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China NFT Weekly: Dating in the Metaverse – Pandaily

Digestible news on the latest developments across the fields of Web3, NFTs, blockchain, and metaverse in China and beyond, compiled for you every week by Pandaily.

This week: metaverse dating app Soul eyes Hong Kong IPO, ByteDance continues metaverse investments with the acquisition of VR startup PoliQ, Chinese tech giants vow to end NFT speculation, and more.

Tencent-backed social media and dating app Soul is vying for an IPO in Hong Kong, after abruptly withdrawing its plan to raise $185 million for a listing on the Nasdaq last year. The Financial Times first reported this story.

READ MORE: Tencent-Backed Social Networking App Soul Pulls US IPO Plan

TikToks parent company, ByteDance, has acquired Chinese virtual reality (VR) startup PoliQ as part of its plan to expand its portfolio in metaverse hardware, content, software and platforms. SCMP first reported this story.

READ MORE: ByteDance Acquired Metaverse Social Startup PoliQ

Babel Finance is hiring US investment banking firm Houlihan Lokey, a specialist in restructuring and distressed mergers and acquisitions, a few weeks after suspending withdrawals amid liquidity issues. CoinDesk and BlockWorks first reported this story.

Chinese tech giants including Tencent Holdings and Ant Group have signed an agreement to stop the secondary trading of NFTs and self-regulate their activities in the market. Reuters and TechCrunch first reported this story.

The European Commission, EU lawmakers and member states secured an agreement on what is likely to be the first major regulatory framework for the cryptocurrency industry. Reuters, CNBC, and Cointelegraph first reported this story.

Meta has begun the roll out of an NFT feature on Facebook, just a week after its chief executive, Mark Zuckerberg, had announced the plan. TechCrunch and The Block first reported this story.

Thats it for this weeks newsletter thanks for reading! As always, we welcome any feedback on how to make this newsletter better. Write to us at [emailprotected]. See you again next week!

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China NFT Weekly: Dating in the Metaverse - Pandaily

Correspondence chess server, Go (weiqi) games online – FICGS

We also organize special events, thematic chess, big chess, chess 960, poker texas holdemheads up tournaments, some with money prizes. Check the waiting lists.

At last on FICGS, you can play Go(, , , C vy, )tournaments and world championship. Even if computers are now able to beat the very best human players from China & South Korea, its complexity still makes it one of the most interesting board games. Play this fascinating game at FICGS.

[Event "FICGS__CHESS__WCH_STAGE_1_GROUP_M_02__000025"][Site "FICGS"][Date "2022.03.14"][Round "1"][White "Werner,Frank-Karl"][Black "DeBonis,Patrick"][Result "*"][WhiteElo "2256"][BlackElo "2182"]

1.g3 d5 2.Nf3 c6 3.Bg2 Bg4 4.O-O Nd7 5.h3 Bh5 6.d4 e6 7.c4 Be7 8.cxd5 exd5 9.Nc3 Bxf3 10.exf3 Ngf6 11.h4 O-O 12.Bh3 Nh5 13.Re1 Nb6 14.Bg4 Nf6 15.Bf5 g6 16.Bd3 Ne8 17.Kg2 Ng7 18.Bh6 Bf6 19.Ne2 Re8 20.Rh1 Nd7 21.Qc2 Nf8 22.Rad1 Qd6 23.Qd2 Nfe6 24.Bb1 a5 25.a3 a4 26.g4 Rad8 27.h5 Ng5 28.Rde1 Rxe2 29.Rxe2 N7e6 30.hxg6 hxg6 31.Rxe6 Nxe6 32.f4 Qe7 33.f5 gxf5 34.Qd3 Bg7 35.Be3 Re8 36.Rh5 Nf8 37.*

Although many say that it seems quite impossible to beat such a correspondence chess champion in a 12 games match nowadays, you'll probably find some tips in the previous answers by former champions & finalists. Always playing the best move according to the strongest chess engines may not be the solution. Ideas from the famous "Art of war" by Sun Tzu still can be used in this modern chess era, and maybe in other games as well like Go & poker holdem, now all dominated by machines.

