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Tag
Law
Articles and publications tagged Law across the Atmosphere.
26
articles
9
publications
Articles
Publications
Libretech | Systems
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Jun 28, 2026
Law Above Government
The law must stand as a fixed, independent framework that governs the government itself—not as a flexible instrument the state wields to justify its actions. If those in power can rewrite, reinterpret, or bypass the rules at will, then legality becomes mere policy, and justice becomes a matter of convenience. True accountability requires that the constitution be difficult to change, that courts operate without political interference, and that every official—from the highest minister to the lowest clerk—answers to the same code as the ordinary citizen. When the government is bound by the law, the people retain their liberty; when the law bends to the government, the people lose their shield. That separation is not abstract philosophy—it is the mechanical guardrail that keeps power from becoming tyranny.
Law
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Government
English – Hungary by atlatszo.hu
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Jun 26, 2026
After our question, ruling party Tisza changes wording of proposed amendment
legal matters
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integrity authority
Domination Chronicles Podcast
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Jun 25, 2026
Episode 23: Bishops, Papal Bulls, and the Problem of Domination
Steve Newcomb and Peter d’Errico discuss a Catholic bishops’ Doctrine of Discovery symposium, papal bulls, revocation, and the deeper issue of domination.
law
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language
The Emu Café Social
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Jun 16, 2026
Pook-Emu Bee: Links For 06-16-26
Time for a new edition of Pook-Emu Bee links on this very pretty (in Brooklyn, at least) June 16. [caption id="attachment_5974" align="aligncenter" width="963"] I took this phone on June 14, 2026, to send to Victor V. Gubo.[/caption] 1. SCOTUS To Newman: Drop Dead (Josh Blackman at The Volokh Conspiracy. June 15, 2026.) Say what one...
federal circuit
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federal judiciary
Domination Chronicles Podcast
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Jun 8, 2026
Episode 22: Where Are We Now? Why Domination Is the Beginning of the Conversation, Not the End
In this episode of *Domination Chronicles*, Steven T. Newcomb and Peter d’Errico explore why “domination” has become a slogan instead of a serious inquiry—and why language, law, history, and power must be carefully unpacked.
law
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language
brennan.day
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Jun 4, 2026
I Need To Stop Making Promises I Can't Keep
Building fanfiction.lol taught me that some promises are impossible to keep. I wanted canonical tags for everything and 'write whatever you want' as a tagline, but Canadian obscenity laws and the philosophical complexity of tag wrangling forced me to adjust. Here's what I learned about running a community archive, the legal constraints I face, and the promises I can still keep.
IndieWeb
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fanfiction
Domination Chronicles Podcast
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May 25, 2026
Episode 21: “Tribal Sovereignty” 101: Limited Sovereignty, Federal Domination, and the Language Trap
Steve and Peter unpack “tribal sovereignty,” federal anti-Indian law, Cohen’s Handbook, and the domination framework hidden in plain sight.
law
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language
Domination Chronicles Podcast
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Apr 18, 2026
Episode 20 - UNTRUSTWORTHY “TRUST”: DOMINATION, FEAR, AND FEARLESSNESS
Today we deep dive into the legal and philosophical foundations of the "federal Indian law trust doctrine." We argue that the term "trust" is a euphemism for a relationship of domination rather than a protective legal obligation.
law
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language
lu.is
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Mar 4, 2026
Lawyers, Humility, and LLMs
Reviewing a book about a multi-billion-dollar contract bug—and what it means for the profession's arrogant response to LLMs.
law
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llm
lu.is
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Mar 2, 2026
Of Monsters, Men, and Lawyers
Generalist LLMs are not lawyers, and evaluating them that way is a waste of time. Evaluating LLMs with useful specialized prompts (and eventually, with specialized legal harnesses) is where the work must happen.
law
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llms
Domination Chronicles Podcast
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Jan 23, 2026
Episode 11: 2026 - The Year Ahead
A New Year’s conversation exploring domination, free existence, law, language, and technology—connecting deep history to urgent questions shaping 2026.
domination
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freedom
Domination Chronicles Podcast
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Dec 22, 2025
Episode 10: Pulp Legal Fiction: The Bizarre Case Of Tee-hit-ton v. US
Domination Chronicles unpacks Tee-Hit-Ton v. United States (1955) and the doctrine of Christian discovery, comparing it with Brown v. Board of Education to show how both cases advanced U.S. projects of racial segregation, land theft, and global domination.
