Topic: Massachusetts Supreme Court

4 chapters across the catalog

Gender Justice
Episode 1398 56:32 - 58:54

1398: Gender Justice

Supreme Court Fast-Tracking, Jacobson v. Massachusetts

The hosts discuss the legal process for challenging mandates, noting that cases must typically move through appeals courts before the Supreme Court decides to hear them. They revisit the 1905 *Jacobson v. Massachusetts* case, often cited by legal scholars like Alan Dershowitz. They clarify that the historical ruling allowed for a fine for non-compliance but did not grant the government the right to forcibly inject citizens.

Attribution Science
Episode 1363 19:46 - 22:14

1363: Attribution Science

Jacobson v. Massachusetts, Mandatory Vaccination Jurisprudence, Smallpox History

The 1905 Supreme Court case Jacobson v. Massachusetts is frequently cited as the legal foundation for mandatory vaccinations in the United States. While the court upheld the state's authority to mandate smallpox vaccines, the actual penalty for non-compliance was a five-dollar fine rather than forced injection. This historical context is used to debate the limits of government power regarding modern vaccine mandates and the potential for discriminatory practices.

Mask Up!
Episode 1245 57:01 - 1:03:16

1245: Mask Up!

Alan Dershowitz vs. Professor Jones on Forced Vaccination

Constitutional scholar Alan Dershowitz claims that the state has a clear legal right to mandate vaccinations. This is challenged by a detailed analysis of the 1903 case Jacobson v. Massachusetts, which suggests the ruling was actually about the state's right to impose a small fine ($5) for refusal, rather than the right to use physical force to vaccinate citizens.

Speciesism
Episode 661 2:34:22 - 2:36:51

661: Speciesism

War on Photography, Massachusetts Supreme Court Ruling

The Massachusetts Supreme Court's unanimous ruling that upskirting is legal sparked public outrage and calls for legislative reform. Legal analyst Ricky Klayman explained that the current law requires a victim to be in a private place, such as a bedroom, for a crime to occur. Lawmakers are now scrambling to draft new statutes that specifically criminalize the practice of taking non-consensual photos under clothing.