Yen-Wei Huang is FICGS Go champion...After his win in the Go world championship final match, Yen-Wei shared his analysis on the games and his views around the world of Go (Weiqi, Baduk) and particularly computer Go in the forum.

Playing online games including chess, Go, and poker holdem is easier than ever from the comfort of your mobile phone or tablet.So whether youve got an iPhone, Google Phone, Huawei or Samsung device, all you need to do is connect to the world wide web and enjoy the benefits of a modern touch interface for a better gaming experience. And with specialist games providers and casinos using a mobile-first approach, its only going to get better!

You can also find specific informations about gaming websites according to the country. In example, certain websites detail UK or Indian casinos sorted according various criteria. Other useful websites will provide you more informations on all online alternatives, listing both mobile and desktop versions, either focused mainly on the British market, the Swedish one or any other. It will also tell you if it is possible to use either Bitcoin or an e-wallet like Paypal, Neteller, Skrill, Paysafe, Epay, Netpay & so on, but surely most support a wide variety of currencies.

In such online casinos, it is possible to play games for free or for money. All of these games are played at a long-term advantage for the house, however just like in some casino games such as Spanish 21 and Blackjack, the player makes decisions so the house edge may be reduced to about 0.5%, even without using card counting. There are many tactics and strategies for casual players. Many websites will help you to make the best of these online games, each country has its own guides, from scandinavia to japan. Many casinos require to get an account, however it is often possible to play without any registration.

Casino guides will allow you to read a bit more on strategies and how to find the best casino bonus that can give you extra money and free spins. Gamblers from the United Kingdom in particular can find the latest released casinos very easily. Undoubtly we will see a growing number of new online casino sites with UK license next year.

It is much more difficult to find pertinent information when not limiting your searches to a particular country, so if you need more good stuff on any casino online wherever in the world, you can have a look at one of these links, you will probably find something there.Finally, gambling is nowadays a very social thing, and in some cases a short cut to get rich. Read more at http://www.sveacasino.se how to take advantage of the best offers for online gambling.

Will Google Deepmind envisage to make its so-called A.I. master Poker Holdem next? We'll probably have an answer within a few months. However, it seems that we're not so close to see an artificial consciousness that could be compared to the human one, that is probably our very last privilege. Meanwhile, let's play!

Is it a good time to buy bitcoin? Hi, what do you think about bitcoin these times? From 50k, just went down to about 35k, good time to buy it or better forget this idea according to you? Or maybe ethereum or any ...

Why bitcoin rate decreased? Hi there. Does anyone know why bitcoin value decreased by about 35% this last week? Is Elon Musk really responsible for this because of 1 tweet only?? (people can't use bitcoin ...

Feel free to link to this page to get FICGS referer backlinks.Please copy the code below :

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Correspondence chess server, Go (weiqi) games online - FICGS

White Man In Connecticut Arrested After Pushing 11-Year-Old Black Boy Off Bike – The Root

Photo: Connecticut State Police

A Connecticut man has been accused of pushing an 11-year-old Black boy on Monday. According to state police, 48-year-old Jameson Chapman assaulted the child while was he riding his bike in Deep River Monday evening. The boys mother immediately informed police. Troopers then went to her home and saw video footage of the incident, as stated in a criminal information summary.

The suspect was subsequently arrested and charged with second-degree breach of peace, risk of injury to a child and third-degree assault. After watching just a couple seconds of the video I immediately went into flight or fight and jumped into my car to go look for the guy, Desiree Dominique, the victims mother explained.

Dominique claimed her son and a friend were riding their bikes around when Chapman accidentally bumped into them and lashed out on her son.

Where did you grow up? Did you grow up in Connecticut? Chapman can be heard asking the boy in the video.

No, he replied.

No, you didnt. Exactly, so get the fuck out of town, Chapman said.

Shortly after, the child was pushed. Dominique shared that her son has cuts and bruises, but the psychological impact has also taken a toll. Hes terrified to leave the house, she said. Dominique also said that this entire ordeal has been very scary as a mom.

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Black people know all too well the dangers we face for just leaving our house. The reality of Black children being treated like adults is a painful reality they face daily. We saw this when police killed Tamir Rice when he was just 12 years old. Trayvon Martin was just 17 years old when he was killed at the hands of George Zimmerman.