law
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language
Domination Chronicles Podcast
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Dec 17, 2025
Episode 9: McGirt v. Oklahoma: Revealing and Concealing Domination
Steve Newcomb and Peter d'Errico provide an analysis of *McGirt v. Oklahoma* that examines how the decision reveals and conceals domination in U.S. law, jurisdiction, and federal power over Indigenous nations.
law
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language
Chaotic Concerns
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Dec 11, 2025
Marching Orders
Don't do anything I wouldn't do.
war
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law
Domination Chronicles Podcast
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Dec 7, 2025
Episode 8: WORDS & MEANINGS
In this episode, Steve Newcomb and Peter d'Errico examine how everyday words hide a deeper system of domination. Drawing on law, history, and lived experience, they reveal how language shapes our understanding of power and invites us to recover an original sense of free existence.
law
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language
Domination Chronicles Podcast
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Dec 1, 2025
Episode 7: A Quantum View of “Free Existence” as Entangled Indeterminacy
In this episode, Steve Newcomb and Peter d'Errico explore how quantum theory can help us rethink the meaning of free existence
law
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physics
Domination Chronicles Podcast
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Nov 23, 2025
Episode 6: Supreme Court Justices Attack 'plenary power' over Native Peoples
A dramatic Dissent by Supreme Court Justices Gorsuch and Thomas Opens a Path to Tectonic Changes in US Law
law
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lingustics
Domination Chronicles Podcast
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Nov 22, 2025
Episode 5: The Future of Indians
The confluence of a 1975 article by Vine Deloria, Jr., and a 2025 law review article sparks a conversation about what's roiling our minds at the moment.
law
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lingustics
Domination Chronicles Podcast
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Nov 21, 2025
Episode 4: Seeing Through To The Emperor's Extravagant Pretension
A concurring opinion in FLYING T RANCH v. STILLAGUAMISH TRIBE, October 9, 2025, from the Supreme Court of the State of Washington criticized the 'racism' of foundational cases in 'federal Indian law'.
law
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lingustics
Domination Chronicles Podcast
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Nov 20, 2025
Episode 3: Symbols, Enigmas, Curiosity
We explore symbols — statues, seals, emblems, etc. — in the process of reality creation — especially a domination reality.
law
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lingustics
Domination Chronicles Podcast
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Nov 19, 2025
Episode 2: Say Something, See Something
Steve Newcomb and Peter d’Errico dig into Halverson v. Burgum, the August 21, 2025, Ninth Circuit dismissal of Jack Halverson’s (Crow Nation) case against the Bureau of Indian Affairs.
law
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lingustics
Domination Chronicles Podcast
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Nov 18, 2025
Episode 1: Our Opening Conversation
In this inaugural episode of *Domination Chronicles*, Steven Newcomb (Shawnee/Lenape) and Peter d'Errico deepen a decades-long dialogue on how systems of domination have shaped U.S. federal Indian law, beginning with the 1823 Johnson v. *McIntosh* decision and its roots in 15th-century the Doctrine of Christian Discovery.
introduction
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law
Domination Chronicles Podcast
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Nov 17, 2025
E000: Trailer
Welcome to The Dominiation Chronciles Podcast
introduction
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law
Cory Dransfeldt
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Nov 4, 2025
Superbloom
From the author of The Shallows , a bracing exploration of how social media has warped our sense of self and society. From the telegraph and telephone in the 1800s to the internet and social media in our own day, the public has welcomed new communication systems. Whenever people gain more power to share information, the assumption goes, society prospers. Superbloom tells a startlingly different story. As communication becomes more mechanized and efficient, it breeds confusion more than understanding, strife more than harmony. Media technologies all too often bring out the worst in us. A celebrated interpreter of technology’s impacts on human life, Nicholas Carr guides the reader through the dark trends that have always shadowed how telegrams disrupted diplomacy, how radio aided autocrats, how the Facebook feed sowed division, how AI now blurs reality and fantasy. With vivid examples from history, science, and politics, Superbloom unmasks a fundamental flaw in our perception of, and revolutionizes our understanding of, how media shapes society. It may be too late to curb the "superbloom" of information—but it’s not too late to change ourselves.
ai
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tech
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