Hate Speech at a High School

In my last post on the VC, I would like to say a bit about so-called “hate speech” (which I address in the last chapter of my book, arguing that it should be constitutionally protected in public schools). I say “so-called,” because it might be better to drop the term “hate speech” insofar as it implies an extreme aversion to a particular group. However, in this post, I will use the term for convenience.

No single legal definition of hate speech exists. The term is notoriously difficult to define with sufficient precision. As a result, those who support anti-hate speech codes on college campuses, for example, must say more about what to do about invariable vagueness and overbreadth problems than they usually do. That hate speech is constitutionally protected in the U.S. has not stopped university administrators to try to make it much harder for students to express certain ideas with impunity.

I doubt that any anti-hate speech code at a public school could be formulated and applied in a way that would not ban or chill speech that ought to be constitutionally protected. Such codes would be ripe for overreach and misapplication, apart from allowing viewpoint discrimination. It is important to understand that even if a particular word—like a racial slur—has little, if any free speech value most of the time, the fundamental problem is that if the government can ban that word, then it also has the authority to ban other words, regardless of the context and the intent of the speaker or writer.

In the late 1980s and 1990s, lower courts struck down a variety of speech codes on college campuses. In R.A.V. v. City of St. Paul, writing for the majority, Justice Antonin Scalia invalidated a Minneapolis anti-hate speech ordinance on the ground that it was underinclusive. For him, the law in question invited government to engage in viewpoint discrimination inasmuch as people could be prosecuted for expressing racist views but not for expressing racially egalitarian views or homophobic views.

In Scalia’s view, government must remain neutral towards all viewpoints, even racist ones, so that the “fight” is fair. No viewpoint is better or worse than another from the standpoint of the First Amendment, and it is up to the public to decide which ideas they will embrace and reject. There is no way to regulate hate speech without also censoring ideas. Doctrinally, that fact presents an enormous problem for those who want to alter the constitutional state quo by creating a new category of unprotected speech. It is not evident how to balance the importance of free speech against the importance of protecting victims of hate speech from some sort of harm. Reasonable people disagree about how harmful it is likely to be, which is situational and can vary from person to person, and what can or should be done about it.

Progressives should not be so eager to embrace bans on hate speech when their own chickens could come home to roost. Recently, some European countries have curbed pro-Palestinian protests designed to raise awareness about the violence in Gaza. This response is problematic for a few reasons, including the importance of the expression of the viewpoint that the Israeli conduct is unjust (regardless of whether this proposition is true) so that the public can decide for itself which side, if any, to take.

This generation of college students is more inclined to suppress speech that offends minorities, makes them feel uncomfortable, or undermines their equality. This inclination comes from the right place but the implementation of such a speech code would have a high cost: trying to protect vulnerable students from hurtful ideas, school officials would be able to engage in viewpoint discrimination and punish students who express their sincere beliefs, which of course, may be wrong.

Additionally, censorship may reduce the likelihood that uncomfortable conversations will take place that will enlighten white students who may be racially illiterate. A number of years ago, I was taken aback when I realized how many of my students, who had grown up in this county, did not know why people burn crosses. When a white student wears blackface to school as part of a Halloween costume, school officials and teachers have an opportunity to educate students about the historical meaning of minstrel shows and its present-day implications. Understandable anger or outrage should not replace the need to explain why such a costume is problematic; it is not as if all or even many junior high and high school students (or adults for that matter) know why that is so. At minimum, all students must become used to encountering unwelcome ideas, even the worst ones.

Few people will want to talk about race openly and honestly if what they say could be considered racist speech under an amorphous anti-hate speech code. A few years ago, at the Georgetown Law Center, Professor Ilya Shapiro was investigated (and eventually cleared after several months before he resigned), for making an offensive comment on Twitter about then-U.S. Supreme Court nominee Ketanji Brown-Jackson and her being a “lesser black woman.” Regardless of whether Shapiro was right or whether he phrased his comment well, he meant that President Joseph Biden should not have promised to put a black woman on the Court during his presidential campaign in 2020. Apparently in Shapiro’s mind, Biden should have picked from a much wider pool of qualified applicants. Surely at law schools and elsewhere, there is a public discussion worth having about the meaning of merit, the judicial selection process, its political dimensions, and the lack of sex and racial diversity on the federal bench. This incident also illustrates why the threat of punishment is the wrong approach in dealing with speech that is offensive or racist. Frequently, people – students included – do not choose their words carefully when they speak extemporaneously, use social media, or blurt out something in the heat of the moment. Any sensible theory of free speech must take people as they are –error-prone, emotional, uninformed, insensitive, and thoughtless– and not how we wish them to be.

