A lawsuit moving through the state’s court system helps explain why.
The suit, dubbed
Waldron v. Cooper, pits the owner of a popular Greenville bar against the state’s governor. In her initial complaint, plaintiff Crystal Waldron focused on the discriminatory nature of Gov. Roy Cooper’s executive orders linked to the COVID-19 pandemic. Waldron’s Club 519 and other private bars remained shuttered for 11 months as Cooper permitted other types of bars to reopen across the state.
Within days of a court hearing on Waldron’s suit, Cooper issued a new order. It allowed private bars to reopen in a limited capacity. That change addressed one piece of Waldron’s complaint, but it also prompted her legal team to shift its focus.
Sheldon Whitehouse s Mistaken Crusade Against the Supreme Court
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Gender Mandates on the Docket in Meland v Padilla
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To the Editor:
A good metaphor for too much choice is an email ad I recently received about tennis rackets.
Wilson is among several other companies that make more than 30 models each.
Besides never being able to try all of them, unless your last name is Federer or Nadal, you would lack the expertise to tell the difference between them.
Michael Marek
To the Editor:
Kudos to Paul Krugman for highlighting the dizzying aspect of a surfeit of choice in modern American consumer mania. But it should be pointed out that much of modern American business thrives on precisely this advantage of possessing information not readily available to the ordinary consumer.