The Supreme Court has held that the Constitution protects most pornography, abortion rights, too same-sex marriage. That would accept astonished the framers, too it would accept astonished virtually all Americans 100 years ago. How did it happen?
Geoffrey Stone’s Sex too the Constitution is, for the most part, a breezy too fast read. It is packed amongst entertaining stories too revealing details. It chronicles a major shift inward the tectonic plates of constitutional law. It is every bit good of import for a minute reason: it is a remarkably clear joint of a real common, unsmooth persuasion of the appropriate relation betwixt politics too religion.
Thus begins my review of the book, only published past times The New Rambler Review, here.
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