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Full-Text Articles in Law
For My Friend, Philip Chase Bobbitt
For My Friend, Philip Chase Bobbitt
Faculty Scholarship
Auden wrote somewhere that a friend is simply someone of whom, in his absence, one thinks with pleasure. How do we measure that against Dante’s famous observation that there is no greater pain than to remember happy days in days of sorrow? They are both right, are they not? I cannot think of my first memory of Charles without smiling even though all afternoon my throat has ached with the strain of suppressed anguish at the loss of him. “Memory is all that the death of such a man leaves us.”
100 Million Unnecessary Returns: A Fresh Start For The U.S. Tax System, Michael J. Graetz
100 Million Unnecessary Returns: A Fresh Start For The U.S. Tax System, Michael J. Graetz
Faculty Scholarship
We are now in a quiet interlude awaiting the next serious political debate over the nation's tax system. No fundamental tax policy concerns were at stake in the 2002 disputes over economic stimulus or the political huffing and puffing about postponing or accelerating the income tax rate cuts of the 2001 Act. Those arguments were concerned principally with positioning Democratic and Republican candidates for the 2002 congressional election, not tax policy.
But the coming decade, with its paint-by-numbers phase-ins and phaseouts of 2001 Act tax changes, the tax cuts waiting to spring into effect, and the sunset of the entire …
The Storrs Lectures: Liberals And Romantics At War: The Problem Of Collective Guilt, George P. Fletcher
The Storrs Lectures: Liberals And Romantics At War: The Problem Of Collective Guilt, George P. Fletcher
Faculty Scholarship
Somehow we in the West thought the age of war was behind us. After nuking Hiroshima, after napalming Vietnam, we had only distaste for the idea and the practice of war. The thought of dying for a noble cause, the pursuit of honor in the name of patria, brotherhood in arms – none of this appealed to us anymore. "I hate war and so does Eleanor," opined FDR in the oft-repeated lyrics of Pete Seeger. War became a subject for ironic disdain. As Tom Lehrer caught the mood of the 1960s: "We only want the world to know that …