What Roman Mars Can Learn About Con Law
En podcast av Roman Mars
89 Avsnitt
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Election Lawsuits
Publicerades: 2024-11-04 -
Enemy Aliens
Publicerades: 2024-10-29 -
Faithless Electors and Wrong Winners
Publicerades: 2024-10-08 -
Deepfakes and Lying Liars
Publicerades: 2024-09-24 -
Whose Speech, Whose Campus
Publicerades: 2024-09-10 -
Fishy Deep State
Publicerades: 2024-08-27 -
Preview: Not Built For This
Publicerades: 2024-08-14 -
Cruel and Unusual
Publicerades: 2024-08-14 -
Farfetched Arguments
Publicerades: 2024-07-30 -
Law-Free Zone
Publicerades: 2024-07-16 -
The Disqualification Clause
Publicerades: 2023-12-18 -
Gag
Publicerades: 2023-11-02 -
Margarine, Meadows, and Removal
Publicerades: 2023-09-19 -
Comstock Zombies
Publicerades: 2023-05-31 -
On the Eve of Trump's Arraignment
Publicerades: 2023-04-04 -
Lies, George Santos, and the 1st Amendment
Publicerades: 2023-03-17 -
Weddings, Websites, and Forced Speech
Publicerades: 2023-02-10 -
The War Between the States
Publicerades: 2022-11-27 -
Trump's Bet on Cannon
Publicerades: 2022-10-22 -
The Mar-a-Lago Warrant
Publicerades: 2022-09-10
Professor Elizabeth Joh teaches Intro to Constitutional Law and most of the time this is a pretty straight forward job. But when Trump came into office, everything changed. During the four years of the Trump presidency, Professor Joh would check Twitter five minutes before each class to find out what the 45th President had said and how it jibes with 200 years of the judicial branch interpreting and ruling on the Constitution. Acclaimed podcaster Roman Mars (99% Invisible) was so anxious about all the norms and laws being tested in the Trump era that he asked his neighbor, Elizabeth, to explain what was going on in the world from a Constitutional law perspective. Even after Trump left office, there is still so much for Roman to learn. What Roman Mars Can Learn About Con Law is a weekly, fun, casual Con Law 101 class that uses the tumultuous activities of the executive, legislative, and judicial branches to teach us all about the US Constitution. All music for the show comes from Doomtree, an independent hip-hop collective and record label based in Minneapolis, Minnesota.
