How the Supreme Court’s Judicial Activism Compromises Public Health
The Supreme Court is willing to subordinate public health policies to pet interests in boosting religious freedom and dismantling the administrative state.

The Supreme Court is willing to subordinate public health policies to pet interests in boosting religious freedom and dismantling the administrative state.
Judicial partisanship is a major threat to public health. Congress should implement reforms to address this problem at its roots.
Public health in the U.S. has collapsed. In its place, we are left with an insufficient, impoverished alternative: personal crusades.
If public health is to prosper, we will need to overcome the after-effects of several failures of imagination.
On January 5, the South Carolina Supreme Court struck down Senate Bill 1, which banned most abortions after the sixth week of pregnancy.
Affirmative action in higher education may soon be abolished by the Supreme Court. The consequences for the physician workforce may be dire.