Show Notes - Murthy v. Missouri Oral Arguments Update
Description
Episode #79
Today on Legalese we have my second official video on the social media mass censorship case Murthy v. Missouri. On Monday, March 18th, 2024 this case went before the Supreme Court for oral arguments and they were an exhilarating and controversial session indeed. Though not for any of the actually upsetting and controversial aspects of this case. Rather it was controversial because of a comment posed by Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson, that to me, seemed to be the most sensible, relevant, least controversial comment of the entire Court session.... But I have already discussed that in my last episode "Conservatives Say The Darndest Things". Today we will be doing a deep dive into the full session of oral arguments, which were fascinating, but lead us to some very disturbing updates on the potential future of this case.
As always, we will go over the potential outcomes of this case and I will give you my prediction for the most probably final opinion of the Court.
Links
Missouri v Biden (2023)
Missouri v. Biden, No. 22-cv-1213 (W.D. La., July 4, 2023) Preliminary Injunction
Missouri v. Biden, Civil Action 3:22-cv-1213 (W.D. La. Jul. 10, 2023)
Murthy v Missouri (Docket No. 23-411)
Murthy v. Missouri Oral Arguments
Amicus Brief of Foundational For Individual Rights and Expression
Other Resources
Supreme Court should end government and Big Tech collusion (By: Ilya Shapiro, Washington Examiner)
Biden asks justices to block limits on collaboration with social media companies (Amy Howe, SCOTUSblog)
Justices allow federal government continued communication over social media content moderation (Amy Howe, SCOTUSblog)
Past Episodes & Articles
Follow And Support
Subscribe to the Legale§e Newsletter You will get notifications for all new content, whether it’s articles, podcasts or videos!
Visit the Legale§e Podcast homepage to learn more about the show, get updates, contact me, buy my book, find links to my social media & more!
Follow
Support
BUY MY NEW BOOK
Constitutional Sleight Of Hand: An explicit history of implied powers Now Available on Amazon
Legalese is a podcast that discusses all things constitutional law as well as current events in areas of law, politics & culture.
Legale§e is a subscriber-supported project. Please consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.