
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


How does history inform our interpretation of the Constitution? In all kinds of ways, it seems, and perhaps in too many of them. We once again look at how history and the Second Amendment are mixing together, in a case from the Eighth Circuit. The opinion lets us do a bit of digging into a less-well-known founding father, Benjamin Rush, and his enthusiastic embrace of putting people behind bars. But before that IJ’s Bobbi Taylor details some of the latest class-action shenanigans in the Seventh Circuit. For the first time we address “mootness fees,” settlements extracted in some disclosure litigation against public corporations. And we consider whether they’re “a racket” as the court suggests.
Alcarez v. Akorn, Inc.
U.S. v. Veasley
Ted Frank episode, SC 154
Szasz, The Manufacture of Madness
By Institute for Justice4.7
172172 ratings
How does history inform our interpretation of the Constitution? In all kinds of ways, it seems, and perhaps in too many of them. We once again look at how history and the Second Amendment are mixing together, in a case from the Eighth Circuit. The opinion lets us do a bit of digging into a less-well-known founding father, Benjamin Rush, and his enthusiastic embrace of putting people behind bars. But before that IJ’s Bobbi Taylor details some of the latest class-action shenanigans in the Seventh Circuit. For the first time we address “mootness fees,” settlements extracted in some disclosure litigation against public corporations. And we consider whether they’re “a racket” as the court suggests.
Alcarez v. Akorn, Inc.
U.S. v. Veasley
Ted Frank episode, SC 154
Szasz, The Manufacture of Madness

970 Listeners

384 Listeners

711 Listeners

1,108 Listeners

1,517 Listeners

982 Listeners

6,618 Listeners

307 Listeners

40 Listeners

738 Listeners

3,941 Listeners

3,359 Listeners

398 Listeners

744 Listeners

0 Listeners