The Three Whisky Happy Hour: Tackling the Admin. State from Sicily
The end of this week finds the 3WHH crew in situ in Enna, up in the highlands of Sicily, visiting the University of Kore for a conference on, well, everything, though it is hard to tell since half the speakers are speaking in Italian and the rest of us are speaking in English. John Yoo’s incoming plane was delayed—again—but it gave us the prompt we needed to have in John’s place, R.J. Pestritto, the Dean of graduate education at Hillsdale College, but above all, one of the most trenchant critics of the Progressive revolution of the early 20th century, and the insidious administrative state it birthed. If ever you want to throw down on Woodrow Wilson—and what sensible person doesn’t?—R.J. is your man.
For this episode we consider R.J.’s recent short monograph for the Claremont Institute’s “Provocations” series, Government by the Unelected: How It Happened, and How It Might Be Tamed. Settle in with your favorite Chianti for this one, as “D.J.—R.J.,” as I like to call him when he gets rolling on this subject, really gets rolling on this subject with us.
For this episode, recorded in a hotel lobby with some visitors wandering by our “field recording studio (which included Michael McConnell listening in for some of it), we decided to keep the “authentic feel” of the background noise, in case you get to wondering.
Meanwhile, the full 3WHH crew arms up for the next podcast after they finish sacking Sicily.
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.

How the Zelman Decision Revitalized Religious Freedom
'Zelman v. Simmons-Harris' catalyzed a judicial recovery of the founding vision for the Establishment Clause and, more broadly, the relationship between church and state.


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