As Matthew Kramer observes in Freedom of Expression as Self-Restraint, anti-hate speech laws are “designed to control people’s thoughts.” Although that may be an overstatement, Kramer is right that if we are genuinely committed to respect for the autonomy of each student, then they will make racist remarks and use racial epithets, unfortunately. They will also make mistakes that they may regret. That is the price of letting them come to her their conclusions for better or for worse. A speech code on campus is a blunt instrument. Alternative remedies must be considered before the state engages in censorship. Other non-censorious countermeasures could be equally or more effective (and much more respectful of student autonomy).

One of the most difficult challenges is to figure out exactly what to do about such speech, especially when laws proscribing it will not make it disappear, may be hard to enforce, and may have unintended consequences. It is not evident that the hate speech problem in the United States, because such speech is constitutionally protected, is worse than that of European countries in which such speech is prohibited (although that result may be due to under-enforcement). In terms of reducing hate speech, a ban on it on a high school campus may help to mitigate it, and racial and ethnic minority students may be less likely to directly experience it, but it will not disappear. At most, students who use such language are more likely to be more careful about who may overhear them or with whom they share their real beliefs.

There may be more tactful ways of expressing racist sentiments but doing so in a more “civil” manner is not necessarily much of an improvement. Doctrinally, people are allowed to express pernicious stereotypes and make outrageous claims; it is not the role of government to censor them. Alternatively, “good” speech can counteract “bad” speech, with good or bad often being in the eye of the beholder.

Students may want to engage in such speech yet do not do so for fear of being suspended or expelled. We should not necessarily want a racist student punished for what they say or write; we should want them refuted. The expression of racist ideas can have some educational value, then, when educators can turn an incident into a teachable moment. So, yes, to answer one VC reader’s query in the comments section, a student should be able to use the “n” word without the possibility of being disciplined. But that is not to say that they should use the word. To have a legal or constitutional right to do this or that does not entail that it is fine to exercise such a right whenever they happen to want to do so. It is to say that it is their choice and that others are free to respond with their own counter speech.

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“The Real Part Of This Economy Is Not Doing Well”: Ed Dowd Warns ‘Just Wait ‘Til The AI Bubble Bursts’

“The Real Part Of This Economy Is Not Doing Well”: Ed Dowd Warns ‘Just Wait ‘Til The AI Bubble Bursts’

Via Greg Hunter’s USAWatchdog.com,

Wall Street money manager and financial analyst Ed Dowd of PhinanceTechnologies.com warned at the beginning of April that the economy was already rolling over. 

He said “Private Credit Problems are Ending the Party.”  Just 10 days ago, BlackRock and other firms with so-called private credit are  locking up investors’ cash because of a wave of redemptions.  Dowd predicted this, and the sagging economy is not going to be getting any better anytime soon. 

If you thought private credit was a drag on the economy, then the Iran war is going to be a boat anchor.  Dowd says:

“The longer this situation persists, the likelihood of oil drifting higher is going to happen.

 We have two scenarios, and one is oil peaks out at $125, and this gets resolved by May.  Inflation would peak around 5%…

We are at the point now, if this does not get resolved soon, oil prices could continue to drift higher…

We have a second scenario where we get $200 to $250 a barrel oil, which was our worst-case scenario. 

If that happens, inflation will peak out at around 11% by our models…”

Martin Armstrong said two weeks ago that gasoline prices could go to $9 a gallon.  Dowd agrees with Armstrong and says you might get $10 a gallon gas in a worst-case scenario.  Dowd adds:

I see oil going a lot higher, which will cause a tremendous amount of demand destruction and a recession that I think is coming anyway. 

It will be even deeper than we have forecasted. 

It will cause layoffs and economic growth to go into recessionary territory.  The prices of commodities will collapse as deflation sets in.  

The solution to high commodity prices is high commodity prices because it creates demand destruction.”

So, what’s the Fed going to do?  Dowd thinks,

“The Fed could raise rates to combat the headline inflation.  My best guess is they do nothing at the June FOMC meeting

They are certainly not going to cut until they see the economic growth slowing…

Depending on this war . . . the real part of this economy, housing, is not doing well and rolling over. 

We are just waiting on the AI bubble to finally burst . . . we are close to that topping out soon.”

Dowd is still bullish on gold and silver long term, but short term, it may get sold off to raise cash like Turkey just did. 

Silver will have stronger headwinds than gold given the deflation that is coming. 

Dowd does not see China’s economic woes getting any better.  Dowd predicted China’s economic problems months ago, and Wall Street is just now catching up on the bad news.  Dowd says,

“China had 8% negative growth in the first quarter.”