Chapman was held on a $10,000 bond and transported to Hartford Correctional Center. He is due to appear in Middletown Superior Court on July 11.

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White Man In Connecticut Arrested After Pushing 11-Year-Old Black Boy Off Bike - The Root

Local elected officials routinely ignore and violate part of 1st Amendment – The Citizen.com

OPINION Heres an Independence Day quiz intended for our local elected officials in Fayette County for the city councils and the county commission and the Board of Education.

The quiz is about what local officials in their public meetings seem to have overlooked, or forgotten or just plain ignored about the last clause of the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.

Mayors, council members, commissioners and school board members, you all know about freedom of religion and its free exercise, about freedom of speech and of the press. Some of you worry about the right of the people peaceably to assemble.

Heres the final right expressly listed in the First Amendment: to petition the government for a redress of grievances.

I have been covering and reporting on local government meetings since 1970. Yep, thats a long time and a lot of elected officials. And I have observed a common reaction of elected officials (many if not most) during public meetings throughout that half century.

They gavel down and even threaten to remove members of the public who dare to speak their actual grievances about public officials.

I have seen it personally during the past year at the following meetings: Fayette County Board of Education (the most egregious), the Fayetteville City Council, the Peachtree City Council, the Fayette County Commission. It likely happened at the Tyrone Council as well, but I havent personally witnessed it.

Why likely? Because thats just how public meetings of elected bodies operate.

You may argue that they all have set aside (more about that insult later) a limited amount of time for the public to have comments.

But the deal is this: They will not allow name-specific criticism of any person on the public payroll under their jurisdiction, elected, appointed or otherwise. They cut you off if you try. If you persist, they tell you to shut up or they will have a law enforcement officer remove you from the room.

At the recent Fayetteville City Council meeting, it got worse.

Fayetteville Mayor Ed Johnson (who is a good man and whom I like and respect) gaveled down a public speaker who began to criticize the Fayette County Development Authority. The FCDA was the applicant for a controversial annexation and rezoning for a mid-county data center next to long-established residential neighborhoods. The mayor ruled she was out of order.

The woman tried to continue about the FCDA. Mayor Johnson said if she continued, he would have a police officer remove her from the council meeting room. After asking, What did I do? she sat down.

She had a grievance about the government authority that was the official applicant for the rezoning. A meeting room was packed with folks who opposed the FCDA request.

Under threat of removal (and possible arrest) this member of the public speaking in measured words, without visible anger and using no curse words or obscenities was muzzled and her First Amendment right to voice her grievance during the designated time and place was trampled on.

What do these people in power think a grievance is? Heres a dictionary definition: a real or imagined wrong or other cause for complaint or protest, especially unfair treatment . an official statement of a complaint over something believed to be wrong or unfair a feeling of resentment over something believed to be wrong or unfair.

In other words, it is by definition something negative. And according to the First Amendment of our U.S. Constitution, the mayor and council are obligated to hear that grievance. To speak that grievance is a constitutional right, in clear text and without boundaries.

The only person in that meeting who was out of order out of constitutional order was Mayor Ed Johnson.

But he is not the only one out of order.

The Fayette County Board of Education routinely silences criticism from members of the public. Let a parent bring up a specific grievance about a principal or a school disciplinary problem, and the gavel comes down with a bang.

The Peachtree City Council also dislikes criticism about city personnel or applicants for a zoning change during a public meeting.

Again, who do they think they are that they can routinely set strict limits on what a grievance can be? The First Amendment sets no boundaries on what is a proper, allowable grievance and what grievance is out of order.

I can hear elected officials argue, If we let just any grievance be aired, no telling what will be said and how long we will have to be there. Amen, brothers and sisters, preach that First Amendment! It is your elected privilege to listen to the people who put you in that position.

More about that set aside time that elected officials ordain for the public that elected them. Heres the truth: Most officials dont want to hear it. Thats why they move public comments to near the end of the public meetings, or set strict, timed limits on how long somebody can speak (they have no such limits on their own talk time, though many wish they would), and make speakers sign up before the meeting begins. What an insult!

