Advisory Opinions The Dispatch
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Advisory Opinions is a new podcast from The Dispatch. Hosts David French and Sarah Isgur have a weekly conversation about the law, culture, and why it matters.
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Originalism v. Common Law
Judge Edmund Sargus from the Southern District of Ohio joins Sarah and David to take on originalism and different means of constitutional interpretation.
The Agenda:
—Brown v. Board of Education and the different judicial philosophies that can be applied to the case
—Originalism vs. common law traditionalism
—Challenges and limitations of textualism and originalism
—Landmark cases and the Supreme Court’s decisions shaping societal progress
—Interpreting ambiguous constitutional terms like ‘equal protection’ and ‘due process’
—Thus ends DEI
Show Notes:
—Plessy v. Ferguson
—Rutan v. Republican Party
—Bostock v. Clayton County
—Loving v. Virginia
—A blast from the past: Rep. James A. Traficant found guilty of corruption
—David for the NYT: The Magic Constitutionalism of Donald Trump
—Seceding from Secession: The Civil War, Politics, and the Creation of West Virginia
—Fifth Circuit opinion from Judge Andrew Oldham
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Tears of Scrutiny
It’s a silent spring in Texas as Pornhub pulls out of the state in an act of protest over a law requiring age verification measures. Sarah and David go through the legal battle between the explicit site and Texas AG Ken Paxton.The Agenda:
—Sarah’s high
—Texas law requiring age verification to access pornography online
—The tiers of scrutiny in constitutional law
—The role of text, history, and tradition
—Going through the Antisemitism Awareness Act of 2023
—Understanding the differences between Medicare and Medicaid can be challenging, even for lawmakersShow Notes:
—Sarah’s Remnant episode
—Jacobellis v. Ohio
—Ginsberg v. New York
—Ashcroft v. ACLU
—Child Online Protection Act
—Wickard v. Filburn Wilker
—United States v. Carolene Products Company
—David for NYT: Ban Online Porn for Kids
—David for NYT: One Party Has a Serious Foreign Policy Problem. The Other Has a Tantrum.
—A class-action lawsuit against Columbia
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Pressing the SCOTUS Panic Button
David returns after a brief food poisoning hiatus to discuss two oral arguments heard before the Supreme Court: Trump’s immunity case and Idaho’s case on abortion bans. But first, a request from The Dispatch’s resident Wilson-hater.
The Agenda:
—Are solo podcasters sociopaths?
—Proposals for changes on the Israeli Supreme Court
—Absolute immunity for presidents
—The role of the executive vesting clause
—Reviewing Idaho’s abortion ban
—Time, place, and manner restrictions on college campuses
—Answering questions and issuing corrections
Show Notes:
—Previous AO episode
—South Dakota v. Dole
—NFIB v. Sebelius
—Dr. Martin Luther King on “civil disobedience”
—Columbia University banned student protester over saying “Zionists don’t deserve to live”
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Indictment Watch: Supreme Court Hears Trump’s Immunity Case
The Supreme Court this week heard oral arguments for Donald Trump’s immunity case, and David has thoughts. However, he was too sick to join today so Sarah had to go solo (Ruminant style!), recapping the legal and political implications of the case, assessing the strength of the arguments and their significance for the future of our political system, and trying to imagine where we go from here in this bizarre election cycle.
The Agenda:
—Good and bad news for Trump
—What presidential acts are immune?
—Impeachment and conviction
—Going through the specific charges
—Can Trump stage a coup?
—ANSWER THE HYPOTHETICALS!
—Defining official acts
—The effect on Trump’s other cases
—The effect on SCOTUS as an institution
Show Notes:
—Bonus Collision newsletter
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Lady Law and Homeless Encampments
Sarah and David discuss oral arguments in Grants Pass v. Johnson, a Supreme Court case addressing the issue of homeless people camping on public property, as well as and the 4th Circuit ruling that blocked West Virginia's law blocking transgender athletes from participating in sports.
The Agenda:
—SCOTUS hears Grants Pass v. Johnson
—Necessity defense and cannibalism
—4th Circuit ruling on trans sports ban in West Virginia
—SCOTUS rules on Title VII case
—Biden expands Title IX ruling
—Campus due process and Columbia protesters
Show Notes:
—Casey Mattox on local governments stopping churches from helping the homeless
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Retire Universal Injunctions
There’s not much worth discussing yet in Donald Trump’s criminal trial in New York, so Sarah and David focus on the Supreme Court and a case on Idaho’s law restricting gender-transition treatment for minors. Plus: Murmurs about Clarence Thomas’ brief absence.
The Agenda:
—Election law crimes, tax crimes, and falsification of business records
—Challenges of broad injunctions
—Idaho’s Vulnerable Child Protection Act
—SCOTUS exhausted with emergency docket applications
—Justices call to retire universal injunctions
—January 6 arguments before SCOTUS
—SCOTUS declines to intervene in a police lawsuit against a Black Lives Matter activist
—Obstructions in official proceedings
—Legal issues in the Iran-Israel conflict
Show Notes:
—Labrador v. Poe
—Counterman v. Colorado
—18 U.S. Code § 1512 - Tampering with a witness, victim, or an informant
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Customer Reviews
Rotary phone user
62, it was a $ issue. Dad with $ had touchtone phones (6). Mom living on the edge had one rotary phone.
Best law podcast that is out there. Great mix of legal analysis, history and politics. Really extraordinary.
Squatters Rights inquiry
One of my favorite podcasts, you both do an awesome job at breaking down the information and making it digestible to non legal parties. Can you explain squatters rights? I’m baffled to hear so many recent instances going on around the country and no real legal recourse to remedy the situation. If you’ve already covered the topic in a prior episode, my bad.
Interesting and fun
Another rotary phone person, at 63, hopefully not almost dead. Used to “speed dial” to be the nth caller at the local rock radio station. (And won once, so.)
Listen each week; always learn something and enjoy them.