Dowd goes into a deep dive on the severe economic problems facing China

Dowd points out big problems in housing and says it’s cheaper to rent a house than to own one. 

Dowd also predicts the Fed will be forced to cut interest rates in early 2027 because the deflation will be so severe.

In closing, Dowd says, “This is the normal credit cycle…”

”  The credit cycle is old and aging, and we are seeing the credit cycle get chinks in the armor with the private credit situation, which is effectively frozen.  This was credit growth that happened in 2024 and 2025.”

There is much more in the 44-minute interview.

Join Greg Hunter of USAWatchdog as he goes One-on-One with money manager and investment expert Ed Dowd as he explains why we are seeing big trouble for the US economy.   Dowd predicted this was coming in January with his report called “US Economy Outlook 2026.”

Tyler Durden
Fri, 05/29/2026 – 10:40

via ZeroHedge News https://ift.tt/xQmZckg Tyler Durden

Kicking The Can On A Ceasefire “Which Does Not Solve Anything”

Kicking The Can On A Ceasefire “Which Does Not Solve Anything”

Bas van Geffen, Senior Macro Strategist at Rabobank

Both Bloomberg and Axios report that the US and Iran have reached a tentative deal to extend the ceasefire by 60 days as they engage in further negotiations over Iran’s nuclear programme. However, Tasnim reported that the text of the memorandum of understanding had not been finalized.

US Vice President Vance said that the two sides are still “going back and forth on a couple of language points,” which reportedly includes the wording on Iran’s nuclear capacity. But the Vice President said that Iran appears to be negotiating in good faith, paving the way for Trump’s approval of the ceasefire extension.

While negotiators are trying to dot the i’s and cross the t’s of the memorandum, President Trump has reportedly asked for a couple of days to think about the final deal.

Energy prices fell further on the news that a deal could –again– be imminent, after the US administration made similar claims last week. Brent futures are currently down about 10% on the week. That, in turn, is lifting optimism in other markets. Yields dropped, and green figures returned on stock exchanges.

Admittedly, a 60-day extension would lessen some of the near-term tail risks – although both sides have accused each other of violating the current ceasefire. Just the past day, Kuwait intercepted a missile that Iran had fired at a US base, causing the US to respond with new “defensive strikes” on Iran.

More importantly, a ceasefire does not solve anything, unless the US and Iran manage to agree on the key sticking points during that extended ceasefire.

Treasury Secretary Bessent reminded everyone that Trump’s three red lines are unchanged: Hormuz must reopen, Tehran must end its nuclear programme, and Iran must transfer its highly enriched uranium. As we noted earlier this week, a nuclear deal still seems highly unlikely at this juncture.

Likewise, Iran still believes that it can effectively control traffic through the Strait of Hormuz, together with Oman, allowing it to put down toll booths along the strait. Even though this would allow paying ships to cross, that’s not a “reopening” in Trump’s view.

The US imposed sanctions on the Hormuz Strait Shipping Authority, which is supposed to collect the toll. And Bessent warned that “Oman, in particular, should know that the ⁠U.S. Treasury will aggressively target any actors involved –directly or indirectly– in ⁠facilitating tolls for the Strait.” President Trump even threatened to “blow them up” if Oman works with Iran to control shipping through Hormuz.

It still seems unlikely that the key sticking points will be resolved soon. On that basis, we have shifted our baseline for Hormuz to remain closed for up to three more months before we see a crisis resolution. Only if either the US or Iran blinks regarding the nuclear programme, could we see a quicker end to the conflict.

Meanwhile, tensions are rising in other parts of the globe too. Talks between the US and Cuba appear to have stalled, while Cuba and China discussed agricultural cooperation, food shipments, and political support. This increases the risk that the US may resort to military aggression. China, meanwhile, claims that a Dutch frigate entered their waters – which the Netherlands disputed; and a Canadian frigate transited the Taiwan Strait, defying Chinese warnings not to do so.

And, as we’ve noted before, even if the US-Iran conflict is resolved sooner, it would still take a substantial amount of time before energy flows return to some form of normalcy. So, some further inflationary pressure is inevitable.

Policymakers are also starting to realize this. The ECB’s Schnabel noted recently that “even if the war ended today, a lot of damage has already been done to energy infrastructure and global supply chains.” She adds that higher costs will probably trickle through global supply chains and into higher goods prices.

The accounts of the April ECB meeting suggest that Schnabel is not the only policymaker who’s concerned about the size and the persistence of the inflation shock. It therefore looks like a June hike is all but a done deal. According to the minutes, some policymakers said that the decision to hold or hike was already a “close call” for them in April. This group essentially indicated that they would not have opposed a rate hike last month, if this had been proposed as the path forward.

