Shoresy, which drops the puck on a second six-episode season for Hulu, features creator, writer, and star Jared Keeso, who along with director Jacob Tierney previously developed Letterkenny, the long-running comedy about the residents of a small town in Canada and “their problems.” Shoresy, the mouthy hockey winger Keeso plays here, even appeared on Letterkenny, albeit in the shadows alongside Wayne, his main character. But other bits and pieces of the original series surface here, too, as Shoresy continues to remake a semi-pro hockey team in Northern Ontario in his image, an image best defined by his cocky, toothless grin.
James Madison argues for the republic.
Among the numerous advantages promised by a well-constructed union, none deserves to be more accurately developed than its tendency to break and control the violence of faction. The friend of popular governments never finds himself so much alarmed for their character and fate as when he contemplates their propensity to this dangerous vice. He will not fail, therefore, to set a due value on any plan which, without violating the principles to which he is attached, provides a proper cure for it.
The instability, injustice, and confusion introduced into the public councils have, in truth, been the mortal diseases under which popular governments have everywhere perished, as they continue to be the favorite and fruitful topics from which the adversaries to liberty derive their most specious declamations. The valuable improvements made by the American constitutions on the popular models, both ancient and modern, cannot certainly be too much admired;