Two evenings a month, they could make the time to serve the public by simply listening to the public as long as the speakers want to come, let them speak. But, sadly, many elected officials who campaigned for your vote at all hours and for many days once elected would rather you didnt disrupt their twice-a-month evening schedule.

To any attorneys in the audience, I suggest this is a mostly untouched area of First Amendment jurisprudence, ripe for precedents to be adjudicated. Unlike the Second Amendment, the text of the First Amendment is easily understood, without limiting qualifications: To petition the government for a redress of grievances. By definition, you could find a lot of aggrieved citizens.

People have a First Amendment right to tell the government what its doing wrong and to request that the wrong be righted. The biggest wrong is to gavel a member of the public down because the official dislikes the grievance being aired. And to shut them up at the 2-minute or 3-minute mark. In this democratic republic, we are under the impression that we elect public servants, not royalty who hold timed audiences.

With deep respect, I suggest to the mayors and chairpersons running these meetings, Shut up and listen.

[Cal Beverly has been the editor and publisher of The Citizen in Fayette County since 1993.]

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Local elected officials routinely ignore and violate part of 1st Amendment - The Citizen.com

Top 10 First Amendment Cases of the Supreme Court Term – JD Supra

The Supreme Court term that ended today once again showed the power of the First Amendment to shape American life. The court invoked the First Amendment in cases regulating social media platforms, prayer at public schools, state funding of religious schools, campaign finance restrictions, billboard advertisements, and religious exemptions to COVID-19 vaccine mandates.

The court decided three government speech cases, holding that a Christian flag flown outside Bostons City Hall and a coachs public prayers on the 50-yard line after high school football games represented private, not government, speech. In a unanimous decision, the court also held that an elected official had no First Amendment retaliation claim against a government board for censuring him. The boards censure was not a penalty, but its own protected speech.

In two cases, the court also elevated religious liberty rights under the free exercise clause over concerns about the separation of church and state under the establishment clause of the First Amendment. It held that Maine could not discriminate against religious schools by excluding them from a tuition assistance program open to nonsectarian schools. It also abandoned the Lemon test, holding that public schools do not offend the establishment clause by permitting school employees to engage in private, publicly visible prayer on campus.

At the same time, the court signaled that some members were open to weakening First Amendment protections for the media. Three justices would have preliminarily let a Texas law go into effect regulating the content of social media platforms. The court will likely hear a test case of the Texas law and a similar Florida law next term. The court also turned away a challenge to its landmark defamation decision, New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, but Justice Thomas continued to press the court to revisit the precedent.

The courts decisions continue to show the tension between incremental change and more decisive reversals of precedent. The court, for example, declined to recognize an implied claim against federal officials for damages for First Amendment retaliation under Bivens. But it did not join Justice Gorsuchs call to overturn Bivens altogether.

The justices also continue to struggle with how to frame tests to evaluate whether government action violates the First Amendment. The court unanimously ruled against the city of Boston for excluding a Christian flag from a flag-flying program at City Hall, but it split 63 on the test for evaluating whether speech constitutes government speech. Three justices also dissented from a case holding that an off-premise billboard ordinance was not a content-based regulation. The three justices argued that the court had retreated from a stricter, bright-line test for content-based laws set out in Reed v. Town of Gilbert just seven years ago.

Here are summaries of the Supreme Courts major First Amendment decisions this term:

The Supreme Court agreed to keep a preliminary injunction of Texas social media law in place, preventing the law from going into effect pending a full review of the laws constitutionality. The law would prohibit platforms from censoring users based on viewpoint, require procedures for users to appeal content removal, and require disclosures of the social media companies policies.

Three justices, including Justice Kagan, would have let the law take effect now. Justice Alito wrote that the case concerns issues of great importance that will plainly merit this Courts review but concluded that whether the First Amendment challenge is likely to succeed under existing law is quite unclear.

In a 63 opinion written by Justice Gorsuch, the court held that the First Amendments free speech and free exercise clauses protect a high school football coachs right to pray on the 50-yard line of the school football field after a game in a quiet, publicly visible religious observance.