Today’s inflation data are further cementing the case for a rate hike. French HICP inflation rose to 2.8% y/y, while Spanish HICP inflation edged up to 3.6%. Meanwhile, business surveys indicate that companies expect to raise selling prices further – although selling price expectations eased a bit in May, compared to the steep increases in the two months prior.

And, worryingly, consumers’ medium-term inflation expectations have started to pick up alongside the rise in current inflation rates. As Schnabel pointed out, these shifts in consumer expectations could be a first indication that expectations are de-anchoring.

However, we still believe that the current backdrop is less conducive to broader and protracted inflationary pressures than 2021-2022. Yesterday’s business confidence survey indicated that employment expectations continue to score below the long-term average. The labor hoarding index remains above its long-term average, but businesses appear to hoard less labor than before.

Tyler Durden
Fri, 05/29/2026 – 10:00

via ZeroHedge News https://ift.tt/gVGar3W Tyler Durden

Court Awards $400M Default Judgment Against North Korea to Victims of 1968 Attack on U.S.S. Pueblo

A short excerpt from the long opinion in Does v. Democratic People’s Republic of N. Korea, decided yesterday by Judge Timothy Kelly (D.D.C.):

In January 1968, North Korea chased down and captured the U.S.S. Pueblo in international waters, killing one of the ship’s crew and taking the rest hostage. For the next eleven months, North Korea beat, starved, interrogated, and tortured the survivors to extract false confessions from them. Before the year was up, North Korea got the admission and the apology that it wanted from the United States for supposedly violating North Korean territorial waters. And the hostages, having served their purpose, were released.

This case is the latest of several in which some of the Pueblo’s crew members, their families, and their estates sued North Korea under the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act and state tort law. North Korea failed to appear, and Plaintiffs moved for default judgment. For the reasons below, the Court will grant their motion and award long-overdue compensation to these victims of state-sponsored terrorism.

As to the statute of limitations, the opinion says this:

The FSIA’s statute of limitations imposes a cut-off date for lawsuits: the later of (1) 10 years after April 24, 1996, and 10 years after “the cause of action arose.” This timing provision is not jurisdictional, so it does not implicate the Court’s power to decide the case. And “by defaulting” and failing to “raise [this] affirmative defense in responding to a pleading,” North Korea has forfeited this timing-based defense. Moreover, district courts lack “authority to raise sua sponte the FSIA terrorism exception’s statute of limitations when it has been forfeited by a defendant” like North Korea “who is entirely absent from the proceedings.” So even though Plaintiffs’ complaint, filed in January 2023, might struggle to overcome the FSIA’s statute of limitations were the issue raised, the issue has not been raised, and the Court will not—cannot—address it unprompted.

The awards, which amount to $404.55M, are listed in this order; I don’t know whether there are any North Korean assets that plaintiffs could access to collect on the awards.

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Republicans Shrug at Trump’s Outrageous Corruption


Gold statue of Donald Trump and plaque | Photo: Michele Eve Sandberg/ZUMAPRESS/Newscom

In a normal, pre-Donald-Trump political world—you know, when pastors didn’t pray around golden statues of political leaders and presidents didn’t plaster their names and faces on public buildings, passports, and currency like in a tin-pot dictatorship—lawmakers could agree on some basic parameters of decent behavior. Democrats and Republicans may fight about everything, but they could unite in their opposition to self-dealing outrages.

That’s no longer true. There is seemingly nothing Donald Trump or his family could do that would spark denunciations from the GOP. That’s especially obvious after Trump exacted vengeance in Tuesday’s primaries on the handful of Republicans who would sometimes raise concerns about the administration’s threats to the Constitution. I still remember when sucking up was a loathsome character trait, but now it’s a Republican art form.

In pre-Trump days, Republicans would laugh at Bagdad Bob-style third-world toadyism. Yet this week, Republican Gov. Jeff Landry went to Greenland as Trump’s special envoy. “Greenland was not on a map, until Donald Trump put it on a map,” he gushed. Ick. I also remember when Louisiana governors, however ill-behaved, were independent-minded and clever. Edwin Edwards on a foe: “He’s so slow that it takes him an hour and a half to watch 60 Minutes.”

While derriere-kissing behavior is embarrassing, the latest news from Washington, D.C., is shocking. Trump had sued the IRS for $10 billion for the leak of his tax returns, and now the agency that he runs has settled with the president and his family. The terms of the agreement are not surprisingly tilted heavily in Trump’s favor and should make any self-styled advocate for limited government blush, but you know that isn’t the case.

