertain future of a bust of Chief Justice Roger Taney that stands in his hometown of Frederick, Maryland. Taney, ...
Corruption of a Venerable Brand
Once upon a time, Encyclopedia Britannica was an authority to be reckoned with. From its famous first edition over two centuries ago to its fabled eleventh edition to the one ...