
Why America Made Christmas A Federal Holiday
A holiday can be more than a date off work; it can be a quiet pact about what a free people hold in common. We dig into Christmas as both a religious feast and a civic tradition, exploring why Congres...
23 Dec 202529min

Inside The Sixth Amendment: Rights That Shape Justice
Power decides what counts as fair—unless people do. That’s the heartbeat of our conversation with Professor Esther Hong, a scholar of youth and adult carceral systems and a former appellate advocate, ...
22 Dec 202517min

What Gideon v. Wainwright Teaches About Rights, Funding, And Real Justice
A single Supreme Court decision promised that no one would face the power of the state without a lawyer. The more complex question: who pays, who shows up, and how do we make that promise real? We sit...
22 Dec 202518min

Chickens, Wheat, And The Commerce Clause
A chicken counter, a wheat field, and a school-zone arrest shouldn’t define the reach of federal power—but they do. We unpack how a few pivotal cases turned the Commerce Clause from a narrow trade rul...
19 Dec 202520min

What Citizens United Actually Changed About Political Speech
Think you know Citizens United? The headlines got the heat, but the holding was far narrower than the myth. We walk through the real story—what the Court protected, what it left alone, and why the big...
19 Dec 202513min

How Supreme Court Rulings Reshaped The Second Amendment
The ground under the Second Amendment keeps shifting—and the story is bigger than a single case. With Professor Nelson Lund of George Mason University’s Antonin Scalia Law School, we walk through the ...
18 Dec 202513min

From Bakke To SFFA: How The Supreme Court Shaped Diversity In College Admissions
What happens when a single swing opinion steers higher education for decades—and then the Court changes course? We unpack the legal journey from Bakke’s fragmented ruling to the 2023 Students for Fair...
17 Dec 202515min

When Free Exercise Meets Compulsory Education In Wisconsin v. Yoder
A tiny truancy fine opened a constitutional door that still shapes classrooms today. We unpack Wisconsin v. Yoder, the 1972 Supreme Court case where Old Order Amish parents won a free exercise exempti...
16 Dec 202513min





