As The Dispatch‘s Jonah Goldberg explained, “Realizing that the courts might find this too cute to countenance, the Justice Department and IRS—both, again, run by Trump—compromised by creating a $1,776,000,000 fund (that “1776” before all the zeros is a play on the country’s 250th birthday) that Trump will control. Its primary function would be to compensate the January 6 rioters, all of whom he has already pardoned.” Trump isn’t particularly smart, but he is cunning. (And you thought it was self-dealing when unions negotiate for pay deals with the politicians that they elected to office.)

Further details of this “anti-weaponization” deal are more brazen. As the BBC noted, the deal “blocks the IRS from reviewing tax filings that Trump, his family and his businesses made in the past.” It’s a self-pardon for any financial problems and, as others have noted, largely puts the Trump family above the nation’s tax laws. In free societies, no one is above the law, whereas in despotisms the despot and his cronies can do pretty much anything they choose. As a Peruvian dictator once said, “For my friends everything, for my enemies the law.”

So where are Republican lawmakers? Some of them feigned ignorance of the details of any of this well-reported deal. Others expressed some concern, per the Deseret News, with Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R–S.D.) saying that he’s “not a big fan” of a slush fund that could pay millions of dollars to people who attacked the Capitol and its police officers. Sen. Lindsey Graham (R–S.C.) says he wants to ask more questions. It won’t be long before all elected Republicans—including those now expressing “concern”—become big fans of the deal.

Already, per the news report, Sen. Chuck Grassley (R–Iowa) is doing the whataboutism thing by comparing it to a deal made under the Biden administration—a laughably weak comparison. The case he references involves a $2 million settlement the administration made with former FBI officials, not to a president who “negotiated” a $1.8-billion slush fund with get-out-of-jail-free passes for his family.

One writer referred to Trump’s governance as “patrimonialism,” meaning that he treats the United States and its government as his personal property. That certainly helps explain Trump’s desecration of the White House and other D.C. monuments, as he imposes his Early Saddam Hussein style on everything largely free from congressional oversight. But that’s an overly generous description.

The key to Trump’s success is that he throws so much stuff against the wall that it leaves his opponents constantly flat-footed. Consider this doozy of a news story that, in that long-forgotten sane world, would be intolerable. From The New Republic: “At least two companies tied to Don Jr. and Eric Trump have won large government contracts.”

Why do Republicans roll over? “One of the saddest lessons of history is this: If we’ve been bamboozled long enough, we tend to reject any evidence of the bamboozle,” wrote Carl Sagan. “It’s simply too painful to acknowledge, even to ourselves, that we’ve been taken. Once you give a charlatan power over you, you almost never get it back.” And now the nation will probably never get back to normal because a spineless GOP can never admit that it’s been conned.

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California Judge “Cited and Relied on a Fictitious Case” Submitted by Lawyer, Even Though …

From H.C. v. Contreras, decided yesterday by California Court of Appeal Justice Mark Snauffer, joined by Justices Bert Levy and Donald Franson:

Bethany G. sought a protective order protecting H. C., her minor son, from H. C.’s father, Rudy C. Numerous witnesses testified at a hotly contested hearing after which the parties filed closing briefs. Rudy’s brief, submitted by counsel, contained fictitious caselaw and misstated the law. Counsel for Bethany directly and swiftly pointed the errors out to the trial court.

The trial court declined to issue the requested order, but its ruling erroneously relied on a nonexistent case and a serious legal misstatement—the very same shortcomings Bethany had already noted. As explained below, we reverse for further proceedings….

After the evidence was presented, but before the trial court ruled, Rudy’s counsel filed a closing brief. Most pertinent here, the brief contains the following portions:

“2) Insufficient Evidence of Harassment or Disturbing the Peace

“Under Family Code § 6320, abuse can include harassment or disturbing the peace of the other party. However, California courts have held that the behavior must be persistent, egregious, and intended to disturb the victim’s peace. In Enrique M. v. Angelina V. (2005) 15 Cal.App.5th 788, the court emphasized that disturbing the peace should be understood as conduct that ‘destroys the mental or emotional calm of the other party.’

“In this case, the alleged incidents presented by Bethany do not rise to the level of severe, ongoing behavior required to meet the standard of ‘harassment’ or ‘disturbing the peace.’ The incidents presented lack the frequency, intensity, or impact required under the statutory definition and supporting case law, rendering them insufficient to constitute harassment or disturbing the peace.

“3) Failure to Demonstrate Reasonable Fear of Immediate Harm

“Family Code § 6203 also requires that abuse must place the petitioner in reasonable apprehension of imminent serious bodily injury. Petitioner has failed to demonstrate any legitimate, immediate fear of bodily harm that is objectively reasonable under the circumstances.”

Bethany, also through counsel, replied to the brief, pointing out the citation to Enrique M. v. Angelina V. (2005) 15 Cal.App.5th 788 did not exist. {Bethany’s counsel has identified a case, Enrique M. v. Angelina V. (2004) 121 Cal.App.4th 1371, which involved a father’s request to modify a custody order and is otherwise inapplicable to the present case.} Counsel also noted Family Code section 6203 did not require proving “legitimate, immediate fear of bodily harm that is objectively reasonable” before a restraining order may issue.

The trial court {Judge Irene A. Luna} issued a written ruling in Rudy’s favor. It contains the following pertinent portion [which is nearly identical to the brief submitted on Rudy’s behalf -EV] ….

Here, in our view, the trial court committed at least two clear legal errors. First, the trial court cited and relied on a fictitious case, i.e., Enrique M. v. Angelina V. (2005) 15 Cal.App.5th 788. The error is underscored by the fact Bethany brought the fictitious citation to the court’s attention. The court ignored Bethany’s warning, and relied on it in its ruling. The trial court clearly incorporated this part of Rudy’s brief into its ruling because the ruling is a verbatim reproduction—save for changing “Bethany” to “Mother”—including a spacing typo.

Second, the trial court’s ruling reproducing Rudy’s brief misstated section 6203, the section defining abuse under the DVPA. Section 6203, subdivision (a) provides four independent circumstances constituting abuse:

“(1) To intentionally or recklessly cause or attempt to cause bodily injury.

“(2) Sexual assault.

“(3) To place a person in reasonable apprehension of imminent serious bodily injury to that person or to another.

“(4) To engage in any behavior that has been or could be enjoined pursuant to Section 6320.”

The trial court nonetheless ruled section 6203 “requires that abuse must place the petitioner in reasonable apprehension of imminent serious bodily injury.”

The ruling misstates the law. Section 6203 is written in the alternative and not the conjunctive. Each subsection alone can constitute abuse. Immediate bodily injury is not a prerequisite to issuing a protective order.

“We have no difficulty concluding that it is an abuse of discretion for a court to rely in material part on fictional case authorities in rendering a decision or making an order. Reliance on fake cases is fundamentally incompatible with an informed exercise of discretion controlled by genuine principles of law. It seriously undermines the integrity of the outcome and erodes public confidence in our judicial system. It can also hinder meaningful appellate review.” …

When faced with nonexistent case law and misconstrued statutes brought to its attention, the court incorporated the objectionable material into its final ruling. The court’s ruling is without doubt an abuse of discretion and our confidence in the outcome is sufficiently undermined to justify reversal. For all future proceedings in this matter, we direct the matter be assigned to a new trial judge.

With respect to Rudy’s counsel’s actions, “Business and Professions Code section 6068, subdivision (d), states it is the duty of an attorney ‘[t]o employ … those means only as are consistent with truth, and never to seek to mislead the judge or any judicial officer by an artifice or false statement of fact or law.’ California Rules of Professional Conduct, rule 3.3(a)(1) and (2), prohibit an attorney from ‘knowingly mak[ing] a false statement of fact or law to a tribunal or fail[ing] to correct a false statement of material fact or law previously made to the tribunal by the lawyer’ or ‘knowingly misquot[ing] to a tribunal the language of a book, statute, decision or other authority.’ A person’s knowledge may be inferred from the circumstances.”

The judgment is reversed. The matter is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion….

Amanda G. Hebesha, John P. Kinsey, and Stephanie Hosman (Wanger Jones Helsley PC) represent Bethany G.

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James Talarico vs. Ken Paxton, the Pope on AI, and Caves


Robby Soave and Christian Britschgi discuss Texas senate primary | Illustration: Adani Samat

Robby Soave and Christian Britschgi discuss the brewing Texas showdown between Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton and Democratic Senate candidate James Talarico. Then, they break down Rep. Nancy Mace’s (R–S.C.) proposal to give boomers a property tax break and Pope Leo XIV’s latest encyclical on artificial intelligence. Finally, they wrap up with some lighter debates over The Legend of Zelda, Nicolas Cage movies, retro-futurism, Jill Biden’s latest remarks, and whether President Donald Trump’s political influence will ever fade.

0:00—Heretics and hypocrites in Texas

14:30—Talarico takes back his former wokeness

19:10—If you can’t take it, don’t dish it

32:25—Coal mines are cool?

34:00—Mace’s boomer luxury communism

39:20—The pope’s views on AI

47:40—Why does anyone play video games?

58:59—Nicolas Cage is a good actor

1:05:57—Retro-futurism

1:10:26—Jill Biden’s latest remarks

1:18:36—Will Trump’s influence ever fade?

