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3hOpinion
Jacksonville Journal-Courier on MSNCommentary: Antitrust immunity for the NCAA? That’s a foul — Diana Moss, Brian HessIf a billion-dollar organization breaks the law, should Congress reward it with immunity from the antitrust laws? The NCAA and some lawmakers seem to think so, and the recently introduced House bill — ...
The Supreme Court sides with the Nuclear Regulatory Commission on procedural grounds but signals support for its licensing ...
The identities of confidential court informants are feared compromised in a series of breaches across multiple U.S. states.
The Supreme Court seems poised to get rid of one of the most basic rights Americans enjoy, according to a new column. New ...
The Court recently limited access to porn. It is unclear whether that was a one-off decision or the start of a new regime.
For lawyers, judges and engaged citizens, the book “The Shadow Docket: How the Supreme Court Uses Stealth Rulings to Amass Power and Undermine the Republic” has a lot to offer about what the late Yale ...
The Trump administration is pressing ahead with a probe targeting Obama-era officials and could bring charges against any ...
19hOpinion
The Western Journal on MSNFirst Omar, Then James, Now AOC Accused of Lying About Who They're Married To - The Truth Means Nothing to ThemIt turns out some of the country's best-known and most infamous Democratic women seem to have a strangely flexible concept of ...
Texas has a long history of violating the VRA. The state’s current congressional redistricting map, adopted in 2021, is being ...
The Supreme Court rejects a nondelegation challenge to the FCC’s power to set universal service fees.
Supreme Court justices can't receive more than about $30,000 in outside income annually, but book revenue is exempt from that ...
The Supreme Court conversion therapy case, Chiles v. Salazar, involves a hate group defending psychological torture as a ...
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