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Advisory Opinions

Supreme Court Rejects Ban on Public Money for Religious Schools

Advisory Opinions

The Dispatch

News, Politics, Government

4.83.6K Ratings

🗓️ 22 June 2022

⏱️ 56 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Sarah and David breeze through a few Supreme Court opinions released Tuesday to focus on United States v. Taylor, and how Maine is more rural than Alaska (go figure). David points out that Carson v. Makin, which held that Maine’s “nonsectarian” requirement in schools violated the Free Exercise Clause, is yet another victory for religious liberty in the U.S. And finally, a casual discussion of toddler yoga, skirt skepticism, and how to have fun at your job.

Transcript

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0:00.0

You ready?

0:02.0

I was born ready.

0:04.0

Welcome to the Advisory Opinions Podcast. I'm David French with Sarah Isger and Sarah.

0:24.0

The anthem that DJ Khaled wrote for religious liberty litigators is still valid.

0:32.0

Remind us. All I do is win, win, win, win.

0:36.0

Oh God. Great.

0:40.0

We've got a major Supreme Court case to talk about. Carson V. Maiken, the Supreme Court has decided yet another religious liberty case, yet another religious liberty, yet another victory for religious liberty.

0:52.0

We're going to talk all about that.

0:54.0

We're also going to talk about a Hobbes Act case that is pretty interesting from the morning hand downs.

1:00.0

And then in no particular order, we're going to talk about skirts, beer and rice.

1:06.0

Is that correct? No particular order, skirts, beer and rice.

1:10.0

Yes.

1:12.0

So, let's start with Scotus, Sarah.

1:16.0

Had a number of cases that came down today.

1:20.0

And you put them in one and a half for interesting?

1:22.0

Yeah. I mean, maybe one and three quarters.

1:26.0

Okay.

1:28.0

So that left us with three that were less so.

1:34.0

First of all, we had a Medicare secondary payer statute case, which is basically all we need to say about that.

1:44.0

True enough. Yeah. Interesting lineup on that one. Breyer joined with the six. So it was a seven to opinion on Medicare reimbursement.

1:56.0

Exciting.

1:58.0

Next up, workers comp, Washington's workers comp law discriminated against federal government and its contractors.

...

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