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Politics
Sept 15, 24

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Politics
Sept 15, 24

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Politics
Sept 15, 24
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Brains Versus Brawn: Ordinal Rank Effects in Job Training

Is it better to be a big fish in a small pond or a small fish in a big pond?

Pursuit of Happiness
Jan 28, 2025
The Case Against Birthright Citizenship

No one at the time or now has advanced a coherent explanation as to why birthright citizenship is desirable as a matter of principle.

Constitutionalism
Jan 28, 2025
The Arrival of Legal Traditionalism

With a clearer view of what justifies its traditionalist intuitions, the Court has an opportunity to right many residual wrongs from its past misadventures.

Constitutionalism
Jan 28, 2025

Less than a year after fleeing California’s extreme environmental laws, Chevron now finds itself in a Louisiana courthouse defending itself against a $3 billion claim that World War II-era oil production caused erosion of the state’s coast. The mastermind of the swampland stickup is a politically connected trial lawyer who has leveraged his ties with the state’s Gov. Jeff Landry and Attorney General Elizabeth Murrill—both Republicans—to lead a statewide fight to make oil and gas companies pay for exploration dating back to the 1940s. With friends like these, who needs Gavin Newsom?

On March 13, a jury in Plaquemines Parish heard opening arguments in a case seeking damages for the alleged environmental harm Texaco (now owned by Chevron) caused when it began drilling in the Bayou Gentilly oil field—in 1941. The case, orchestrated by plaintiffs’ attorney John Carmouche, will signal how juries will respond in the 40 other lawsuits that Mr. Carmouche’s firm has brought to hold oil and gas companies liable for Louisiana’s coastal land loss. A plaintiffs’ verdict in Plaquemines Parish could lead to settlements in the billions in these other cases.

Such an outcome would be a boon to plaintiffs’ lawyers, but a disaster for Louisiana’s ability to lead the Trump administration’s energy dominance agenda. In 2022 the New Orleans-based Pelican Institute estimated that Louisiana had 53 to 74 fewer oil wells and would lose between $44 million and $113 million dollars annually because of the litigation risk associated with the coastal lawsuits.

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The Death of the Family Home Is Killing the American Middle Class
Locked Out of the Dream: Regulation Making Homes Unaffordable Around the World
Musk’s Outbursts Reveal a Deeper Rift in MAGA
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