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INTERVIEW WITH STATE SENATOR DENNY HOSKINS ON COLOMBO AND KATIE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Joe Biden announced on Tuesday that the Department of Justice will give more than $231 million to states for crisis intervention projects, such as red-flag programs, in an effort to reduce gun violence. Biden has long championed red-flag laws, which allow a judge to take away a firearm from someone based on the suspicion that the owner could use it to harm themselves or others.
On today's Daily Signal Top News, we break down:The consumer price index report Legislation introduced to ban TikTok in the U.S.‘Respect for Marriage Act' becomes lawThe Department of Energy has parted ways with Sam BrintonA scientific breakthrough relating to energy Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Stuart Rudner and Brittany Taylor join forces to bring you an employment law legislative update. From Bill 27 to Bill 88 and beyond, this is what employers and employees need to be mindful of now and in the coming months.
THINGS JUST GOT SERIOUS-DEMS INTRODUCE MARTIAL LAW LEGISLATION-DOUG & DAVE INTEL REPORT
Join us for an episode dedicated to all things Taurus, Ford Firearm and otherwise as we discuss firearms related news of the past few weeks and Joe Biden's Super Colon Blow-esque interpretation of 9MM. Joe Biden Says 9mm Bullet 'Blows The Lung Out of The Body' https://www.newsweek.com/joe-biden-says-9mm-bullet-blows-lung-out-body-1711551 House passes sweeping gun reform package though it's unlikely to move in the Senat includes raising age to 21and expanded background checks Red flags…Mittens supports https://www.cnn.com/2022/06/08/politics/house-gun-reform-package-vote/index.html March For Our Lives recap: Frustrated Americans rally for gun reform across US Rallies spanned D.C. to Florida to Michigan to New York. https://abcnews.go.com/US/live-updates/march-for-our-lives/?id=85238267 GOP senators surprisingly bullish on prospects for a bipartisan gun deal https://www.politico.com/news/2022/06/06/senators-weigh-enhanced-background-checks-gun-talks-00037426 SCOTUS Decision NYGC vs Buren Expected as soon as Monday EXCLUSIVE: OLDER SJ COUPLE BOUND, MOUTHS TAPED SHUT IN BRAZEN HOME ROBBERY DETAIL TERRIFYING ORDEAL https://abc7news.com/amp/san-jose-robbery-home-invasion-elderly-couple-attacked-sj-berryessa/11942709/ Boudin Ousted by Coalition of Asian Voters From All Income Levels and Wealthy Whites https://sfstandard.com/politics/elections/chesa-boudin-ousted-by-coalition-asians-wealthy-whites/ “You can't use a gun for self-protection in Canada. It's not a right that you have,” says Trudeau. Bill Maher Blames Mass Shootings in Part on Hollywood's ‘Unbridled Romanticization of Gun Violenc https://www.thewrap.com/bill-maher-hollywood-romanticizes-gun-violence/ Music Credit: Title: New Beginnings Karl Casey @ White Bat Audio --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/aapigo/support
A new community clinic in downtown Green Bay is nearly complete. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Forum on the Economic & Legal Foundations of Capitalism, with Nobel Laureate Vernon L. Smith; Cosponsored with the Smith Institute for Political Economy and Philosophy
March 1 marked the coming into force of sweeping changes to family law legislation, in Ontario and across Canada. I discuss some of these in this episode, which is Part 2 of a series. My focus here is on relocation (sometimes also referred to as mobility) and on family violence, a very important and impactful subject. My email: aj@jakubowska.ca
March 1 marked the coming into force of sweeping changes to family law legislation, in Ontario and across Canada. I discuss some of these in this episode, which I plan to be part of a series. My focus here is new terminology we will use to describe child-related arrangements, and a renewed focus to resolving parenting disputes outside the court system.My email: aj@jakubowska.ca
This Liberty Law Talk is with philosopher Eric Mack on Friedrich Hayek’s 1973 magnum opus, Law, Legislation and Liberty. Hayek’s significant trilogy distinguishes between law and legislation, considers the appropriate rule of judges within a spontaneous order, observes the difficulties of even defining social justice, and attempts to set forth the principles of a new […]
A new PA House Podcast with Representative Matt Gabler (R-Clearfield & Elk) is now available. Topics discussed in this week’s program include: • Gabler’s Legislation to Help Provide Stability to Local Industry Signed into Law • Legislation to Benefit Helpers and Heroes • Road Project on Route 120
