Supreme Betrayal: How the Supreme Court and Constitutional Law Have Failed America
Mark Tushnet, Louis Michael Seidman
31 episodes
3 days ago
Sitting in their marble palace, dressed in their black robes, Supreme Court Justices would like us to believe that they are wise and disinterested oracles dispensing words of truth and justice. Nothing could be further from the truth. Every episode week, Mark Tushnet and Mike Seidman, two renown constitutional law scholars, lift the curtain and show us how the men and women there who sit on the High Court have been manipulating us.
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Sitting in their marble palace, dressed in their black robes, Supreme Court Justices would like us to believe that they are wise and disinterested oracles dispensing words of truth and justice. Nothing could be further from the truth. Every episode week, Mark Tushnet and Mike Seidman, two renown constitutional law scholars, lift the curtain and show us how the men and women there who sit on the High Court have been manipulating us.
Why Have a Constitution--An Introduction to Tushnet's Take
Supreme Betrayal: How the Supreme Court and Constitutional Law Have Failed America
53 minutes 22 seconds
8 months ago
Why Have a Constitution--An Introduction to Tushnet's Take
After our discussion of the first month of the Trump administration and constitutional law, we return to our exploration of constitutional theory—this time turning away from theories of interpretation to theories about constitutional foundations: What’s the best story about why people adopt constitutions? This episode begins to examine stories that say that constitutions are good ways—maybe the only way—to work out how to peacefully resolve their disagreements about what ought to be done through what we call ordinary politics. We look at some reasons for (and against) entrenching the “rules about ruling”—and expose some disagreements about constitutional foundations that we’ll get into in later episodes.
Supreme Betrayal: How the Supreme Court and Constitutional Law Have Failed America
Sitting in their marble palace, dressed in their black robes, Supreme Court Justices would like us to believe that they are wise and disinterested oracles dispensing words of truth and justice. Nothing could be further from the truth. Every episode week, Mark Tushnet and Mike Seidman, two renown constitutional law scholars, lift the curtain and show us how the men and women there who sit on the High Court have been manipulating us.