
Ed.
note:
A
weekly
roundup
of
just
a
few
items
from
Howard
Bashman’s
How
Appealing
blog,
the
Web’s
first
blog
devoted
to
appellate
litigation.
Check
out
these
stories
and
more
at
How
Appealing.
“Aftershocks
from
‘The
Shadow
Papers’;
Publication
of
a
trove
of
confidential
Supreme
Court
memos
ignited
debates
in
the
legal
academy”: Adam
Liptak
has this
new
installment of
his
“The
Docket”
newsletter
online
at
The
New
York
Times.
“Paul
Clement
Will
Argue
for
Trump-Targeted
Law
Firms
Next
Month”: Justin
Henry
of
Bloomberg
Law
has this
report.
“Originalist
Judges
Are
Spitting
On
the
Constitution
and
Think
You
Won’t
Notice;
A
law
in
Texas
requires
every
public
school
to
display
the
Ten
Commandments
in
every
single
classroom;
No
problem,
says
the
Fifth
Circuit”: Jay
Willis
has this
post online
at
his
“Balls
&
Strikes”
Substack
site.
“New
Alito
book
reveals
details
on
Jan.
6
case,
flag
controversy;
New
books
about
Alito
are
being
published
after
much
speculation
about
when
the
conservative
justice
might
retire”: Maureen
Groppe
of
USA
Today
has this
report.
“Chapman
on
Indoctrinating
Thy
Neighbor;
Assessing
Nathan
v.
Alamo
Heights
Independent
School
District”: Nathan
Chapman
has this
guest
post at
the
“Divided
Argument”
Substack
site.
“11th
Circuit
shoots
down
challenge
to
machine
gun
ban;
The
federal
government
maintained
the
Second
Amendment
does
not
cover
machine
guns
or
the
machine
gun
conversion
device
that
led
to
a
two-year
prison
sentence
for
a
Fort
Lauderdale
man”: Alex
Pickett
of
Courthouse
News
Service
has this
report.
