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Although there are technical differences between the two cases [Hobby Lobby and Conestega Woods], both will force the justices to confront the future balance between the First Amendment on one ...
Second, no large ... One of the wrinkles in Hobby Lobby is the decision doesn't really involve the First Amendment. The court has already spoken on how far it believes the Constitution protects ...
Now that Hobby Lobby’s case is before the Supreme Court, some of the same figures insist that corporations should be denied the right to assert First Amendment protections for religious freedom.
For the Supreme Court to agree with the Greens, two questions must be answered: First, does Hobby Lobby, the corporation, have religious rights protected by the First Amendment? Second ...
Hobby Lobby Stores, Inc. – the better-known case ... Citing the Supreme Court's extension of certain First Amendment rights to corporations in the 2010 Citizens United v.
As before, those efforts are running into serious trouble. The major problem is simple: The Second Amendment has come to be seen as a constitutional barrier, and perhaps even more, a political one.
The Hobby Lobby ruling hinges on religious freedom, not the First Amendment, but it has campaign finance implications, legal scholars say. The ruling challenges the traditional distinction between ...