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336 pages, Hardcover
First published March 11, 2025
First principles, Clarice. Simplicity. Read Marcus Aurelius. Of each particular thing ask: what is it in itself? What is its nature? What does he do, this man you seek?
I think it's worth to have a cost of, unfortunately, some gun deaths every single year so that we can have the Second Amendment to protect our other god-given rights. That is a prudent deal.
...the popularity of these menacing legal tactics has recently surged to unprecedented heights. In such an environment, the safest course often seemed to be to avoid writing about anyone or anything that smacked of controversy -- or at least anyone with the inclination and wherewithal to retain aggressive counsel. It was a form of quiet censorship all but inaudible to the American public.
His preference was to get rich working in the corporate world.
The Times, fearing a tidal wave of litigation, barred its reporters from setting foot in Alabama, and its lawyers urged staff not to write articles that detailed the state's institutionalized racism.
Yes, there had been inaccuracies in the "Heed Their Rising Voices" ad, but "erroneous statement is inevitable in free debate," and writers and publishers needed "breathing space" to engage in robust argument and criticism without worrying that a factual slipup could cause financial ruin.
Her primary objection to the amendment, which would have guaranteed that women had the same legal rights as men, was that it would open the door to women being drafted into the military. Donnelly didn't want that to happen to her young daughters.
It was easy to cringe at a tabloid tarring someone as a prostitute or a secretly recorded sex tape being leaked to a boundary-pushing website. Helping such clients arguably fit within the good=versus-evil worldview that Harder liked to espouse. But those cases tended to be the exceptions. Lawyers like harder were often plying their craft on behalf of unsavory individuals, and they were doing so in ways that, if they succeeded, would help their clients escape accountability for their past misdeeds and potentially continue to engage in terrible behavior.
Thomas and his fellow justices were weighing whether to hear a case in which another famous Black man was accused of having defamed his alleged victim. It is hard to imagine that Thomas missed the parallels.
... Ginni went to the White House to lobby Trump to install more far-right activists in his administration.
The pieces weren't always bulletproof. Stedman sometimes presented a pile of circumstantial facts as evidence of a conspiracy. His language could be overheated.
Even if you accepted Silberman's claims at face value, it was unclear what business a federal judge had using a court opinion to attack news organizations whose views he happened to disagree with. The whole point of the First Amendment was that the government shouldn't be able to suppress speech that its officials disliked.
The right to vigorously criticize elected officials was a cornerstone of democracy, Katriel noted. Not so for private citizens who had been dragged unwillingly into the harsh glare of the public spotlight.
As a result, publishers are incentivized to do little or no fact-checking, confident that the more slipshod their investigation, the less likely they are to be guilty of "actual malice."
He must have known that Section 230 -- not Sullivan -- was the root cause of many of the problems he decried.
...owners tend to care about the bottom line. That had been Locke's point: financial incentives would instill discipline. But they also could instill fear. This wasn't simply a matter of outlets paying a price for getting facts wrong. If the burden of proof rested once again with defendants -- if it were up to them to prove that they had their facts right, as opposed to being up to plaintiffs to prove that the facts had been wrong -- even entirely accurate articles could pose huge financial risks.
At one in Florida, a Clare Locke attorney named Jered Ede -- the firm had recently hired him from Project Veritas, the group of conservative provocateurs, where he'd been general counsel -- recycled the incorrect data that Gorsuch had plucked from David Logan's law review piece, claiming that 90 percent of jury awards in defamation cases were reversed on appeal.
It's our view in Florida that we want to be standing up for the little guy against these massive media conglomerates," the governor declared.
For all of her diligence, the Pilot had failed to take a rudimentary step: it hadn't contacted Tomczyk beforehand to ask for his version of events.
NHPR's outside lawyer...never witnessed such an onslaught. "It's very unusual for sources to be targeted, especially in such a methodical fashion with the clear goal of having the sources retract their stories,"
Libel law, it seemed to Goodman, was a potentially powerful weapon in the fight against corrosive public lies.
This left Locke in a potential pickle. If her firm won, it would gain bragging rights, but her arguments for overturning Sullivan might lose traction. If her firm lost, it would be embarrassing, but the loathsome libel precedents might be on borrowed time.
Even if its claims were taken at face value, he argued, they did not show that the Times had acted with actual malice. The editorial had been sloppy but not a deliberate smear.