File under: Annals of liberal law professor hypocrisy. Bonus material: check out this video by Johnny Harris calling out additional forms of progressive hypocrisy.
Ricky Martin, Domestic Violence, and Strategic Behavior
Via the Drudge Report, I just learned that Latin music star Ricky Martin was the subject of a domestic abuse restraining order in Puerto Rico (see here). The identity of the person who requested this order, however, is protected under Puerto Rico’s sweeping domestic violence law, so my 2006 paper on “Domestic Violence, Strategic Behavior, and Ideological Rent-Seeking“, might (or might not) be relevant to this case. (As an aside, Ricky Martin’s “La Copa de la Vida” is my favorite World Cup theme song of all time.)
Happy Louisiana Purchase Day?
On this day (July 4) in 1803, the terms of the treaty between the United States and France for the purchase and sale of Louisiana — the Vente de la Louisiane or “Louisiana Purchase“, a treaty that quite possibly changed the course of world history — are announced to the public: $15 million for 828,000 square miles west of the Mississippi River.

What is the 4th of July to Native Americans?
Your annual reminder of why I don’t like celebrating Independence Day.

In praise of Cowen & Tabarrok
Model this! Tyler Cowen and Alex Tabarrok are still my favorite bloggers, by far. To see why, below are links to my top-ten entries for the month of June from their Marginal Revolution blog, an eclectic and wide-ranging repository of information that they still somehow manage to update multiple times a day:
- Fact Checking Increases Fake News (June 1)
- My Conversation with Jamal Greene (June 2)
- Moving From Opportunity: The High Cost of Restrictions on Land Use (June 2)
- What are the markers of spam emails? (June 8)
- Ayn Rand on the Tonight Show (June 9)
- “Which book can attract anyone towards your field of study?” (June 10)
- Grade non-disclosure agreements (June 20)
- The intellectual mistake of once-and-for-allism (June 26)
- The glories of Irish economics (June 28)
- Scottish Enlightenment vs. Irish Enlightenment (July 1).
July reading
I am busy proofreading a textbook (Business Law & Strategy, 2nd edition) and putting the finishing touches on the first part of my “Adam Smith in Paris” manuscript, which I will be presenting later this month at the Universidad de los Andes in Bogota, Colombia, so there is just one book (the cover of which is pictured below) in my reading basket for the month of July.

The Law of the Colonies
Check out this misnamed special issue of the Yale Law Journal on “The Law of the Territories“. (Misnamed because, despite the joint U.S.-U.K. Atlantic Charter of 1941, the United States still has several overseas colonies, including American Samoa, Guam, the Northern Mariana Islands, Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin Islands.) This special volume, however, contains only four articles:
- “Navassa: Property, Sovereignty, and the Law of the Territories” (125pp.) by Joseph Blocher and Mitu Gulati. (Navassa is a small Haitian island that is still privately owned by the United States.)
- “Aurelius’s Article III Revisionism: Reimagining Judicial Engagement with the Insular Cases and ‘The Law of the Territories’” (110pp.) by James T. Campbell. (The Aurelius case, which was decided by the U.S. Supreme Court in 2019, held that the members of the Puerto Rico Oversight Board were not “Officers of the United States”.)
- “The Insular Cases Run Amok: Against Constitutional Exceptionalism in the Territories” (93pp.) by Christina D. Ponsa-Kraus. (The Insular Cases were a series of controversial cases decided by the U.S. Supreme Court during the early 20th century. These cases held that not all constitutional rights apply to our overseas territories.)
- “Indigenous Subjects” (107pp.) by Addie C. Rolnick. (This paper explores the rights of indigenous peoples who reside in the overseas territories.)
Alas, I hate to sound anti-intellectual, but this special issue illustrates everything that is wrong with legal scholarship. The papers are too damn long. (The shortest paper is “only” 93 single-spaced pages long!) At least now I know why my submission to this special issue was not accepted for publication, even though I was an Editor of the Yale Law Journal during the 1991/92 and 1992/93 academic years. My paper “Breaking the (Puerto Rican Condorcet) Cycle” is a measly 19 pages long.


Hypotheticals
Happy Friday! Check out this beautiful song by Lake Street Dive:
Your TSA tax dollars at work

More details here, via Gary Leff. Bonus: the comments to this lame TSA Tweet are on point.
Assorted links (Apple iPhone edition)
The first iPhones were sold to the public on this day 15 years ago (June 29, 2007). We now take “smartphones” for granted, but are these little electronic talismans more of a blessing or a curse? Either way, here is a fun “smartphone addiction test“.
Although we’re a day late, 29 June 2017 marks the 10th anniversary of the launching of the original Apple iPhone.* To honor this occasion, here are some useful links:
1. Tyler Cowen’s essay in praise of the iPhone:Put down the iPhone and appreciate its genius.
2. Adam Greenfield’s critique:A sociology of the smartphone.
3. Steve Jobs’s original iPhone presentation from January 2007.
* Full disclosure: I drafted this blog post on my Apple iPhone 5s. That I was able to access the Internet, link to various sources, and track down and post a picture — in a matter of minutes and on such a small and portable device — is remarkable.



