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7 votes
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New Vermont legalization law sparks 'gift' delivery service
4 votes -
Israel passes controversial 'Jewish nation-state law', stripping Arabs of self-determination right
16 votes -
Should we loosen the restrictions on psychedelics?
13 votes -
Enforcing the law is inherently violent
4 votes -
At last, a law that could have stopped Tony Blair and George W Bush invading. The Hague’s new crime of aggression might give belligerent heads of states a reason to pause.
10 votes -
Israel in turmoil over bill allowing Jews and Arabs to be segregated
7 votes -
Attorney-General poised to crack down on gaps in gun laws in wake of Pennant Hills murders
3 votes -
US Justice Department reopens Emmett Till murder investigation
9 votes -
CS:GO update blocks players in Netherlands and Belgium from opening loot boxes
12 votes -
Sabotage laws give Australian PM Peter Dutton new powers over energy, port facilities
0 votes -
Law of new new media platforms
4 votes -
Wikipedia blacked out across Europe in protest against laws that could change the internet forever
18 votes -
YouTube and Facebook could escape billions in copyright payouts after EU vote. Lawmakers reject overhaul of rules which aimed to make tech giant's pay a bigger share.
2 votes -
EU sends controversial internet copyright reforms back to the drawing board
13 votes -
A Foodora delivery rider is facing a test case at the Fair Work Commission that will determine whether food delivery riders are really employees.
5 votes -
Australian states and retail chains ban single-use plastic bags
16 votes -
Poland's supreme court constitutional crisis approaches a standoff. The government’s attempt to lower the mandatory retirement age of judges is due to come into effect this week
8 votes -
How come seven people (the supreme court) can have so much power?
I am not American but it seems to me that it is an incredibly broken system that 7 judges can essentially halt an entire country's progress. They decided that corporations have rights like a...
I am not American but it seems to me that it is an incredibly broken system that 7 judges can essentially halt an entire country's progress. They decided that corporations have rights like a person, they can decide if gay marriage is legal, they can decide basically anything if they wanted as I understand it.
So why does this even exist? Surely such gigantic decisions should be left to a parliament or something.
19 votes -
Australian Senate backs loot box investigation
7 votes -
'Three parent baby' IVF technique on track to become legal in Australia
8 votes -
‘Everyone is breaking the law right now’: GDPR compliance efforts are falling short
19 votes -
Parliament passes sweeping new foreign influence laws
3 votes -
US Supreme Court upholds Donald Trump travel ban
26 votes -
Alberta judge upholds law that prevents schools from outing students who join gay-straight alliances
9 votes -
The ACLU retreats from free expression
2 votes -
In major privacy win, US Supreme Court rules police need warrant to track your cellphone
40 votes -
The ACLU retreats from free expression
26 votes -
DOJ: Trump's immigration crackdown 'diverting' resources from drug cases
6 votes -
US President Donald Trump proposes ending the crisis he created by creating another crisis -- The proposed executive order ending family separation is just here to create more hostages
11 votes -
Feds seek removal of twenty-day limit on immigrant family holds
4 votes -
EU committee approves new rules that could "destroy the internet as we know it."
13 votes -
Cory Doctorow: "The EU is about to end everything that's good and pure about the internet"
12 votes -
Norwegian court orders website of public domain court decisions shut down with no due process
14 votes -
Canada legalises recreational cannabis use
34 votes -
Lawmakers barred from child migrant facility in Florida
11 votes -
'Ideological sex clubs': Alberta gay-straight alliance law faces court challenge
3 votes -
Priests won't comply with law: SA church
8 votes -
Supreme Court of Canada rules that limits on religious freedom 'reasonable' to protect LGBT rights
14 votes -
Tunisian presidential committee recommends decriminalizing homosexuality
5 votes -
South Australia to compel priests to report abuse revealed in confession
5 votes -
Attorney-General backs laws forcing Australian priests to break confession over child abuse
4 votes -
Why should any non-Euro companies care about the GDPR?
18 votes -
The EU could be about to ban memes and 'destroy the internet'
4 votes -
The EU's copyright proposal is extremely bad news for everyone, even (especially!) Wikipedia
8 votes -
Overhaul for foreign interference laws in bipartisan deal
5 votes -
Studying law
In three months I will probably start studying law. It's the second time starting university for me, since I left the university where I studied IT about 5 months ago because of depression and I...
In three months I will probably start studying law. It's the second time starting university for me, since I left the university where I studied IT about 5 months ago because of depression and I guess I didn't really like programming that much.
My question is: Say I finished the uni and got a law degree. What are the jobs I could do and what do I really have to do there? I have a slight idea from the movies, but I don't really know any people in person to ask this from.
6 votes -
US Supreme Court hands narrow win to baker over gay couple dispute
18 votes -
Fall asleep in seconds by listening to a soothing voice read the EU’s new GDPR legislation
11 votes -
Rudy Giuliani says US President probably can pardon himself
43 votes