On all our lives and businesses. The rise of the Administrative State, will the u. S. Be a democracy or a nation rolled by the Administrative State . Our panel will be here in a minute. You will get a preview of the Fellowship Award presentation, because the moderator of the panel is one of our two new recipients of the blakely fellowship. Jeddy is the deep washington correspondent for the hill, and hill tv. He is a media fellow at the hudson institute, where he cohosts the realignment podcast. He served for the daily caller, and as a Foreign Affairs correspondent. He received his masters degree in u. S. National Security Policy from georgetown university, and his bachelors in economics from George Washington university. He has studied extensively across the globe, spanning three continents, and has visited over 40 countries. I am so proud to introduce one of our new Tony Blankley fellows , please come up gentlemen. [applause] everybody. U, towill take a moment discuss the Administrati
Why did you want to write a book about the court situated not in american law but in the world as a legal and nonlegal venue, and what is the overarching theme that holds the project together . Well, i wrote it so i could speak at brookings. The first book by the way you still can get. Its at amazon. Its called regulation of energy by the federal power commission. Only costs a penny. Pretty good. And if you have one of those free postage things, just a penny. The second book i think it was a better book. A reviewer said, in alice in wonderland, she emerges with the history of england, why are you reading that says alice and the door mouse says because this is the driest thing i know. That was before breyer wrote this book. So in any case, i thought i would try to do better. The theme of this is to show people something. What is it i want to show. I want to show i deal i and maybe lots of others and maybe ordinary people who arent specialists, when they hear words about interdependence
abandon their beliefs, but in the world of fox news, apparently, that s the price of equality. we rereached out to the alliance, and the american religious freedom program to appear on the show tonight but they declined. joining me now is elliott shapiro, editor in chief of the cato supreme court review. i have no problem with the arizona law. what s your argument. next week i m filing a brief supporting the challenges on appeal on utah and oklahoma. i filed briefs in their supreme court. i m all for gay rights, the problem here is what your segment talked about, the new mexico photographer on whose behalf i have filed a brief, other businesses that are being sued for declining not to serve gay couples but to work gay
equality. we reached out to the alliance, and the american religious freedom program to appear on the show tonight but they declined. joining me now is elliott shapiro, editor in chief of the cato supreme court review. i have no problem with the arizona law. what s your argument. next week i m filing a brief supporting the challenges on appeal on utah and oklahoma. i filed briefs in their supreme court. i m all for gay rights, the problem here is what your segment talked about, the new mexico photographer on whose behalf i have filed a brief, other businesses that are being sued for declining not to serve gay couples but to work gay marriages, there s a very important distinction there. let s be clear here, there s
pleased and happy. the governor has done absolutely the right thing for our state, and sent a message to the country about our values. arizona is a state that welcomes diversity, that we appreciate diverse ideas, opinions and people in our state. i think her actions today really solidified the values of arizona voters. are you surprised by the level of attention that it s got, and the way that it went from basically no one paying attention to this legislation nationally, at least working its way through both houses, to it becoming a central national issue? i think many people were surprised not just around the country, when the bill moved so quickly through the state senate and almost immediately after through the state house. that was a shock to even those of us who live in arizona. the bill was really ram rodded through quickly. i m grateful that it received a lot of national attention, because it shows that as americans we can all agree that discrimination is wrong. we