Order Barring Communication Between Inmate/Probationer and Daughter for 11 Years Is Unconstitutional

From Tuesday’s Wisconsin Court of Appeals decision in State v. Brister, by Judge Sara Geenen, joined by Chief Judge Joseph Donald and Judge Pedro Colón:

On June 22, 2023, Brister was sentenced in two unrelated cases. In Milwaukee County Circuit Court Case No. 2020CF367, which is not part of this appeal, Brister was sentenced for possessing a firearm as a felon (“the 2020 case”). He illegally possessed a gun while also committing acts of domestic abuse against his live-in girlfriend, Marie.

In Milwaukee County Circuit Court Case No. 2021CF3563, the case before us on appeal, Brister was sentenced for child neglect and OWI (1st) [Operating While Intoxicated] with a minor in the car, after Brister was pulled over for speeding and weaving on I-43 while Diana, then two years old, was unsecured in the backseat of the car. Diana was not injured, so the charge of child neglect alleged that harm would be a natural and probable consequence of the neglect. During the traffic stop, police found a loaded gun under the rear passenger seat. Brister called Marie to pick Diana up from the traffic stop, in violation of a no-contact order that had been imposed while he was released on bail in the 2020 case…. Brister’s criminal record … included 2006 convictions for burglary and uttering a forgery, a 2009 conviction for marijuana possession, and three convictions for burglary in 2011….

The circuit court’s sentencing remarks focused on the gravity of the offenses, noting the danger to which Brister had exposed his daughter and the seriousness of twice having a gun while intoxicated. The court summarized the most relevant sentencing factors when rejecting Brister’s recommendation for probation:

The first thing I have to consider is whether probation is appropriate. I can’t think of anything further from appropriate, than putting you on probation, for these offenses. You have demonstrated, by your behavior, not only by your criminal record, not only by your incredibly dangerous behavior in not following court orders and having that firearm and being drunk while you have the firearm, and battering [Marie], engaging in disorderly conduct. Not only that, but then adding on, that you needed to neglect and endanger your two-year-old while you were driving with her, again drunk, at incredibly high speeds, and having the firearm accessible to her. It defies description.

The court sentenced Brister to six months in jail for the OWI, concurrent to 18 months of confinement and 18 months of extended supervision for child neglect. Those sentences were made consecutive to four years’ confinement and four years’ extended supervision for the 2020 case. Thus, the total sentence for both cases was eleven years’ imprisonment, equally divided between confinement and extended supervision.

After stating the sentences, the court ordered that Brister have no contact with Marie or Diana for the entire eleven-year sentence, stating: “I’m going to find, as conditions of the time that you are on—either serving your sentence, initial confinement, or extended supervision—I’m going to order that there be a no contact order with [Marie] and [Diana].”

The appellate court held that, though restrictions on constitutional rights as part of a criminal sentence are often constitutional, this one went too far in restricting Brister’s First Amendment rights and parental rights; an excerpt:

The scope and duration of the no-contact order renders it overly broad and unreasonable with respect to Diana. The circuit court imposed the no-contact order with Diana because Diana was a victim of two of the crimes for which Brister was convicted and sentenced—child neglect and OWI (1st) with a minor in the car. However, the actual sentence for those two crimes amounted to three years of the total eleven-year sentence. The other eight years were a result of the unrelated 2020 case involving Marie.

That is, the circuit court imposed a no-contact order with respect to Diana that is almost quadruple the time of the sentence for the crime that justified the no-contact order in the first place. The circuit court did not explain this disparity, and in our view, imposing an eleven-year no-contact order between a father and his daughter is irrational (and certainly not narrowly tailored) where Brister did not cause harm to Diana and the sentence for the crime justifying the no-contact order is itself only three years.

We also view the scope of the no-contact order to be overly broad and not narrowly tailored. The circuit court correctly described Brister’s criminal acts as “dangerous,” but it failed to explain how no contact whatsoever between Brister and Diana for the entire eleven-year sentence actually protects Diana. Under the circuit court’s no-contact order, Brister is not only prohibited from unsupervised face-to-face contact with Diana, he is prohibited from communicating with her in any way, including during the period of time that Brister is confined. He cannot call, text, email, or send letters to his daughter for eleven years. Protecting Diana, as a victim of Brister’s crimes, is a significant and legitimate goal, but on this record, we see no rational connection between the scope and duration of the no-contact order and the circuit court’s purported goal of protecting Diana.

Finally, we observe that the constitutional right abridged here, Brister’s right to a parent-child relationship with Diana, is a finite right. It exists only so long as Diana is a legally recognized child. Put another way, Brister has no constitutionally protected right to a parent-child relationship with Diana after she reaches the age of majority. Diana was four years old when Brister was sentenced, meaning that Brister cannot have contact with her until she is 15 years old. The vast majority of Brister’s finite right to a parent-child relationship is, in practical terms, terminated by the eleven-year no-contact order. While being incarcerated will, in all likelihood, negatively affect the parent-child relationship between Brister and Diana, in this case, the circuit court effectively terminated Brister’s right to a parent-child relationship with Diana without any of the legal protections attendant to formally and legally terminating parental rights.

{We note that this is an extreme case. Not every no-contact order imposed under Wis. Stat. § 973.049(2) between a parent and child will effectively terminate the parent-child relationship like the one considered in this appeal. We also observe that cases involving other crimes committed by a parent against their children may well justify a lengthy and absolute no-contact condition under § 973.049(2). However, under the facts of this case, the no-contact order presented here is irrational, overly broad, and not narrowly tailored to serve the admittedly significant interest of protecting Diana.}

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The Conservative Anarchism of Dwight Macdonald


'Atrocities of the Mind' book cover | University of Chicago Press

Atrocities of the Mind: Essays on Violence and Politics in the American Century, by Dwight Macdonald, edited by John Summers, University of Chicago Press, 310 pages, $25

If the mid–20th century was the nadir of American liberties and the (Caesarist) salad days of the American imperium, it was also a golden age of literary journalism whose luster was enhanced by the slashing wit of that self-described “conservative anarchist,” Dwight Macdonald. Historian John Summers has compiled 25 of Macdonald’s best essays in Atrocities of the Mind, and boy, is this ever welcome.

There is a rich conservative anarchist tradition in American life and letters. Many of its exemplars (Dorothy Day, Paul Goodman, Norman Mailer) have abided in New York City, as did Macdonald, who was born to a relatively happy Upper West Side family. (His appearance-conscious mother gussied up the family name of McDonald, adding an A and rendering the D in minuscule so as not to be taken for shanty Irish.)

As a lad at Exeter and Yale, Macdonald majored in haughty arrogance. A bizarre early detour led him through the executive training program at Macy’s, but he quickly soured on business, deciding that it was the province of “adroit opportunists,” a judgment from which he never really strayed. He married a bluestocking Trotskyite whose ample trust fund cushioned Macdonald’s fall when he quit his job as a star reporter at Henry Luce’s Fortune after his takedown of U.S. Steel—he called it “bereft of both the social intelligence of Communism and the dynamic individualist drive of capitalism”—was editorially eviscerated.

Macdonald had a brush with the Communist Party in the mid-’30s but found its partisans pious and humorless ideologues. He fell in for a while with the Trotskyites at Partisan Review before launching his own periodical, the lower-case politics, which from 1944–49 gave voice to the anarchist, pacifist, and libertarian views he would express with style and intelligence until his death in 1982.

Macdonald was the sort of anarchist not averse to calling upon President John F. Kennedy to aid the poor with “a massive increase in government spending.” Such jarring incongruities have been one of the charming quirks of American anarchists, whose ancestor Ralph Waldo Emerson spoke of a foolish consistency being the hobgoblin of little minds. No one ever accused Macdonald of having a little mind.

Looking back as an old man, he explained his anarchism: “I believe in the decentralization of authority and the ability of people to decide their own destinies. If politics begins at the bottom, people can decide much better for themselves than well-intentioned liberal bureaucrats or badly-intentioned Nixonian bureaucrats.” He added that “there are dangers to anarchism, if you think of it as just busting up things. I was appalled by the view of some student rebels that libraries were not sacred and that they could fuck up the file cards.” He’d not have been amused by the personality-disordered cretins of antifa.

Macdonald’s populist anti-state politics coexisted with his frankly elitist cultural stance, though his real beef with popular culture was that it was a top-down affair, cynically marketed to the masses, rather than a grassroots phenomenon. And really, how elitist can a man be if he counts himself a fan of Bob Hope, Jimmy Durante, and Moon Mullins?

Macdonald’s sardonic side was displayed in dozens of notorious witticisms, most famously: “The Ford Foundation is a large body of money completely surrounded by people who want some.” Charlton Heston and the cast of Ben-Hur, he wrote, are “at no point in danger of lawsuits for impersonating real people.” Assessing the crucifixion scenes in biblical epics—Macdonald reviewed movies for Esquire in the early 1960s—he called the Romans the “fall goys.”

He cut a distinctive figure in the Manhattan salons and Cape Cod beach houses in which he held court, often drunkenly. He cultivated a Leninist goatee and festooned his lapel with buttons advertising Emma Goldman and Rosa Luxemburg; while Macdonald became a favorite speaker on the New Left circuit, he never fell for Third World pinups Ho Chi Minh, Fidel Castro, or Che Guevara, excoriating them as Stalinists before bemused leftist audiences. Macdonald’s idea of a hero was Randolph Bourne, minter of the timeless aphorism that “war is the health of the state.”

It can be hard to warm up to Macdonald the man, at least as he comes down to us in anecdote and print. He appears to have been a lousy parent and adulterous husband, a forgetter of birthdays and anniversaries and other party occasions he deemed bourgeois frivolities. He was aggressively argumentative, not knowing when to just shut up. Yet Macdonald was also a lovable curmudgeon and a brave dissenter from—tormenter of—dead-end leftist ideologies and the national security state.

In Atrocities of the Mind, Macdonald’s subjects range from World War II to Vietnam, Dorothy Day to Michael Harrington, tax resistance to American manners. He is, ultimately, on the side of the human against the machine, the conscientious against the conformist. And of course there is that smiling, shoulder-shrugging inconsistency to which the writer cheerfully admitted. For instance, he hymns small voluntary communities and deplores the collectivist nightmare of New York City, which he calls an “anthill” in which people make “no eye contact” and likens to “living in a concentration camp.” That he spent more or less his entire life resident in Manhattan is a mere detail.

