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Adrian Vermeule's avatar

Very interesting - and plausible. I tend to think that in the medium and long run the institutional and structural factors that led to Chevron in the first place will reassert themselves. Judges don’t want to be deciding, independently, what is a “reasonable level of toxicity” etc. But only time can tell.

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Fernando Ferreira Jr's avatar

This whole situation reminds me of the dictum in the masterpiece "The Leopard", by the great Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa, that "everything must change if we want everything to remain as it is". I think this applies very well to law in general. If law is fundamentally a tradition, it is to be expected that changes will be more apparent than really substantive, it seems to me. And that goes for both pretorian law and legislation. Even legislation that is seen as innovative and radically different from the previous state of affairs, for example, often ends up being interpreted on a day-to-day basis according to concepts, ideas and notions forged in the light of the previous regime. Man is an animal of habit. Law does not escape this circumstance of our nature.

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