This is really Erik's beat, but the NLRB is holding a set of hearings this week on the nascent movement among college football players to organize a union. The first.
Damon Linker has yet another of his trademark "other people's fundamental rights must be sacrificed to appease conservatives because something" arguments. For example, "when liberals use the government's coercive powers.
I bring this to your attention because it’s fun to do a little thought experiment with a “What Your Favorite Kind of Cookie Says about You” kind of story. And.
A journalist is running for Congress in California! Matt Miller, the host of KCRW's politics show "Left, Right, and Center," announced this afternoon that he is running for the Congressional.
So let's say a large energy company, perhaps Chevron, has come into your community exploring for fuel. And let's say that Chevron screws up and one of their gas wells.
Yeselson's analysis is exceptional, if depressing: Anybody can take the litany of factors I mention above and pick out the ones they think were most salient. Yes, the opposition of.
In proof that sometimes even an idea as dubious as bicameralism can work, the Kansas Senate will apparently not pass the House's recently passed LBGT Jim Crow law, at least.
Earlier this morning, I summed up each presidency in one tweet. They are collected here. Kelsey Atherton undertook a similar project, also worth reading.
- How Dobbs enables domestic violence
- FIRE and the dream of a world without work
- Bart O’Kavanaugh’s magic expanding precedents
- Bought and Sold Judges
- You Can Never Repeat the Master’s Success
- Why College Presidents Don’t Stand Up to Political Thugs
- Say Hello to the Fujian
- Kind of rapey
- This Day in Labor History: May 9, 1949
- Nation’s most partisan judges announce blackballing of students in retaliation for the protests of students they despise