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Panel on Free Speech at the Library of Congress This Tuesday (June 2), 5:30 to 7:30 pm (Moderated by David Lat)

The event is free, but you need to register at the event page. From the page:

On June 2 at the Library of Congress, Eugene Volokh, one of the country’s preeminent First Amendment scholars and a Federalist Society member; Emerson Sykes, a staff attorney at the ACLU who focuses on free speech; and Mary Anne Franks, professor at the George Washington University Law School and a leading thinker on the relationship between free expression and equality—in conversation with moderator David Lat, founder of Above the Law and Original Jurisdiction—will dig into the questions that the headlines have missed.

If you’re in D.C. Tuesday, please do come by; should be a lot of fun.

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Iran Is Turning America’s Sanctions Playbook Against It


President Trump with cargo ships and oil tankers behind him | Kyodonews/ZUMAPRESS/Newscom/Andrew Leyden/ZUMAPRESS/Newscom

The U.S. government has made it illegal to pay Iran a toll to pass through the Strait of Hormuz. On Thursday, the Department of the Treasury’s Office of Foreign Asset Control (OFAC) imposed sanctions on Iran’s Persian Gulf Strait Authority, forbidding anyone who deals in U.S. dollars from doing business with the Iranian government body collecting the payments.

“The U.S. Treasury will aggressively target any actors involved—directly or indirectly—in facilitating tolls for the Strait and any willing partners will be penalized,” Secretary of the Treasury Scott Bessent declared. “All nations should reject outright any efforts by Iran to disrupt the free flow of commerce.”

It’s easy to miss it, but this action is a dramatic and strange inversion of Washington’s economic strategy. OFAC’s usual job is to stop the free flow of commerce by enforcing trade embargoes and financial sanctions on foreign enemies. The Trump administration in particular has gotten fond of using sanctions (and tariffs) to pressure friends and foes alike. 

U.S. sanctions were historically so effective because almost all of the world’s trade touches the U.S. financial system, directly or indirectly. Even non-American banks would refuse to deal with sanctioned customers for fear of being sanctioned themselves. In recent months, the Trump administration escalated from paper sanctions to physical attacks on Venezuelan and Iranian shipping. But the message was the same: Trading with these nations is not worth the risk. Making an example out of one business would scare the others into compliance.

Now Iran is playing this game in reverse. After the U.S.-Israeli attack in February, the Iranian navy declared the Strait of Hormuz closed and began attacking foreign ships in the Persian Gulf. Throughout the war, the Iranian government developed more systematic control over the waterway, banning ships from hostile nations, charging others ransom to cross through a mine-free safe lane, and cutting side deals with friendly nations.

Proponents of U.S. sanctions often liked to say that they were forcing international business to choose between Iranian markets and the U.S. dollar. With the tollbooth, Iran is presenting foreign countries with their own choice between U.S. support and petrochemical supply chains.

And the U.S. Treasury is reacting in the way that foreigners have historically reacted to U.S. sanctions. In the 1990s, the European Union passed a “blocking statute” that banned its companies from obeying non-European sanctions. (The rule turned out to be basically unenforceable.) China passed its own blocking statute in 2021, and invoked it for the first time this month, ordering refineries to continue buying Iranian oil in the face of U.S. sanctions. The ban on paying Hormuz tolls is in the same vein.

Bessent said that the sanctions were a warning aimed “in particular” at Oman, the Arab monarchy that sits opposite Iran on the Strait of Hormuz. Iran has publicly offered Oman a share in the Hormuz tollbooth, and Omani officials were privately in talks over implementation, The New York Times reported last week. The “toll” would be renamed a “fee for services” to be less provocative, according to the Times.

The Trump administration wasn’t buying the rebranded toll. “Oman will behave like everybody else or we’ll have to blow them up,” President Donald Trump warned at a Wednesday cabinet session. After Bessent and Trump’s threats, Bessent told reporters that Oman has “no plans for tolling the strait.”

Trump threatening Oman with physical violence in response to a trade restriction is another ironic echo of the U.S.-Iranian conflict. Iran has demanded U.S. sanctions relief—specifically, access to Iranian dollars currently frozen in foreign bank accounts—as a condition of ending the war. More than the paltry revenue it generates, the Hormuz tollbooth is valuable to Iran because it allows the country to forcibly undermine the U.S. sanctions regime. Iranian First Vice President Mohammad Reza Aref said last month that the toll scheme would make foreign sanctions “practically ineffective.”

