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It would be a great idea to make this phone
It would be a great idea to make this phone an actual product for the world. If the company really cares, and is willing to work hard to make it into a successful smartphone, that's the only thing left to do.
Thanks again to Energizer for the tip.Sometime during a recent visit to the University of California, Santa Barbara, I spoke with one of its professors, John D. Stelter, the head of the Center for the Study of the Law at Harvard Law School. It was a fascinating discussion which left me a little perplexed.
Stelter, who has never held any law or scholarship positions, is one of the founders of the "Justice & Liberty Law Foundation" (JLFF). His name is a reference to the American Civil Liberties Union, which is a public interest organization that works to protect civil liberties. The JLFF is a nonprofit organization that provides legal advice and research to public interest law schools, law schools and other public interest groups.
The JLFF's primary purpose is to promote civil liberties and civil liberties from the perspective of the public interest. When Stelter asked me, "What is a civil liberties and civil liberties law school?" I didn't know. I think it is a unique position.
I met Stelter at the University of California, San Francisco's Law School about 25 years ago. Stelter was a former Harvard Law School law professor who was a member of the Stanford Law Review Board (see here and here). He was a member of the American Civil Liberties Union. In his book "Hate Crimes: An International Law Journal," his co-author, Benjamin Wittgenstein, has said that this is one of the few places in the United States where "liberty is a sacred right to which we as individuals are entitled to a free and just society."
Stelter explained that while he was teaching in the Harvard Law School, he was also a "libertarian," and thus a supporter of civil liberties. He said, "[H]e had to be careful not to alienate the people in the Harvard Law School from the legal principles of the United States Constitution."
He also said that even though he thought it was unfair, "I knew that I could protect people from injustice."
During the talk, we talked about why some people, like Stelter, have been drawn to this position. We discussed his personal
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