Thanks, Prof. @robertltsai! It was a pleasure to get your insight on America's evolving "digital first amendment culture", the Facebook Supreme Court, and claims of "silenced conservatism".
Daisy Okoye, a @UChicago student, and I had a great conversation about the state of free speech in America. Keep an eye out for the episode on @kindasortabrown Podcast.
BREAKING: Attorney General Garland has announced that the Justice Department will double its Civil Rights Division staff in the next 30 days to protect voting rights in the U.S.
LISTEN. maybe TRC can do some modicum of good here, but it won’t be enough. those families… how can (“transitional”) justice happen when the perpetrating regime of Canada remains in power and goes unpunished?
WARNING: This video contains details some readers may find distressing. Former senator Murray Sinclair, who chaired the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, delivered this statement on the discovery at Kamloops residential school. https://t.co/amXFEO4CTF
It’s true! Now it’s my charge to write an essay I enjoy just as much... and so my next project begins! So many great moments in this episode.
Listen to “Fire, Fox (News), and the Facebook Court on Free Speech” wherever you get your podcasts.
“Just reading some of your work, especially ‘Fire, Metaphor, and Constitutional Myth-Making’ ‘cause that was an article that I read and kind of wish I had written it.” Thanks @daisyinperil! Listen to our entire @kindasortabrown conversation: https://t.co/JXOO2U34Es
100 years ago today White Oklahomans attacked the Greenwood section of Tulsa (AKA Black Wall Street). Now known as the Tulsa Race Massacre, this is why reparations isn’t just about slavery.
I learned about it on #UnitedShades Season 5, episode 2. Watch it on @hbomax or @CNN.
Had a lovely conversation with @UChicago student @daisyinperil for this episode of @kindasortabrown. Honored to be the first law prof they’ve interviewed! @BU_Law https://t.co/EO0jymFp4T
will be toying with this hobbes for the next 3-5 business days:
“... to accuse requires less eloquence (such is man’s nature) than to excuse; and condemnation than absolution more resembles justice.”