Aside from all the boring crap, Ramo is correct on the Jackson concurrence of Youngstown Steel. It's been cited far more than the majority opinion and has been basically been deemed the de facto opinion simply due to later courts treating it as such.
Any law school class on Constitutional law will focus more on Jackson's concurrence than the majority opinion, because the concurrence is far more important in US legal history.
Any law school class on Constitutional law will focus more on Jackson's concurrence than the majority opinion, because the concurrence is far more important in US legal history.
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