A new PA House Podcast with Representative Matt Gabler (R-Clearfield & Elk) is now available. This brief public affairs report may be used in its entirety or edited for actualities to use in state government news coverage. Topics discussed in this week’s program include: • Gabler’s Legislation to Help Provide Stability to Local Industry Signed into Law • Legislation to Benefit Helpers and Heroes • Road Project on Route 120
Bill Cameron sits down with President and CEO of the Chicagoland Chamber of Commerce, Jack Lavin. They discuss the fair work week ordinance, and the importance of its implementation. Lavin shares what is next on the Chamber’s agenda, with issues including infrastructure, transportation, and pensions. He presents a new asset transfer idea, which could help fund pensions, and explains his position on the new $15 minimum wage. Bill also talks with Chicago Congressman, Dan Lipinski. Bill asks about Lipinski’s position on the two year budget bill, and the raising of the national debt. On this week’s roundtable, Bill Cameron is joined by Lynn Sweet of the Chicago Sun Times, Ray Long of The Chicago Tribune, Greg Hinz of Crain’s, Fran Spielman of The Chicago Sun Times, and Heather Cherone, of The Daily Line. They discuss Mayor Lori Lightfoot and her role in the fair work week ordinance, as well as her “live mic” comments, and a verbal altercation she was involved in this week. They also discuss Alderman Ed Burke and the new issues he faces due to the Ethics Reform in Chicago. This week’s Community Spotlight segment with John Dempsey is on Mayor Lightfoot's plan to reform the way the city hands out fines for not paying parking tickets, or not having a city sticker.
We're joined by Paul Gowder to discuss the rule of law, private power, and technology. We start, after important discussion of fishing bycatch and speech patterns of the western United States, with Paul's more general thoughts on the rule of law, oligopolies, and equality. Conversation then focuses on the connection between substantive politics and rule of law and principles and then on the role of technology in facilitating collective action, including through Paul's Dr. StrangeContract and a new podcast idea for Paul's fights with customer service at large corporations and a prognostication of a future of AI retention specialists vs. CancelBots. This show’s links: Paul Gowder's faculty profile (https://law.uiowa.edu/paul-gowder) and website (http://paul-gowder.com), which includes links to his writing Paul Gowder, The Rule of Law in the Real World (http://rulelaw.net) Paul Gowder, Transformative Legal Technology and the Rule of Law (https://utpjournals.press/doi/abs/10.3138/utlj.2017-0047) About bycatch (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bycatch) Nathan Masters, The 5, the 101, the 405: Why Southern Californians Love Saying "the" Before Freeway Numbers (https://www.kcet.org/shows/lost-la/the-5-the-101-the-405-why-southern-californians-love-saying-the-before-freeway-numbers) Mignon Fogarty, Spendy (https://www.quickanddirtytips.com/education/grammar/spendy) Roadwork (http://5by5.tv/roadwork) AT&T Mobility v. Concepcion (https://scholar.google.com/scholar_case?case=17088816341526709934) Margaret Jane Radin, Boilerplate: The Fine Print, Vanishing Rights, and the Rule of Law (https://press.princeton.edu/titles/9837.html); see also Margaret Jane Radin, Boilerplate: A Threat to the Rule of Law? (https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2340005) F.A. Hayek, Law, Legislation and Liberty: Vol.1 (https://books.google.com/books/about/Law_Legislation_and_Liberty_Volume_1.html?id=4TjL9Ox1ntoC) Elizabeth Anderson, What Is the Point of Equality? (https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.1086/233897?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents) Pericles's Funeral Oration (https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/History_of_the_Peloponnesian_War/Book_2#Pericles_Funeral_Oration) Oral Argument 133: Too Many Darn Radio Buttons (http://oralargument.org/133) (guest Jim Gibson) Frank Pasquale, Is Eviction-as-a-Service the Hottest New #LegalTech Trend? (https://concurringopinions.com/archives/2016/02/is-eviction-as-a-service-the-hottest-new-legaltech-startup.html) Ron Amadeo, Talking to Google Duplex: Google’s Human-Like Phone AI Feels Revolutionary (https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2018/06/google-duplex-is-calling-we-talk-to-the-revolutionary-but-limited-phone-ai/) Special Guest: Paul Gowder.
