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Who Gets to Lie Online?

Slate Daily Feed

Slate

Business, News, Society & Culture

3.9 • 1.1K Ratings

🗓️ 16 March 2024

⏱️ 41 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

While all eyes and brains are on what SCOTUS thinks about making Trump emperor-king, a lesser known case will be heard Monday that could have a huge impact on how social media can (or cannot) keep election workers safe this year. Murthy v. Missouri arrives at the high court as the result a lawsuit filed by the attorneys general of Missouri and Louisiana, along with a group of social media users—including some doctors and right-wing commentators—who argued that officials in the Biden administration censored their online speech about COVID-19, the 2020 election, among other issues The plaintiffs don’t claim that the administration directly silenced their speech. Instead, they argue that, by working with social media companies to limit the spread of misinformation, the government unlawfully chilled the free expression of their ideas.

Gowri Ramachandran serves as deputy director in the Brennan Center’s Democracy program.The amicus brief filed by her team from the Brennan Center in Murthy draws the Justices attention to another aspect of election disinformation . Ramachandran explains to host Dahlia Lithwick that combating election disinformation has always been important, but it is especially critical now, as  election workers struggle to keep on top of voting issues.

Later in the show for Slate plus subscribers, Mark Joseph Stern joins to talk about  the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals taking a swing at teens’ access to contraception, and a new effort to combat the scourge of judge-shopping. 

Need to set up your Slate Plus feed? If you subscribed through Slate.com, check out our FAQ at slate.com/podcastfaqs for easy instructions. Members subscribed via Apple Podcasts get automatic access—no setup required.


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Transcript

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0:00.0

The Hi and welcome back to Amicus this is Slate's podcast about the courts and the

0:20.3

law and the rule of law I'm Dahlia Lwick. I cover the courts in the law and this

0:24.5

week Donald J. Trump started to argue that his New York criminal trial for conduct

0:30.0

that took place before the 2016 election should be paused pending the Supreme Court's

0:35.6

someday, someday ruling in his immunity trial in Washington, D.C. Why? Because immunity is a forever condition and it shields you from all of your

0:46.5

conduct ever before and after. Amen. Trump also defamed E. Jean Carroll, again.

0:54.9

And as of this taping, both Donald Trump and Joseph Biden

0:59.0

are their party's presumptive nominees.

1:02.0

Its official, the 2024 presidential election, is Trump v. Biden, the rematch.

1:11.0

Later on in the show, our slate plus subscribers are going to get a hear from Mark Joseph Stern about the Fight and Fifth Circuit taking a swing at access to contraception and also about an attempt to finally rein in the Alliance for

1:27.6

Hippocratic Medicine's favorite extracurricular hobby, judge shopping.

1:33.0

If you are not a Slate Plus member,

1:34.8

but you'd like to hear extra segments

1:36.8

like my conversations with Mark Stern

1:39.3

or urgent updates with our Law of Trump correspondent Jeremy Stahl and if you would like to enjoy all of

1:45.8

Slate's podcast ad-free plus unlimited reading at slate.com head on over to slate.com slash Amicus plus for details on how to access all the perks of membership

1:58.0

and to our slate plus subscribers, you're the best.

2:02.0

Seriously, the best.

2:02.7

Seriously, the best.

2:04.2

Thank you for your various breathtaking and moving AI-generated

2:09.5

country and western versions of the law is so darn slow or the amicus lament.

2:16.8

But now to the main show where we want to talk about truth, which has become something of

...

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