That is the future of economic sanctions. They were once a game of cat-and-mouse between U.S. regulators, who scoured the banking system for forbidden transactions, and foreign merchants, who tried to hide their trade behind increasingly complex layers of paperwork. Now sanctions are a direct extension of warfare—and U.S. opponents are learning to manipulate business risk to their advantage. The future for free global trade looks bleak.

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Maybe This Time


Vice President J.D. Vance | AdMedia/Newscom

The boy who cried we have a deal to open the Strait of Hormuz: We’ve done this over and over again, but maybe this time, it’s real. Anonymous sources within the government are telling news outlets that they’ve drafted up a “memorandum of understanding” with Iran (which still needs approval from President Donald Trump) that would deal with reopening the Strait of Hormuz and extend the ceasefire.

“Should an agreement be finalized, it could give Mr. Trump an off-ramp from a war that has driven up oil prices and grown deeply unpopular at home,” reports The New York Times. “It could also eventually allow Iran to regain access to frozen overseas assets and provide a route for Tehran to get billions of dollars of oil revenue flowing again.”

Vice President J.D. Vance confirms that the administration is “very close” to a deal; one sticking point appears to be that Trump wants Iran to get rid of its enriched uranium, which might not end up happening. Mediators have, over the past few weeks, struggled to agree on a lasting deal, with ceasefires happening in tiny spurts and tensions flaring back up again. It doesn’t help that the entire region’s been running hot, so mediators sometimes struggle to figure out whether an agreement between the U.S. and Iran should also attempt to cover tensions between Israel and Lebanon (which have flared back up again this week with an attack on Beirut).

Russia hit Romania: The Russian war on Ukraine has now spilled over into Galati, Romania, with a drone hitting an apartment building there, injuring two people and starting a fire.

“The episode comes amid heightened fears that Russia might seek to expand the war beyond Ukraine to target a member of the NATO security alliance,” reports The New York Times. (Romania is part of NATO.)

Romanian President Nicusor Dan said he would “order proportionate measures in relation to the Russian Federation” in consultation with his national defense team. “The unprecedented nature of the event demands a firm, coordinated, and appropriate response—at the national, allied, and international levels.…What happened today in Galați is the direct consequence of Russia’s war of aggression unleashed against Ukraine, the irresponsible and indiscriminate manner in which Moscow operates these weapon systems in the immediate vicinity of NATO borders, as well as the systematic disregard for international law. There is no ambiguity regarding the perpetrator or the cause of this aggression.”

“Russian drones have strayed across Romania’s border a number of times during the four-year war with Ukraine,” reports the BBC, “but it is the first time citizens from the Nato member state have been hurt.”


Scenes from New York: This strikes me as something that is not going to make government efficient in the slightest.

But I appreciate this dose of optimism/useful input:


QUICK HITS

  • “After more than a year of teasing the idea, Governor Ron DeSantis on Wednesday floated a plan that could eventually eliminate property taxes for more than 90% of Florida residents who own their homes, shifting the bulk of the tax burden onto the state’s wealthiest homeowners,” reports Bloomberg. “The Republican governor’s proposal would initially increase the state’s homestead exemption, which shields a portion of the value of a primary residence from property tax, from $50,000 to $250,000, and then eventually double it to $500,000. DeSantis called a special legislative session for next week to get the idea on the ballot in November.” This strikes me as a pretty blatantly populist move to curry favor with his base (DeSantis ends his term as Florida governor in 2026, but it’s very possible he’ll go for the presidential nomination at some point, in which case those voters might come in handy). And I can’t exactly be opposed to people having greater ability to shield themselves from taxes, but it is rather unfair to the wealthy. (Unironically: Won’t someone think of the Florida multimillionaires and billionaires?)
  • A related response, by Reason‘s Eric Boehm, to Rep. Nancy Mace’s (R–S.C.) almost trollish proposal: “Stop Giving Property Tax Breaks to Senior Citizens.” A sampling: “Specialized tax breaks for people within certain age brackets make very little sense—and they don’t actually lower taxes. If the government does not reduce the cost of public services, then a special tax break for one group merely forces everyone else to pick up the slack. A special tax break targeted specifically to senior citizens is worse. The median household headed by someone over age 65 had a net worth of more than $400,000 in 2022, according to Federal Reserve data. For those under age 35, the average was $39,000. However you look at it, elderly homeowners are plainly not a demographic that is desperately in need of tax relief—and giving property tax breaks to the old means pushing the entire property tax burden onto relatively poorer households.”
  • A Blue Origin rocket exploded during launch.
  • This is straight-up insane:

  • A bubble house with a bomb shelter—a relic from a bygone era—is for sale in California, the last of its kind.
  • Interesting differences so far between New York Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s and former Mayor Eric Adams’ administrations:

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