Monday, March 22, 2010

Constitutional Law 101 Lecture 10 Now Available For Download




CONSTITUTIONAL LAW 101

An Internet Course

Presented By Professor Henry Mark Holzer

www.henrymarkholzer.com




Hank Holzer delivered his live Lecture 10 on Sunday, March 21, 2010. This is its content:

10. The Eighth Amendment

Cruel and Unusual Punishment, including why drawing and quartering is no longer acceptable, but vegetarian meals for prisoners might be required.

The Fourteenth Amendment, revisited

Equal protection of the law: race, and its ugly manifestations from discrimination to segregation, and the reverse racism called “affirmative action.”

Conclusion of the course, and some final thoughts about "the inner contradiction.”

The length of Lecture 10, and how it can be downloaded, can be found after the last sentence of that lecture's contents, HERE. Click on "Add to Cart" to purchase.





Note





Please remember that while there is no "homework" for these lectures, to benefit fully from them Hank Holzer strongly recommends you obtain and read a copy of the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution, and the Bill of Rights. Also, especially before you download Lecture 2, you will benefit from reading the Supreme Court opinion in Griswold v. Connecticut. You will find it useful to have the four documents available during the lectures you download.

Monday, March 15, 2010

Constitutional Law 101 Lecture 9 Now Available For Download

CONSTITUTIONAL LAW 101

An Internet Course

Presented By Professor Henry Mark Holzer

www.henrymarkholzer.com




Hank Holzer delivered his live Lecture 9 on Sunday, March 14, 2010. This is its content:

9. The First Amendment, continued

Speech, continued. Can you get away with shouting "fire" in a crowded theater? Why is child pornography unproteced speech? Are depictions of animal abuse?

The length of Lecture 9, and how it can be downloaded, can be found after the last sentence of that lecture's contents, HERE. Click on "Add to Cart" to purchase.


Note



Please remember that while there is no "homework" for these lectures, to benefit fully from them Hank Holzer strongly recommends you obtain and read a copy of the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution, and the Bill of Rights. Also, especially before you download Lecture 2, you will benefit from reading the Supreme Court opinion in Griswold v. Connecticut. You will find it useful to have the four documents available during the lectures you download.

Monday, March 8, 2010

Constitutional Law 101 Lecture 8 Now Available For Download

CONSTITUTIONAL LAW 101

An Internet Course

Presented By Professor Henry Mark Holzer

www.henrymarkholzer.com



Hank Holzer delivered his live Lecture 8 on Sunday, March 7, 2010. This is its content:

8. The First Amendment

Religion. Who's correct about "establishment of religion," the Founders or the ACLU and the Supreme Court? And is the "free exercise" of religion really free?

Speech. Of the various categories of speech—political, obscene, threatening, commercial, symbolic, employee, defamatory, indecent—which are more and which less protected and why? What about subversive advocacy?

The length of Lecture 8, and how it can be downloaded, can be found after the last sentence of that lecture's contents, HERE. Click on "Add to Cart" to purchase.



Note


Please remember that while there is no "homework" for these lectures, to benefit fully from them Hank Holzer strongly recommends you obtain and read a copy of the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution, and the Bill of Rights. Also, especially before you download Lecture 2, you will benefit from reading the Supreme Court opinion in Griswold v. Connecticut. You will find it useful to have the four documents available during the lectures you download.

Monday, March 1, 2010

Constitutional Law 101 Lecture 7 Now Available For Download

CONSTITUTIONAL LAW 101

An Internet Course

Presented By Professor Henry Mark Holzer

www.henrymarkholzer.com



Hank Holzer delivered his live Lecture 7 on Sunday, February 28, 2010. This is its content:

7. Prohibitions On Both Congress And The States: The Bill Of Rights and The Fourteenth Amendment

Introduction to the Bill of Rights, which almost failed to be adopted.

By what trick of judicial legerdemain did the Bill of Rights—whose First Amendment begins "Congress shall make no law. . . ."—come to limit the powers reserved to the states under the Tenth Amendment?

The myth of "substantive" Due Process, and laundresses, killers, contraception, and abortion.

The length of Lecture 7, and how it can be downloaded, can be found after the last sentence of that lecture's contents, HERE. Click on "Add to Cart" to purchase.



Note


Please remember that while there is no "homework" for these lectures, to benefit fully from them Hank Holzer strongly recommends you obtain and read a copy of the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution, and the Bill of Rights. Also, especially before you download Lecture 2, you will benefit from reading the Supreme Court opinion in Griswold v. Connecticut. You will find it useful to have the four documents available during the lectures you download.