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The National Security Law Podcast

Episode 215: Rhyming or Outright Repeating?

The National Security Law Podcast

Bobby Chesney and Steve Vladeck

Courses, Politics, News, Education, Government

4.8646 Ratings

🗓️ 22 February 2022

⏱️ 61 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

We are back with a fresh episode, hot on the heels of Russia's latest incursion into Ukraine. Tune in as we survey some of the legal dimensions to this latest development (including discussion of the impact of diplomatic recognition on UN Charter Article 2(4)), as well as the various sanctions frameworks that are now in play.  We also check in on an important district court ruling in the civil suit against former President Trump in relation to the January 6 insurrection, exploring its First Amendment/Brandenburg doctrine aspects.  As for frivolity?  A bit random this time, even for these guys: we've got the Juwan Howard situation following the Michigan-Wisconsin game, and reviews of some of the key rides at Disneyland. Because...well, it's the frivolity segment, after all!

Transcript

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0:00.0

Hello from Austin and welcome to episode 215 of the National Security Law podcast.

0:13.8

We're brought to you by the Strauss Center at the University of Texas.

0:16.9

It's 2.2- 2, 2, 2.

0:22.1

I'm Bobby Chesney.

0:23.2

I'm Steve Blandock.

0:27.3

I knew there was a reason you wanted to record today, and it wasn't because we're about to go to World War III.

0:32.5

Hey, you're lucky I didn't push for us to record in the afternoon, so I could say it is 22 on 222.

0:33.6

Exactly.

0:39.0

So I, in federal courts this morning, I went out of my way to say that I dispute our local news station saying that today is a palindrome.

0:44.6

Well, because you need the leading zero.

0:46.4

You have to count the leading zero.

0:48.1

Or else, two, 222 is also a palatron.

0:50.4

Yeah, and you got a 20-22 mixed in there.

0:52.6

I just, you know.

0:53.2

Yeah. It's why 11-11-11 and 12-12-12 were such cool dates, although there's not, 11-11-11 to Pallandrome, 12, 12,

0:59.3

yeah, yeah.

1:00.3

As long as you drop the first two numbers.

1:02.2

Well, so.

1:03.1

Karen and I got married on 11-12-11.

1:05.6

11-12.

1:06.0

That's pretty memorable. And I was, our, Heather and I got married on March 11, 2000, which makes for some reasonably easy mathematical calculations when I ponder.

1:16.6

So my, my in-laws, Karen's parents, got married on July 4th, 1974, 7474.

...

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