In both his Trotskyite and anarcho-pacifist phases, Macdonald criticized U.S. involvement in the Second World War. In the former incarnation he saw it as a battle of imperialist powers, and in the latter he saw it as, well, war, to which he was unalterably opposed.

In “The Responsibility of Peoples” (1945), he rejected the concept of collective guilt, though he skated close to the exculpatory edge when he ventured that modern man is a powerless cog in an inhuman machine, almost without agency. On whom, then, do we pin the blame for horrific crimes of state?

Without in any way minimizing the historic evil of Nazi Germany and the Holocaust or the brutality of Imperial Japan, Macdonald was among the brave few to publicly denounce the Allies’ terror bombings of civilians, and in particular the annihilation of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, which he called “morally indefensible, politically disastrous, and militarily of dubious value.”

That our government segregated soldiers by skin color and herded over 100,000 Japanese, most of them American citizens, into internment camps tarnished the white hats in this war. Even more confounding to Macdonald was the U.S. alliance with the Soviet Union. “After Hitler is defeated,” he sighed, “the same evils reappear with the hammer and sickle on their caps instead of the swastika.”

From The Bomb, Dwight Macdonald drew the lesson that “We must ‘get’ the national State before it ‘gets’ us. Every individual who wants to save his humanity—and indeed his skin—had better begin thinking ‘dangerous thoughts’ about sabotage, resistance, rebellion, and the fraternity of all men everywhere.” He found a well of hope in America’s “long and honorable tradition of lawlessness and disrespect for authority.” In the immediate postwar years he spoke at a rally praising those who had destroyed their draft cards.

By the early 1950s Macdonald had aligned himself, hedgingly, with “the West,” as he called it, doubting that there was a pacifist answer to the likes of Hitler and Stalin. Though when the relatively human Khrushchev replaced the monstrous Georgian, he swung back toward the irenic.

Dwight Macdonald is best-loved by me for his well-bred-boor-in-a-china-shop behavior at 1965’s White House Festival of the Arts, which he described unapologetically in the essay “A Day at the White House.” This catastrophe was dreamed up by the court historian Eric Goldman as a way for President Lyndon Johnson to win over American artists, or at least the culture industry.

Painters, poets, novelists, dancers, photographers, critics, and various patrons and administrators of the arts were invited to an all-day festival on the White House grounds. Some—poet Robert Lowell, critic Edmund Wilson—rejected the invite. Macdonald accepted, while acknowledging that “Emerson and Thoreau would [not] have agreed to read from their works if President Polk had staged an arts festival during the Mexican war.” Arriving in sneakers and a rumpled suit, he circulated a statement denouncing the president’s interventionist policies in Vietnam and the Dominican Republic, soliciting signatures.

Only nine signed, but Macdonald had a blast, arguing with the president’s supporters, annoying the first lady, and scoffing at LBJ’s speech. Throw in a killer set by Duke Ellington, and Macdonald counted the day a smashing success.

If any artists or intellectuals engaged in such patriotic misbehavior in the Bill Clinton, Barack Obama, or Joe Biden White Houses, I am unaware of it.

Dwight Macdonald was imperfect, as we all are. He was wrong about any number of things, as we all are. But he was unbossed, unbought, and unafraid. Oh, for more of his (one-of-a) kind in our cowardly age!

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FDA Staffers Oppose Proposed Clearance Of Peptides

FDA Staffers Oppose Proposed Clearance Of Peptides

Authored by Zachary Stieber via The Epoch Times,

Food and Drug Administration staffers said in newly released documents that they do not support letting compound pharmacies manufacture seven popular peptides.

The Food and Drug Administration in White Oak, Md., on June 5, 2023. Madalina Vasiliu/The Epoch Times

FDA personnel said in documents posted online on June 29 that there are safety concerns with the peptides, including the possibility of triggering immune responses that could lead to “life-threatening and catastrophic reactions.”

They do not favor classifying BPC-157, KPV, TB-500, MOTS-c, Emideltide, Epitalon, or Semax in a way that would let pharmacies use them in compounded medicines.

Peptides are short chains of amino acids that act as building blocks of proteins and perform essential biological functions in the body. If permitted, compounding pharmacies can manufacture them for personalized medications tailored to patients’ unique needs.

They have become popular among some fitness influencers and have received endorsement from Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.

Compounding refers to doctors and pharmacists creating customized medicine by combining, mixing, or altering ingredients.

The documents were posed ahead of a scheduled meeting of the FDA’s Pharmacy Compounding Advisory Committee, which will consider whether to support or oppose loosening restrictions on the peptides.

The FDA in April said it would not take action against compounding pharmacies that use some of the peptides, and is now considering whether to add them to a list of approved substances.

The FDA could create some guard rails within which peptides could be prepared by legitimate pharmacies, according to Scott Brunner, CEO of Alliance for Pharmacy Compounding, a trade association for pharmacies.

“We would urge the agency to look at this not as an up or down vote, but to consider a middle path that does address a very real public health concern,” Brunner said.

Ban

The FDA in 2023 labeled more than a dozen peptides, including BPC-157 and KPC, as substances banned for compounding.