In Authoritarian Rule of Law: Legislation, Discourse and Legitimacy in Singapore (Cambridge University Press, 2012), Jothie Rajah tells a compelling story of the rule of law as discourse and praxis serving illiberal ends. Through a series of case studies on legislation criminalizing vandalism and regulating the print media, legal profession, and religion in Singapore, Rajah raises critical questions about the meaning and place of law in a postcolony that celebrates colonialism as a cause of its modernity, prosperity and plurality. Terrence Halliday describes Rajah's work as “theoretically innovative, empirically compelling, and gracefully written”, adding that it “has far-reaching consequences for national leaders who seek ‘third ways' in which economic development is partitioned from political liberalism”. As Halliday suggests, the contents of Authoritarian Rule of Law transcend the confines of the small city-state with which it is primarily concerned, and go to global debates about legislation, discourse and legitimacy, as well as to the inherent tensions in the rule-of-law ideal itself.
In Authoritarian Rule of Law: Legislation, Discourse and Legitimacy in Singapore (Cambridge University Press, 2012), Jothie Rajah tells a compelling story of the rule of law as discourse and praxis serving illiberal ends. Through a series of case studies on legislation criminalizing vandalism and regulating the print media, legal profession, and religion in Singapore, Rajah raises critical questions about the meaning and place of law in a postcolony that celebrates colonialism as a cause of its modernity, prosperity and plurality. Terrence Halliday describes Rajah’s work as “theoretically innovative, empirically compelling, and gracefully written”, adding that it “has far-reaching consequences for national leaders who seek ‘third ways’ in which economic development is partitioned from political liberalism”. As Halliday suggests, the contents of Authoritarian Rule of Law transcend the confines of the small city-state with which it is primarily concerned, and go to global debates about legislation, discourse and legitimacy, as well as to the inherent tensions in the rule-of-law ideal itself. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In Authoritarian Rule of Law: Legislation, Discourse and Legitimacy in Singapore (Cambridge University Press, 2012), Jothie Rajah tells a compelling story of the rule of law as discourse and praxis serving illiberal ends. Through a series of case studies on legislation criminalizing vandalism and regulating the print media, legal profession, and religion in Singapore, Rajah raises critical questions about the meaning and place of law in a postcolony that celebrates colonialism as a cause of its modernity, prosperity and plurality. Terrence Halliday describes Rajah’s work as “theoretically innovative, empirically compelling, and gracefully written”, adding that it “has far-reaching consequences for national leaders who seek ‘third ways’ in which economic development is partitioned from political liberalism”. As Halliday suggests, the contents of Authoritarian Rule of Law transcend the confines of the small city-state with which it is primarily concerned, and go to global debates about legislation, discourse and legitimacy, as well as to the inherent tensions in the rule-of-law ideal itself. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In Authoritarian Rule of Law: Legislation, Discourse and Legitimacy in Singapore (Cambridge University Press, 2012), Jothie Rajah tells a compelling story of the rule of law as discourse and praxis serving illiberal ends. Through a series of case studies on legislation criminalizing vandalism and regulating the print media, legal profession, and religion in Singapore, Rajah raises critical questions about the meaning and place of law in a postcolony that celebrates colonialism as a cause of its modernity, prosperity and plurality. Terrence Halliday describes Rajah’s work as “theoretically innovative, empirically compelling, and gracefully written”, adding that it “has far-reaching consequences for national leaders who seek ‘third ways’ in which economic development is partitioned from political liberalism”. As Halliday suggests, the contents of Authoritarian Rule of Law transcend the confines of the small city-state with which it is primarily concerned, and go to global debates about legislation, discourse and legitimacy, as well as to the inherent tensions in the rule-of-law ideal itself. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In Authoritarian Rule of Law: Legislation, Discourse and Legitimacy in Singapore (Cambridge University Press, 2012), Jothie Rajah tells a compelling story of the rule of law as discourse and praxis serving illiberal ends. Through a series of case studies on legislation criminalizing vandalism and regulating the print media, legal profession, and religion in Singapore, Rajah raises critical questions about the meaning and place of law in a postcolony that celebrates colonialism as a cause of its modernity, prosperity and plurality. Terrence Halliday describes Rajah’s work as “theoretically innovative, empirically compelling, and gracefully written”, adding that it “has far-reaching consequences for national leaders who seek ‘third ways’ in which economic development is partitioned from political liberalism”. As Halliday suggests, the contents of Authoritarian Rule of Law transcend the confines of the small city-state with which it is primarily concerned, and go to global debates about legislation, discourse and legitimacy, as well as to the inherent tensions in the rule-of-law ideal itself. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices