This document, labeled as Chapter 7, discusses the complex conflict between national security and free expression, contrasting it with issues of obscenity censorship. It categorizes different types of secrets—ranging from "necessary secrets" like troop movements to those kept for political convenience—and analyzes the difficult decisions regarding if and when to publish sensitive information in a democracy.
This document appears to be a page from a memoir (draft dated 2012) recounting the narrator's time clerking for Judge Bazelon in the early 1960s. It details the Judge's demanding nature regarding work hours, the narrator's success on the DC bar exam, the birth of his son Jamin, and the Judge's pessimistic reaction to the Cuban Missile Crisis in October 1962. The narrator is likely Alan Dershowitz, given the biographical details (Yale Law, clerkship with Bazelon, son named Jamin).
This document appears to be a page from a memoir or biographical manuscript (likely by Alan Dershowitz, based on the specific career details) produced for the House Oversight Committee. It details the author's law school years, specifically focusing on the influence of professors Goldstein, Alex Bickel, and Telford Taylor. The text recounts missed opportunities to work with Taylor at the CIA and at the Eichmann trial in Jerusalem, as well as the author's early involvement in civil rights and academic collaborations.
Discussion 0
No comments yet
Be the first to share your thoughts on this epstein entity