Officials at the time said there was a lack of information on the peptides. The available data indicated “significant safety risks,” they said.

Kennedy has said the ban was illegal. Such bans should only happen if there is a safety signal, he has said.

No such safety signal was identified.

Rep. Diana Harshbarger (R-Tenn.), a pharmacist, wrote to officials in 2025 in support of allowing the compounding of six peptides, including BPC-157.

New Members

The FDA appointed multiple new members to the compounding panel, including seven who have links to businesses or clinics involved in peptide therapies.

That includes Robert Harshbarger, a Tennessee senator, pharmacist, and son of Rep. Harshbarger.

All committee members underwent the same ethics review and vetting process required of all FDA advisory committee members,” a Department of Health and Human Services spokesperson said.

“Candidates that could not meet existing ethics requirements were removed from consideration.”

Reuters contributed to this report.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 07/02/2026 – 12:40

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Minnesota Gov Walz Pardons Convicted Child-Molester, Blocking Deportation

Minnesota Gov Walz Pardons Convicted Child-Molester, Blocking Deportation

A Minnesota pardon board that includes Gov Tim Walz among its three members has issued a full pardon to a convicted Laotian child-molester, torpedoing Homeland Security’s effort to deport him. The 42-year-old convict, Tou Lue Vang, submitted a letter to the board saying he regretted what he did — and just like that, his criminal record is now clean as a whistle via unanimous decision. 

“Governor Tim Walz’s decision to pardon an illegal alien convicted child rapist so he can remain in our country is disgusting,” said DHS spokeswoman Lauren Bis. “These are the criminal illegal aliens he and his Minnesota sanctuary politicians are protecting. Tou Lue Vang lost his legal status following his conviction for repeatedly sexually assaulting a 10-year-old girl.” 

Tou Lue Vang told the pardons board that he had regrets about abusing a 10-year-old girl multiple times (DHS photo)

In a storyline that has Democrats co-conspiring to infuse precious “diversity” into the American bloodstream over more than three decades, the Clinton administration granted Vang legal status after he entered the United States as a child in 1994. Now, 2024 Democratic vice presidential nominee Tim Walz has  helped guarantee that the convicted sex fiend will be safe from deportation. The two other members of the pardon board are Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison and chief Supreme Court justice, Natalie Hudson

Vang was convicted of sexually assaulting a girl who was just 10 years old when his perverted acts began. He repeated the offense with the same girl between 2002 and 2004, and pathetically tried to buy her silence with an offer of just $10 in hush money.  After his conviction, an immigration judge ordered his removal way back in 2006.  

When he was first interrogated by police, Vang tried to sweep away the gravity of his actions, telling them, “it is a cultural thing…to marry and have sex with girls as young as 12.” Apparently, Walz — who’s heralded as a reliable “ally” for the LGBTQ crowd and famously put tampons in school-kids’ boys rooms — thinks diversity in sexual morality is our strength too. Vang’s pardon quest was bolstered by a supportive letter to the board from his victim, along with many letters of support from the “community.”  

Minnesota Gov Tim Walz was part of a unanimous decision that will prevent a child-molester’s deportation

Minnesota is on a roll when it comes to helping Laotian criminals stay in America. “In May, the state pardoned Jai Vang, a criminal illegal alien from Laos, whose criminal record includes convictions for robberyrobbery of a business with a gun, and driving under the influence of liquor,” noted DHS in a statement. He was ordered to be removed from the United States — you better sit down for this —  in May 1996. The Clinton administration sprung him loose. Between March 2025 and June 2026, Minnesota has received 67 pardon requests that cite immigration woes as a reason for seeking forgiveness. Across all decisions made this year, the Minnesota board has approved an overwhelming 94% of pardons requested. 

Of course, the Trump administration is in a glass house when it comes to throwing rocks about pardons. Among too many other examples, Trump has stirred the disgust of victims and law-and-order Republicans alike with pardons or commutations of: 

  • Joseph Schwartz, a nursing home operator in New York convicted of a $39 million tax fraud scheme
  • Eliyahu Weinstein, a real estate developer who’d been convicted of a real estate Ponzi scheme; after his 24-year sentence was commuted after only a few months, he immediately started orchestrating a scheme in which he defrauded people who thought they were investing in deals to get scarce medical supplies to war-torn Ukraine
  • Sholam Weiss, who was staring down an 845-year sentence for racketeering, wire fraud, money laundering, and transporting stolen goods, after defrauding an insurer and its elderly policyholders out of £91 million; he fled the US before he could be prosecuted and was convicted in absentia

Tyler Durden
Thu, 07/02/2026 – 12:20

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What Did He Just Say?

What Did He Just Say?

Authored by Steve Watson via Modernity News,

In a parliamentary clash exposing deep failures in the justice system, Conservative MP Katie Lam confronted the Government over whether grooming gang perpetrators would serve their already lenient prison terms in full.

The minister’s reply has sparked widespread fury, highlighting a complacency that victims and the public find utterly unacceptable.

When Lam asked for assurances on full sentences, Justice Minister Jake Richards pointed to prison capacity, stressing the need to ensure serious offenders “serve time at all” amid prison shortages and building programs.

Lam slammed the reaction: “He wouldn’t even commit to that. In fact, he seemed to suggest that we should be grateful that these men are serving time in prison at all because of a lack of prison places. What planet are these people living on?”

