🇺🇸 How can flying the American flag on your own property be illegal?
Homeowners in this Massachusetts town have been warned that patriotic decorations could violate endangered species law.
BREAKING: Days before America's 250th birthday, the Town of Newbury, MA warned Plum Island homeowners that flying American flags on their own property could violate endangered species law — and carry "significant regulatory and financial penalties." We've put the town on notice.
I just spent less than 48 hours in Philadelphia. I broke my foot the first day, and on the second I was pickpocketed in broad daylight.
May that city meet the same fate as Sodom and Gomorrah.
@KsteinEnergy@dilanesper Yes, and resell prices are high because people want to recoup as much of the initial purchase price as possible. I'm waiting until the first kickoff before judging these boycott stories
One of my favorite college memories was taking a British exchange student to the Buccees in North Georgia. I will never forget the look on his face of wonder, horror, and anthropological curiosity all at the same time
@VeritableConX@our_decay > be you
> school ranked #30 (doesn’t matter) is “third tier toilet” (had to look this one up)
> still cannot divine from first principles the post chevron administrative law landscape vis a vis judicial deference
> hmmm
@MorosKostas Felix Frankfurter, but he doesn't really map onto the modern conservative/liberal spectrum very well. I consider him very much a proto-Originalist in that he advanced the doctrine of judicial restraint
Originalism is often derided as a right-wing effort to diminish to scope of rights, but the Fourth Amendment is one situation where originalism leads to conclusions more rights-protective than Warren Court-era living constitutionalism.