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Selected Works

Richard W Garnett

2014

Op-ed

Articles 1 - 4 of 4

Full-Text Articles in Law

Rick Garnett Authored An Op-Ed Article "Solidarity, Not A Scolding" In The National Review Online On February 5, 2014, Richard Garnett Feb 2014

Rick Garnett Authored An Op-Ed Article "Solidarity, Not A Scolding" In The National Review Online On February 5, 2014, Richard Garnett

Richard W Garnett

Rick Garnett authored an op-ed article "Solidarity, Not a Scolding" in the National Review Online on February 5.


The Conscience Of A Judicial Conservative, Richard Garnett Jan 2014

The Conscience Of A Judicial Conservative, Richard Garnett

Richard W Garnett

The Conscience of a Judicial Conservative – (Opinion: by Richard Garnett) The Wall Street Journal – October 23, 2012

The late Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist died in September 2005 after a full, consequential and in some ways controversial life. From modest and Midwestern circumstances, he distinguished himself in school, law practice and public service. He was confirmed to the Supreme Court during turbulent times and was for many years a powerful and prescient critic of what he saw as a too-liberal court's innovations and excesses.


Simple Justice: Kids Deserve School Choice – (Opinion: By Richard Garnett) Public Discourse – February 4, 2013, Richard Garnett Jan 2014

Simple Justice: Kids Deserve School Choice – (Opinion: By Richard Garnett) Public Discourse – February 4, 2013, Richard Garnett

Richard W Garnett

Simple Justice: Kids Deserve School Choice – (Opinion: by Richard Garnett) Public Discourse – February 4, 2013


Op-Ed: Worth Worrying About? Same-Sex Marriage & Religious Freedom - Commonweal, July 17, 2013, Richard Garnett Jan 2014

Op-Ed: Worth Worrying About? Same-Sex Marriage & Religious Freedom - Commonweal, July 17, 2013, Richard Garnett

Richard W Garnett

Op-ed: Worth Worrying About? Same-Sex Marriage & Religious Freedom in Commonweal The late-June release of the Supreme Court’s more controversial or culturally salient decisions has become a major media event—like the Oscars, or the election-day tallying of the midnight ballots from Dixville Notch. Refreshing, if archaic, rules prohibiting cameras and live broadcasting from the Court cause tens of thousands to glue themselves to celebrity law-reporters’ Twitter feeds and the SCOTUSBlog webcast.