The Three Whisky Happy Hour: From Birthright Religion to “Lockistotle”
Notre Dame’s Tocqueville professor of political science, Vincent Phillip Munoz (Phil to his freinds and colleagues), joins this special episode which finds all three of your regular bartenders in the same room for once while on the road in Austin, Texas. Phil is one of the leading scholars of religious liberty in the U.S., and after a progress report on the Iran War (we’re still winning), and a prolonged look at the Supreme Court oral arguments in Trump v. Barbara, the birthright citizenship case heard this week, we pick Phil’s brain about the status of school prayer, and whether a restoration of organized prayer in public schools has a prayer of happening, taking as our cue Gerry Bradley’s recent and provocative First Things article, “How To Bring Back School Prayer.”
From there we briefly (but alas because we were out of sufficient time) but inadequately treat Phil’s terrifically concise CRB essay “Ancient and Modern: How Straussians Interpret the Founding,” mostly to annoy John Yoo—and we succeeded!
The Three Whiskey Happy Hour
The Three Whisky Happy Hour: The Best (Podcast) Regime?
Is America in fact the “best regime” in the classical, Platonic/Aristotelian meaning of the term?

The Three Whisky Happy Hour: Battle Zones in Iran, Venezuela, and . . . Minnesota?
An overview of events in Iran, Venezuela, and Minnesota.

Constitutionalism

Amicus Brief: Hon. William P. Barr and Hon. Michael B. Mukasey in Support of Petitioners
Former AGs Barr and Mukasey Cite Civitas in a SCOTUS Brief

Rational Judicial Review: Constitutions as Power-sharing Agreements, Secession, and the Problem of Dred Scott
Judicial review and originalism serve as valuable commitment mechanisms to enforce future compliance with a political bargain.

State Courts Can’t Run Foreign Policy
Suncor is also a golden opportunity for the justices to stop local officials from interfering with an industry critical to foreign and national-security policy.

Supreme Court Justly Skeptical of Trump Administration’s Anti-Birthright Citizenship Executive Order
President Trump appears due for another disappointment.

The Arc of Justice Alito
Samuel Alito will go down in history as a consequential Supreme Court justice. His life story is emblematic of the forces that motivated and shaped the conservative legal movement, which is now the dominant force in American law.


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