Dean is a second year law student at Zoom University, School of Law. He has just finished his Constitutional Law class. He shares his experience in law school. We discuss the SCOTUS cases that your Constitutional Law professor is ashamed to teach. We also discuss the libertarian approach to the major areas on law. This is not one to miss.
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Show Notes:
The Liberty Weekly Podcast: The State of Modern Discourse Ep. 25 ft. Dean-O-Files
The Liberty Weekly Episodes on Lysander Spooner
Planned Parenthood of Southeastern Pa. v. Casey, 505 U.S. 833 (1992)
Lochner v. New York, 198 U.S. 45 (1905)
Roe v. Wade, 410 U.S. 113 (1973)
Liberty Weekly: Interview with Mance Rayder
Liberty Weekly: The Truth About Warren v. DC Ep. 46
The McDonald’s Hot Coffee Case: Not What You Think
Legal Eagle on YouTube Interview with Brent Wisner re Glyphosate
Andrew Kern: The Principled Libertarian
Buck v. Bell, 274 U.S. 200 (1927)
As a former employee, manger, director, and small business owner, here’s what I want with respect to liability: I want it bounded. The thing which management and owners hate is the unbounded scope for liability (e.g. many sexual harassment cases are bunk, many on the job injury claims are bunk), and the unbounded potential for monetary costs. Insurance only addresses this partially. We want simple and clear liability scope rules that a regular human can conceivably understand, and we want the liability payouts to have an upper limit not exceeding let’s say the impacted employees lost potential income. We don’t want to be liable for morons who act unsafely in defiance of normal protocol. We don’t want to be liable for subjective harm. We don’t want a single lawsuit to be able to bankrupt the whole business.
Really enjoyed the format of episode 147.
More like this, with a few tweaks – a bit shorter and just one or two subjects from the viewpoint of a student. I learned lots and loved it!