Now that BlueSky has become populated (and is objectively better than Threads or Mastodon), I'm done posting here. Will check in every now and then for the accounts I'm following here that haven't migrated, but this is it for me.
@ANXIETYATLAW "Plaintiff's argument strains credulity at best." / "The argument is unaviling on the procedure, the facts, and the law." / "In doing so, Appellant at best misunderstands -- and at worst outright misrepresents -- controlling precedent."
If you take the number of states in the country, add one for Puerto Rico, add one for Washington DC, and add one for the U.S. Virgin Islands, you still have a number (53) less than @BadgerMHockey's Current Pairwise (54)
@OrinKerr That mantra was frustrating in Week 3, Professor. The final is Thursday morning and I am still hopelessly lost. "Good! You'll get it soon!"
Did a spit take with my coffee when grades were finally posted and I had aced the test. To this day, part of me wonders if he misgraded it.
@OrinKerr I took AdminLaw spring semester of 2L year. The professor kept saying, "if none of this makes any sense, that's good, that means you're thinking about it." Even at the review session 48 hours before the final: "It will come together. Don't worry if you're confused!"
@AlexWestad I grew up watching the Sertich-era Bulldogs. Our seats were at dead-center ice, second to last row at the old DECC across from the benches, so my dad (who had a bad back) could stand during the games and I could see the entire ice.
Here's a wild anecdote: while teaching high school students about genocide in 1993, Walz had them use GIS data to predict where the next one would occur. They said Rwanda. (the NYT verified this via interviews with some of those students in a 2008 story)
In 1999 Tim Walz, then a football coach at a rural high school in Minnesota, helped students start a Gay-Straight Alliance by serving as its faculty coordinator. For context, Minnesota still had laws criminalizing homosexuality on the books (overturned by the ACLU in 2001).
@KSVesq Last year, when driving my kids to school, I got pulled over (no ticket, just a very stern warning) for going *checks notes* 32 mph in a 30-zone. My kids then proceeded to tell all their teachers and friends how their "attorney dad got arrested this morning."