The law, in its majesty, bars the individual and the corporation alike from camping out while assembling for redress of grievances.
The law, in its majesty, allows the individual and the corporation alike to spend money on political ads.
A Personal Blog
by Michael Froomkin
Laurie Silvers & Mitchell Rubenstein Distinguished Professor of Law
University of Miami School of Law
My Publications | e-mail
All opinions on this blog are those of the author(s) and not their employer(s) unelss otherwise specified.
Who Reads Discourse.net?
Readers describe themselves.
Please join in.Reader Map
Recent Bluessky Posts- Jotwell CourtsLaw: Linda S. Mullenix, Take Notice: Governmental Review of Class Action Settlements, JOTWELL (January 23, 2026), courtslaw.jotwell.com/take-notice-.... January 23, 2026 Jotwell
- Jotwell Tax: Adam Rosenzweig, Putting the Original Back into Tax Originalism, JOTWELL (January 22, 2026) (reviewing Conor Clarke & Ari Glogower, Apportioned Direct Taxes, 79 Tax L. Rev. __ (forthcoming 2026), available at SSRN), tax.jotwell.com/putting-the-.... January 22, 2026 Jotwell
- Law-on-the-ground says, "might as well". January 21, 2026 Michael Froomkin
- Ugly. MORE money for ICE? January 20, 2026 Michael Froomkin
- Surprise! www.nytimes.com/2026/01/19/u... January 20, 2026 Michael Froomkin
Recent Comments
- Michael on Robot Law II is Now Available! (In Hardback)
- Mulalira Faisal Umar on Robot Law II is Now Available! (In Hardback)
- Michael on Vince Lago Campaign Has No Shame
- Just me on Vince Lago Campaign Has No Shame
- Jennifer Cummings on Are Coral Gables Police Cooperating with ICE?
Subscribe to Blog via Email
Join 51 other subscribers
I never have grasped why equal treatment of the weak and the powerful is regarded with such contempt. It’s not like, should the law abandon said majestic indifference, it’s going to replace it with bias in favor of the weak. Equal treatment is the best deal the weak are going to get.