She continued, “Even if we’re facing a shortage of prison places, how can it possibly be the case that grooming gang perpetrators aren’t amongst the highest priority offenders…?”

“Ensuring that these vile men serve out their sentences isn’t a nice-to-have. It’s the bare minimum,” Lam stressed.

In a piece for GB News, Lam further outlined “This week, Parliament debated the early release of rapists and child groomers from prison. It’s appalling that this subject was even up for discussion.”

She continued: “It’s clearly true that those who’ve committed such heinous crimes should, at the very least, serve out their full prison sentences. But under this Government’s prison plans, vile criminals like these are having their sentences cut short. They’re being allowed back onto the streets after just a few years behind bars.”

“Many Labour MPs still don’t seem to have grasped just how horrific these crimes were and just how dangerous the men who committed them are. It’s terrifying that people like this are in charge of making decisions about who goes to prison, who stays there, and for how long.” Lam further urged.

This comes as one grooming gang ringleader – stripped of British citizenship – faces imminent release but cannot be deported back to Pakistan due to legal loopholes.

The inability to remove such individuals underscores deeper systemic issues with immigration enforcement, citizenship revocation, and prioritizing foreign offenders’ “rights” over victim safety and public protection.

Referencing a recent West Yorkshire case, Lam detailed: “In June, twenty perpetrators were convicted of the rape and abuse of three girls… One of the girls was just 12 years old when this gang began to prey on her. Abbas Kaji, one of the offenders, was sentenced to just seven years for rape; Mohammed Ishtiaq Hussain was sentenced to just eight. The idea that these men could be out on the streets even sooner is appalling.”

The grooming gangs scandal represents one of Britain’s gravest institutional betrayals. These groups terrorized communities across the UK, with authorities often ignoring, suppressing or downplaying the ethnic and cultural patterns – predominantly Pakistani Muslim men targeting white girls – out of fear of racism accusations.

Lam has been vocal on the human cost. She referenced survivor Fiona Goddard, who received notice that her abusers – sentenced to 16-20 years in 2019 – could be eligible for early release: “The hard-won justice that she secured in court is being snatched away from her.”

Calls for whole-life sentences, proper inquiries without blind spots on race and religion, and accountability for past cover-ups have grown, amplified by independent reports and public pressure.

The priority should be crystal clear: protect British children, enforce real justice, and reject any notion that jailing child rapists is an optional luxury.

Short sentences, early releases, and evasive answers only deepen the sense of betrayal that has defined this scandal for decades.

Britain needs a justice system that puts victims first and deters monsters – not one that debates basic incarceration as if it’s a favor.

Your support is crucial in helping us defeat mass censorship. Please consider donating via Locals or check out our unique merch. Follow us on X @ModernityNews.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 07/02/2026 – 12:00

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Religious Exemption from Reproductive Health Care Insurance Mandate Can’t Be Limited to Groups “Whose Purpose is the Inculcation of Religious Values”

From Oregon Right to Life v. O’Day, decided yesterday by Judge Mustafa Kasubhai (D. Ore.):

Oregon Right to Life … has one mission: to advocate for pro-life positions based on Judeo-Christian values. This singularly focused nonprofit, by operation of Oregon law, and in particular the religious exemption available to lawfully avoid compliance with this law, would [be forced] to purchase health insurance for its employees that would cover abortions and abortifacients—the very things the nonprofit exists to oppose on religious grounds. The Supreme Court, as this Opinion explains, has made clear that a nonprofit in Plaintiff’s position must prevail on its as-applied challenge to the “religious employer” exemption….

The Oregon Legislature enacted RHEA to “ensure[] that Oregonians have access to comprehensive reproductive health care” including abortion and contraceptives, regardless of their income or insurance coverage. RHEA requires all health benefit plans in Oregon to “provide coverage” for abortion and “any contraceptive drug, device or product approved by the United States Food and Drug Administration.” Further, a health benefit plan “may not infringe upon an enrollee’s choice of contraceptive drug, device or product and may not require prior authorization.

RHEA exempted (among other things) “religious employers” “whose purpose is the inculcation of religious values,” but Oregon Right to Life wasn’t covered because its “purpose is prolife advocacy, not inculcating religious values, and [because Plaintiff] doesn’t primarily serve persons sharing its religious tenets.” The court held that limiting the religious exemption this way involved unconstitutional discrimination among religious objectors:

In Catholic Charities Bureau, Inc. v. Wisconsin Labor & Indus. Rev. Comm’n (2025), a Catholic church-controlled non-profit social services organization brought an Establishment Clause claim after Wisconsin denied it a religious exemption from the state’s unemployment compensation system. The exemption applied to non-profits operated by churches if they were “operated primarily for religious purposes.” The Wisconsin Supreme Court found that Catholic Charities was not eligible for the exemption, interpreting “operated primarily for religious purposes” to require that the religious organization proselytize or limit its services to those who shared its beliefs to qualify for the exemption. The non-profit did not qualify because, consistent with its religious beliefs, it did not limit its services to fellow Catholics or use its charitable work to proselytize.

The non-profit appealed the denial, and the United States Supreme Court reversed … because the exemption “explicitly differentiat[ed] between religions based on theological practices,” creating a denominational preference for religions that proselytize or serve only co-religionists that “facially favors some denominations over others.” …

Both Wisconsin’s exemption in that case and Oregon’s here condition eligibility on serving only co-religionists. The exemptions require that the organization inculcate (teach) or proselytize (convert others to) their religious views. Just as these requirements led the Supreme Court to hold that Wisconsin’s exemption “facially differentiates among religions based on theological choices,” they signal that RHEA’s religious employer exemption also runs afoul of the neutrality principle of the First Amendment….

For more on the Catholic Charities precedent, see this post.

James Bopp, Joseph Maughon, and Richard Coleson (Bopp Law Firm) and Shawn Lindsay represent plaintiff.

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Religious Exemption from Reproductive Health Care Insurance Mandate Can’t Be Limited to Groups “Whose Purpose is the Inculcation of Religious Values”

From Oregon Right to Life v. O’Day, decided yesterday by Judge Mustafa Kasubhai (D. Ore.):

Oregon Right to Life … has one mission: to advocate for pro-life positions based on Judeo-Christian values. This singularly focused nonprofit, by operation of Oregon law, and in particular the religious exemption available to lawfully avoid compliance with this law, would [be forced] to purchase health insurance for its employees that would cover abortions and abortifacients—the very things the nonprofit exists to oppose on religious grounds. The Supreme Court, as this Opinion explains, has made clear that a nonprofit in Plaintiff’s position must prevail on its as-applied challenge to the “religious employer” exemption….

The Oregon Legislature enacted RHEA to “ensure[] that Oregonians have access to comprehensive reproductive health care” including abortion and contraceptives, regardless of their income or insurance coverage. RHEA requires all health benefit plans in Oregon to “provide coverage” for abortion and “any contraceptive drug, device or product approved by the United States Food and Drug Administration.” Further, a health benefit plan “may not infringe upon an enrollee’s choice of contraceptive drug, device or product and may not require prior authorization.

RHEA exempted (among other things) “religious employers” “whose purpose is the inculcation of religious values,” but Oregon Right to Life wasn’t covered because its “purpose is prolife advocacy, not inculcating religious values, and [because Plaintiff] doesn’t primarily serve persons sharing its religious tenets.” The court held that limiting the religious exemption this way involved unconstitutional discrimination among religious objectors:

In Catholic Charities Bureau, Inc. v. Wisconsin Labor & Indus. Rev. Comm’n (2025), a Catholic church-controlled non-profit social services organization brought an Establishment Clause claim after Wisconsin denied it a religious exemption from the state’s unemployment compensation system. The exemption applied to non-profits operated by churches if they were “operated primarily for religious purposes.” The Wisconsin Supreme Court found that Catholic Charities was not eligible for the exemption, interpreting “operated primarily for religious purposes” to require that the religious organization proselytize or limit its services to those who shared its beliefs to qualify for the exemption. The non-profit did not qualify because, consistent with its religious beliefs, it did not limit its services to fellow Catholics or use its charitable work to proselytize.

The non-profit appealed the denial, and the United States Supreme Court reversed … because the exemption “explicitly differentiat[ed] between religions based on theological practices,” creating a denominational preference for religions that proselytize or serve only co-religionists that “facially favors some denominations over others.” …

Both Wisconsin’s exemption in that case and Oregon’s here condition eligibility on serving only co-religionists. The exemptions require that the organization inculcate (teach) or proselytize (convert others to) their religious views. Just as these requirements led the Supreme Court to hold that Wisconsin’s exemption “facially differentiates among religions based on theological choices,” they signal that RHEA’s religious employer exemption also runs afoul of the neutrality principle of the First Amendment….

For more on the Catholic Charities precedent, see this post.

James Bopp, Joseph Maughon, and Richard Coleson (Bopp Law Firm) and Shawn Lindsay represent plaintiff.

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How the US Has – Mostly – Avoided the Dark Side of the World Cup

FIFA

Although I’m a big sports fan, I have long been critical of the Olympics and the World Cup for a variety of abuses, such as massive stadium subsidies that victimize taxpayers, forcible displacement of people in order to build stadiums, and providing a propaganda showcase for repressive authoritarian regimes, such as Russia and Qatar (hosts of the last two World Cups). Fortunately, this year’s World Cup – co-hosted by Canada, the US, and Mexico – has mostly avoided these problems, at least when it comes to the United States. Though not quite entirely, as we shall see.  The key factors are that the US host cities used existing stadiums, and that strong protections for freedom of speech largely foreclosed the censorship and repression common in authoritarian host states.

Back in 2022, at the time of the last World Cup hosted by Qatar, I outlined several problems that needed to be fixed in order to avoid various evils associated with past World Cups and Olympic games. Let’s see how the US has done on each one:

1. No public subsidies. Let the games be funded purely by private organizations and sponsors, as was largely the case for the successful 1984 Olympics in Los Angeles. That way, no one has to pay for the games, except those who profit from them and the audience that voluntarily chooses to watch.

This has largely been achieved, primarily because US host cities have used existing stadiums, obviating the need to build new ones. This eliminates by far the biggest cause of the World Cup’s exploitation of taxpayers. There have still been some public expenditures on things like traffic management and security. But protecting people against crime and terrorism, and managing public infrastructure are basic functions of government that the state provides for events of all kinds. There is no good reason to exclude major sporting events. Anarchists (including libertarian ones) can consistently condemn such spending. But that goes to philosophical issues that go far beyond sports events.

2. No forcible displacement of residents, private businesses, or civil society organizations. We can and should hold sports events without kicking innocent people out of their homes.

As far as I can tell, this has been entirely avoided. And it’s in sharp contrast to the record of many past Olympic and World Cup hosts, such as Brazil and China.

3. No hosting rights for authoritarian human rights violators. There are plenty of possible Olympic venues that aren’t controlled by likes of Vladimir Putin and Xi Jinping, or the Emir of Qatar. Denying these types of rulers hosting rights won’t fundamentally alter their regimes. But it will at least damage their image and deny them propaganda victories.

Even under Trump, the US is nowhere near as bad as Russia, China, or Qatar. The fact that I regularly denounce Trump and even helped litigate a case against him in the Supreme Court, with little fear of reprisal, is one small but telling indication of the difference. That said, Trump’s cruel and discriminatory immigration policies (which victimize US citizens as well as recent migrants), and his assaults on freedom of speech make the contrast smaller than it should be.

So far, however, Trump does not seem to have derived much, if any, propaganda benefit from hosting the Cup. That may be in part because his attention is focused elsewhere.

4. There must be full freedom of speech at all competition venues and in all interactions between competitors, media, and the local population. At the very least, athletes, journalists, and spectators should be entirely free to criticize the host government and its policies (or any other government for that matter).

This standard has also largely been met, thanks in large part to the First Amendment and its strong protection for speech. The city of Seattle deserves credit for refusing the Egyptian and Iranian governments’ demands to bar local Pride celebrations, which happened to coincide with the match between these two countries’ teams. This is a sharp contrast with Russia’s and Qatar’s authoritarian restrictions on pro-LGBT speech.

The Trump Administration’s speech-based deportations and exclusions of immigrants and visitors have cast a pall over this issue. But courts have so far largely ruled against Trump on these issues. And it does not appear that any World Cup players, fans, or officials have been deported or barred on this basis (though some fans and a referee have been subjected to other arbitrary visa restrictions).

5. There must be no “public health” measures blocking normal human interaction between athletes, members of the media, and residents of the host city. Such measures defeat the whole point of having the competition in a particular country in the first place.

This was a serious problem at the 2022 Beijing Olympics. It has not been an issue at the 2026 World Cup.

I will add that the World Cup has generated many heart-warming moments of Americans welcoming foreign players and fans, which has helped the world to see that most Americans do not share the xenophobic nationalism of the Trump Administration.

In sum, the US record on the types of issues and injustices that have marred past Olympics and World Cups is by no means perfect. And the structural corruption of FIFA (the organization running the Cup) remains. The organization has a history of fleecing taxpayers, conniving in forcible displacement of residents to build stadiums, and kowtowing to authoritarians. There is no guarantee that it won’t repeat past abuses during future Cups. The same goes for the International Olympic Committee, which runs the Olympics.

But the current World Cup has been much better in crucial respects than those held by other recent hosts, such as Brazil, Russia, and Qatar. We should learn from that experience, and liberal democracies should pressure FIFA and the IOC to adopt systematic reforms that will permanently preclude these abuses.

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New York’s Socialist Experiment Already Failed Once


Kennedy with mayor Mamdani | Illustration: Lex Villena

New York Mayor Zohran Mamdani and his supporters are treating the Knicks’ championship like proof that socialism has finally learned how to dunk. Kennedy is not buying it, warning that Mamdani’s plans for rent freezes, government-run grocery stores, taxpayer-funded daycare, and higher taxes could send New York back toward its 1970s fiscal mess. Richard Farley, author of Drop Dead, compares Mamdani to former NYC Mayor John Lindsay, whose tenure coincided with bankruptcy, decay, and the last Knicks title.

Kennedy also asks New Yorkers about budget gimmicks, deferred pension payments, sky-high school spending, and a city increasingly dependent on rich taxpayers who might decide to pack up and leave. The big question: If New York scares away the people and industries paying the bills, who’s left with the check?

Photo credits: Michael Nigro/ZUMAPRESS/Newscom, Derek French/ZUMAPRESS/Newscom, Kyle Mazza – CNP/Polaris/Newscom, Derek French/ZUMAPRESS/Newscom, SteveSands/NewYorkNewswire/MEGA / Newscom/SSNEW/Newscom/aul Christian Gordon/ZUMAPRESS/Newscom/SteveSands/NewYorkNewswire/MEGA / Newscom/SSNEW/Newscom/Glasshouse Images / Glasshouse Images/Newscom/akg-images/Newscom/imageBROKER/Alex Grichenko/Newscom

Music credits: Groove Train” by Bresi via Artlist; “Slinky and Salty” by Elifas Sonaru via Artlist; “Shift” by Ny Oh via Artlist; “Eclipse Wave” by Damon Power via Artlist; “Freerolling” by T. Bless and the Professionals via Artlist; “Dough” by Ian Post via Artlist;  “Encore” by Boudicca via Artlist

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Stop Hating America


Young kid waving an American flag in a field | Envato

Land that I love? Younger Americans are less patriotic than ever before. Two new polls illustrate this: Only 31 percent of youngsters aged 18 to 29 are “extremely” or “very” proud to be an American, per a new NBC poll, compared with 75 percent of those 65 and older. And a new poll from the Public Religion Research Institute reports that only 34 percent of that same younger age group are proud to be an American, whereas 66 percent of those 65 and older, 59 percent of Americans aged 50 to 64, and 43 percent aged 30 to 49 feel proud to be FROM THE GREATEST COUNTRY THAT EVER WAS.

I guess they’re in good company. “Oh my country,” John Adams once wrote. “How I mourn over thy follies and Vices, thine ignorance and imbecility, Thy contempt of Wisdom and Virtue and overweening Admiration of fools and Knaves!”

John Adams is dead, but Zoomers aren’t yet, so there’s still time to convince them of how much there is to love: American Flag cake and tech innovation and federalism and homesteading and Martha Stewart and the Beach Boys and the Fourth Amendment and going to space and Lana Del Rey and religious pluralism and Michael Jordan. But it’s so much more than my silly little fixations: America is the land so many of our ancestors took a chance on and embraced great uncertainty to immigrate to. It’s the place where risk, coupled with work ethic, has historically been rewarded; where upward mobility seemed possible; where rising above your station—socially, economically, whatever—has been not just allowed, but encouraged, even for the fools and knaves among us. Life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness, baby!

America hasn’t always treated every group that it set out to protect correctly, but Enlightenment ideals make clear what we’re striving for: Each person has inherent dignity and equality, and ought to be afforded as much liberty as we can muster. Honest Abe said that America was “conceived in Liberty, and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal.” Pretty good mission statement, kinda nails the essentials. Culturally and politically, we’ve historically been broadly opposed to massive wealth redistribution and think people mostly ought to be able to keep what they earn. We’ve valued privacy highly, and let community flourish far away from the prying eyes of the state. We tend to have a high tolerance for rebelliousness and nonconformity, experiments in living both good and bad, and we’ve set high standards for our people. Make something of yourself. Don’t be a freeloader. Follow your dream, see if there’s a market for it, and leave it all out on the field. These haven’t always been perfectly executed ideals—libertarians can find a lot to quibble with, and the trend lines might not look great—but it sure as hell beats France, Morocco, or China.

More broadly, the fact that so many younger Americans don’t feel proud of our country, and appreciative of the great American experiment, says that we’re taking our political circumstances for granted. And when we take our blessings for granted, we lose not only perspective but also hope in our country’s betterment.

It is true that we botch a lot of things in America. Allowing slavery, forcing Natives down the Trail of Tears, interning Japanese-Americans, enacting the New Deal, and going to war in Iraq were all travesties that should not have been so. Our leaders are not always prudent. Our political parties lead us astray. Our bureaucrats are often dunces. Our legislators are frequently clownish, just in different flavors. Team Red/Team Blue partisanship feels ever nastier these days, and the socialist wave threatens to knock us all off our feet.

“Only a virtuous people are capable of freedom,” said Benjamin Franklin. If you think we’ve become less free, consider whether we’ve become less virtuous; if you think we’ve become less virtuous, consider whether we’re struggling to handle all that freedom. But let’s not give up on one another. It’s long been civic discourse that’s helped us define what exactly virtue looks like, and communities coming together that give us the opportunity to live virtue out. Put down the phones; talk to your neighbors. Be charitable in thought and deed.

America is still a fundamentally good experiment—one still in progress, and one very much worth keeping. We can’t be cynical about everything, we’ve gotta pick some things to love. I pick America, long may she live. Happy Fourth of July weekend to you and yours!


Scenes from New York: 

Some more inside baseball about NYC’s power grid (and how ill-prepared we are for a heat wave):


QUICK HITS

  • Tell it to NYC Mayor Zohran Mamdani:

  • OpenAI has begun preliminary discussions about giving the US government a 5% stake in the ChatGPT-developer, the Financial Times reported, citing two people familiar with the talks. OpenAI Chief Executive Officer Sam Altman and other executives proposed that move as part of a broader arrangement under which Washington would hold 5% of each of the leading US AI developers, the FT reported. That might include Anthropic PBC and listed sector leaders Google and Meta Platforms Inc., though it’s unclear if those other firms would agree with the proposal,” reports Bloomberg.
  • Russian strikes in Kyiv kill at least 17.
  • “In the decade since Canada legalized euthanasia, known there as medical assistance in dying, or MAID, its physician-assisted death regime has developed into one of the most permissive in the world. Between 2016 and 2024, 76,475 Canadians received lethal doses from doctors or nurse practitioners. The 16,499 cases in 2024 accounted for 1 out of 20 deaths in Canada. In some regions of Quebec, the rate is 13 out of 100,” writes Charles Lane for The Washington Post. “Now, however, Canada might finally be maxing out on MAID. On June 17, a special parliamentary committee recommended that the government ‘indefinitely exclude’ patients whose only medical condition is a psychiatric one such as depression or schizophrenia. Pro-euthanasia activists had urged that MAID eligibility be expanded to include them, but ‘safe and equitable implementation’ of MAID in such cases is simply not possible, the committee said.”
  • Lord help me:

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