V. Zboreak (@profzboreak) 's Twitter Profile
V. Zboreak

@profzboreak

Law professor, writing about administrative law, advocating for an open Internet, thinking about food and agriculture policy, promoting inclusive pedagogy.

ID: 822861198454620161

calendar_today21-01-2017 17:39:32

1,1K Tweet

447 Followers

844 Following

Michael Hewlett (@mlhewlett) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Lt. Gov. Mark Robinson’s use of the handle “minisoldr” on online platforms drew a lot of attention during this year’s election. He’s still using it, according to records of an official meeting this week. The Return of Minisoldr theassemblync.com/politics/mark-…

V. Zboreak (@profzboreak) 's Twitter Profile Photo

I gently disagree. You should do this several times, taking both the beautiful routes and the 10 hours of unbroken scrub routes. Each trip changes how you understand this country and the vastness of it all.

Ari Cohn (@aricohn) 's Twitter Profile Photo

1/ The FTC is requesting comments on content moderation, in part because the chair is angling to label editorial decisions he doesn't like "unfair or deceptive trade practices." But consumer protection law is no talisman against the First Amendment. The FTC has no power here.

Robyn Sanders (@robyn_nsanders) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Griffin finally conceded. But what the people of NC have endured—and what Republican judges, including those on the state’s highest court, have inflicted upon them—is unforgivable. This wasn’t a normal legal dispute. It was a premeditated, full-scale attack on democracy. 🧵

Anthony Michael Kreis (@anthonymkreis) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Today is the 10th anniversary of Obergefell and the constitutionalization of same-sex marriage into the American canon. Victories are to be savored, but not taken for granted. The law isn't necessarily a one-way ratchet. It takes work to secure wins and just as much to keep them.

FIRE (@thefireorg) 's Twitter Profile Photo

BREAKING: The Supreme Court ruled 6-3 to uphold Texas's age-verification law for sites featuring adult content. The decision effectively reverses decades of Supreme Court precedent that protects the free speech rights of adults to access information without jumping over

BREAKING: The Supreme Court ruled 6-3 to uphold Texas's age-verification law for sites featuring adult content. The decision effectively reverses decades of Supreme Court precedent that protects the free speech rights of adults to access information without jumping over
V. Zboreak (@profzboreak) 's Twitter Profile Photo

This bar taker quoted in the post describes the moral failure of everyone in the room so correctly. Let people help. The paralysis, the memory of knowing you should have been helping but didn't (and that no one else did either) will be carried by these students forever.

FIRE (@thefireorg) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Yesterday, a federal court endorsed the dangerous idea that in-class faculty speech is government speech. At odds with 70 years of Supreme Court precedent, this decision could allow states to muzzle faculty and declare any topic off-limits. Public university professors aren’t

Yesterday, a federal court endorsed the dangerous idea that in-class faculty speech is government speech. At odds with 70 years of Supreme Court precedent, this decision could allow states to muzzle faculty and declare any topic off-limits.

Public university professors aren’t
Kate Klonick (@klonick) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Bluesky has geoblocked Mississippi in response to their age assurance law. The balkanized internet has long been here between nations, but I think this is the first time we're seeing a speech platform geo-blocking by *US State* This way lies madness. bsky.social/about/blog/08-…

Caprice Roberts (@capricelroberts) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Calling all law faculty candidates hoping to teach law starting next fall: more ways to get your application seen by all law hiring + appointments committees & find your ideal law school. #SEALS2025

Calling all law faculty candidates hoping to teach law starting next fall: more ways to get your application seen by all law hiring + appointments committees & find your ideal law school. #SEALS2025
𝐒𝐚𝐮𝐫𝐚𝐛𝐡 𝐕𝐢𝐬𝐡𝐧𝐮𝐛𝐡𝐚𝐤𝐚𝐭 (@emptydoors) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Calling all faculty candidates—new and lateral. The Southeastern Association of Law Schools (SEALS) wants your applications! sealslawschools.org/hiring/index.p… Questions? Reach out to Professor Linda Jellum at [email protected].

Calling all faculty candidates—new and lateral. The Southeastern Association of Law Schools (SEALS) wants your applications!
sealslawschools.org/hiring/index.p…

Questions? Reach out to Professor Linda Jellum at ljellum@uidaho.edu.
V. Zboreak (@profzboreak) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Congratulations to our first JU College of Law bar exam takers! 91.7% first-time bar pass! share.google/i3zCWnRDWuueCP…

V. Zboreak (@profzboreak) 's Twitter Profile Photo

So every federal agency with a propaganda post on their splash page is violating the Hatch Act. Which is enforced by way of claims to the Merit Systems Protection Board. Two days ago the Administration said that the MSPB is no longer independent from presidential control.

The Provost / سيدة الفتنة (@msentropy) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Please amplify, those with a bigger platform than me. It’s horrifying that the person running the official Homeland Security Twitter account is using — and clearly knows the meaning of — the exact same aesthetics, memes, and propaganda from fashwave, accelerationist, and Nazi

Please amplify, those with a bigger platform than me.

It’s horrifying that the person running the official Homeland Security Twitter account is using  — and clearly knows the meaning of  — the exact same aesthetics, memes, and propaganda from fashwave, accelerationist, and Nazi
Jennifer Doleac (@jenniferdoleac) 's Twitter Profile Photo

I can’t wait to read this. A big challenge in dealing with sexual misconduct in academia is that too many (mostly male) professors think it has no long-term consequences. They can’t understand how it could. “So she had a bad day? We’ve all had bad days. Shake it off.”

I can’t wait to read this. 

A big challenge in dealing with sexual misconduct in academia is that too many (mostly male) professors think it has no long-term consequences. They can’t understand how it could. “So she had a bad day? We’ve all had bad days. Shake it off.”
V. Zboreak (@profzboreak) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Once more, administrative agencies, especially those that are not primarily focused on civil liberties, should not be the decision makers who determine what speech is protected, and where the lines should be drawn for pornography or obscenity.