Alex Pretti Failed This IQ Test
Stand With ICE
We're Going to Get a New Fed Chair Nominee Today
DHS Kristi Noem Admits She Made a Mistake Regarding the Alex Pretti Shooting...
Watch Scott Jennings Eviscerate Tim Walz and His Civil War Obsession
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent Cooked Gavin Newsom With These Remarks
How a Philly DA Plans to Go After ICE Agents Once Trump Leaves...
Body Cam Backlash
Ed Markey Just Compared the Anti-ICE Mobs to What?
Cultural Apocalypse
Trump Accounts Will Restore the Family As the Cornerstone of the American Dream
Big Surprises in the 2030 Census Estimates
'Common Sense' at 250
Puerto Rico Can Power Trump’s 'Made in America' Medicine Agenda
When Democracy Goes Awry
OPINION

Our puritanical progressives

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.

An eminent Harvard law professor, James Thayer (1831-1902), argued that although the judicial function is "merely that of fixing the outside border of reasonable legislative action," this still gives courts "a great and stately jurisdiction." While patrolling that jurisdiction today, Supreme Court justices may be playing the video game "Postal 2," whose rich menu of simulated mayhem provoked California's legislature to pass a problematic law.

Advertisement

During the oral argument about whether the law restricting children's access to violent video games violates First Amendment guarantees of free expression, the lawyer representing game manufacturers urged the court to remember America's history of moral panics, which he said included one in the early 1950s about comic books. Really? Yes, and the episode remains instructive.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement