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Monday, February 08, 2016

I almost never agree with Ned Foley about reform, as he calls it. But http://historynewsnetwork.org/article/161849 here he tells a great story about bloodshed and vote counting in Kentucky. It's some of the backdrop of Burson v Freeman, a rare case upholding a censorship statute under a strict scrutiny test. Foley and I are pretty much on common ground here;
there is a line somewhere between free speech and overt corruption,and Kentucky has crossed that line a time or two.

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