- Everyday orders share same griddle, but alternate cooking method is offered for vegans: “Lawsuit claims Burger King’s Impossible Whoppers are contaminated by meat” [Jonathan Stempel and Richa Naidu, Reuters]
- Court orders Canadian Senate to pay $1,500 to man who complained of language rights violation from English-only push labels on Parliament Hill drinking fountains [Jackie Dunham, CTV]
- Guns N’ Mootness: Supreme Court hears challenge to New York’s Kafkaesque have-gun-can’t-travel law, since repealed [Clark Neily, Daniel Horwitz, Josh Blackman, Newsy video with Ilya Shapiro, earlier and David Kopel/Randy Barnett in SCOTUSBlog symposium; Cato brief, oral argument transcript]
- Some deserved national attention for the killing of Gary Willis last year by Anne Arundel County, Md. police enforcing a “red flag” gun order [Jacob Sullum, earlier]
- Profile of Ken White is first time I recall seeing explanation of Popehat as blog name [Zane Hill, Outlook Newspapers]
- “When the opposition is paying [an expert’s fee in litigation], no incentive at all exists to charge anything but top dollar. That’s where the courts come in.” [Jim Beck]
Filed under: Canada, expert witnesses, guns, restaurants, Supreme Court
2 Comments
Re: Burger King
My recommendation? Stop selling it and mark it up to “This is Why We Can’t Have Nice Things” Department.
Re: Profile of Ken White
Wonderful to see Ken White featured in a newspaper article.
His commentaries on legal and constitutional issues are not only brilliant, but delightfully humorous and often hilarious.
Not mentioned in the article, but perhaps worth mentioning here: Ken’s public commentary over the years has also provided early warning eventually leading to the criminal takedown of some copyright trolls.
Reading his commentary or listening to his podcasts is always worthwhile.