The case arose when high school football coach Joseph Kennedy refused a directive from the Bremerton School District to stop publicly praying with students after games. The school district placed Kennedy on administrative leave and did not renew his contract when he continued to pray after games, and Kennedy sued. The court described Kennedy as engaging in a quiet prayer of thanks while his students were otherwise occupied. But the dissent by Justice Sotomayor included photographs of Kennedy praying with a crowd of students and adults, and described his history of inviting students from the opposing team to pray, leading vocal religious motivational speeches to students after games, and praying in the locker room with the team.

The court held that the school district had violated both his free speech and religious liberty rights by suspending him. The coach was engaged in private speech, not government speech in his capacity as a school employee, by leading the prayers on the 50-yard line after games. The court also held that the school districts tolerance of Kennedys prayers did not violate the establishment clause, and cast aside the courts Lemon test for evaluating whether government acts appear to endorse religion. Instead, Justice Gorsuch wrote that the court should look to historical practices and understandings to evaluate whether conduct offends the establishment clause.

Justice Sotomayor accused the majority of setting aside years of establishment clause precedents and ignoring the coercive effect of the coachs public prayers on students, who may feel social pressure to participate in the coachs prayer circle. [T]he Court sets us further down a perilous path in forcing States to entangle themselves with religion, with all of our rights handing in the balance, Justice Sotomayor wrote. As much as the court protests otherwise, todays decision is no victory for religious liberty.

In a 63 decision, Chief Justice Roberts wrote that the free exercise clause prohibited Maine from discriminating against religious schools by excluding those schools from a tuition assistance program open to nonsectarian schools in rural areas without free-standing public schools.

Because the Maine Constitution requires that every town provide children with free public education, the state offered tuition assistance to private, nonsectarian schools in rural Maine towns lacking the funds and population to support a free public school. Two families who wanted to use the state tuition payments to send their children to Christian schools sued when the state refused to provide the state tuition assistance to the schools.

The court held that Maine had discriminated against religious schools by excluding them from the program. Chief Justice Roberts wrote that Maine could not promote stricter separation of church and state than the Federal Constitution requires while penalizing parents for the free exercise of their religion by denying them tuition payments available to every other parent.

Justice Breyer dissented, explaining that states needed leeway to balance the purpose of the establishment clause to prevent a state religious orthodoxy with the individual religious rights protected by the free exercise clause. Justice Sotomayor was blunter: This Court continues to dismantle the wall of separation between church and state that the Framers fought to build.

The court unanimously held that the city of Boston did not engage in government speech when it let groups raise a flag of their choosing on a city flagpole outside City Hall during community events. Because the city was not itself speaking by letting groups fly flags outside City Hall, it could not discriminate against a Christian flag based on the flags religious viewpoint.

The case arose when the city refused to let a group called Camp Constitution fly a Christian flag as part of an event, involving local clergy, to recognize the contributions of the Christian community in Boston. For years, the city had allowed private groups to fly a flag of their choosing on a flagpole during community events and had never denied a group use of the flagpole or even closely reviewed the flags flown.

Although the court ruled unanimously for the challengers, it split 63 on the proper test to determine whether expression constituted government speech. Writing for the court, Justice Breyer applied a three-part test considering the speechs history, the publics likely perception about who was speaking, and the extent of government control of the speech. The last two factors favored the view that the Christian flag represented private, not government, speech.

Justice Alito disagreed, arguing that the courts test obscures the real question in government-speech cases: whether the government is speaking instead of regulating private expression. He proposed a two-part test. First, Alito would look at whether the speech involved purposeful community of a government message by a person acting within his or her powers to speak for the government. Second, Alito would require the government to establish that it had not abridged the speech of persons acting in a private capacity.

With only Justice Thomas dissenting, the court denied certiorari in a case brought to overturn or limit the Supreme Courts landmark decision in New York Times v. Sullivan. Sullivan protects speech about public figures and officials from defamation lawsuits without proof of actual malice.

Coral Ridge Ministries sued the Southern Poverty Law Center for designating the evangelical Christian group as an anti-LGBT hate group because, among other things, it described homosexuality as lawless, an abomination, and against nature. The Eleventh Circuit held that Coral Ridge had failed to plead actual malice in its lawsuit and affirmed the cases dismissal.

Coral Ridge came to the Supreme Court last year, asking the justices to either reconsider the actual malice standard or limit it to public officials. But the justices turned down that request. Justice Thomas dissented. New York Times and the courts decisions extending it were policy-driven decisions masquerading as constitutional law, he wrote.

The court invalidated a federal law and FEC regulation that prohibited a campaign from using more than $250,000 in contributions made after election night to repay a candidates personal campaign loan. Sen. Ted Cruz loaned his reelection campaign $260,000 and sued when the campaign could not repay him more than $250,000 from post-election contributions.

Chief Justice Roberts wrote that the First Amendment offers the fullest and most urgent protection to political campaigns and that the restrictions inhibited candidates from loaning money to their campaigns, burdening political speech. The court also doubted the governments rationale for the restrictions, claiming it had not proven quid pro quo corruption and that campaign contribution limits already worked to prevent corruption.

Justice Kagan dissented, writing that the court had overstated the laws First Amendment burdens and understated the laws value to prevent corruption value. The law regulated loans, not campaign spending. And the government did not need to prove corruption to regulate what everyone knows to be true people (including politicians) will often do things for money.

The court upheld Austins off-premise billboard ordinance and receded from a bright-line rule for content-based restrictions set out in Reed v. Town of Gilbert. Justice Sotomayor wrote that though the billboard ordinance required a person to read the billboards content to determine whether the billboard advertised an on-premise or off-premise business, the ordinance was actually agnostic as to content. A signs location, rather than its content, mattered most.

Justice Breyer concurred but favored a balancing test weighing a regulations First Amendment harms against the regulatory objectives that it serves.

Justice Thomas wrote a bitter dissent, joined by Justices Gorsuch and Barrett, warning that the court had replaced Reeds bright-line rule with an incoherent and malleable standard that was results-driven and created the potential for invidious discrimination of disfavored subjects.

The court unanimously held that the First Amendment permits a government board to censure a member for his or her actions and that the censure does not create a claim for First Amendment retaliation.

The case arose after the Houston Community College System censured an elected trustee, Dave Wilson, for disrespecting members after Wilson criticized and campaigned against his colleagues, sued the board, and hired a private investigator to look into one of his fellow trustees.

The boards censure constituted the governments own speech, equally protected by the First Amendment as Wilsons speech, Justice Gorsuch wrote for the court.

The court unanimously held that the Constitution does not permit a person to bring a First Amendment retaliation claim for damages against a federal official under Bivens v. Six Unknown Federal Narcotics Agents. Justice Thomas wrote that the court would not enlarge implied constitutional torts where there is any reason to think that Congress might be better equipped to create a damages remedy.

The case occurred after Robert Boule, the owner of the Smugglers Inn on the Canadian border in Washington state, complained that a Border Patrol agent had thrown him to the ground after demanding to see the papers of a Turkish national at the inn. In response, the agent contacted the IRS, triggering an audit, and notified the state that Boules license plate, SMUGLER, referenced illegal activity. Boule sued for First Amendment retaliation under Bivens.

The court did not recognize a Bivens claim for First Amendment retaliation but held back from overruling Bivens entirely, as Justice Gorsuch urged the court to do in a concurrence that no other justice joined. I would only take the next step and acknowledge explicitly what the court leaves barely implicit, Justice Gorsuch wrote. [W]e should exercise the truer modesty of ceding an ill-gotten gain, and forthrightly return the power to create new causes of action to the peoples representatives in Congress.

Last term, after Justice Amy Coney Barrett joined the court, the court, in a series of orders on the emergency or shadow docket, prevented California and New York from enforcing limits on, among other things, the size of religious services and indoor gatherings. The court sided with challengers seeking to block lockdown restrictions to slow the spread of COVID-19.

But this term, a majority of the court voted for the government in emergency applications involving religious challenges to COVID-19 vaccine mandates.

In two New York cases, We the Patriots USA Inc. v. Hochul and Dr. A v. Hochul, the court declined to enjoin a regulation requiring all health care workers to get the COVID-19 vaccine regardless of religious objections.

The challengers asserted they could not receive the vaccines, which they said were developed with decades-old aborted fetal cells, without violating their religious beliefs. A different group also challenged the rule for allowing a medical exemption, but not a religious exemption. Justices Thomas, Alito, and Gorsuch would have granted injunctive relief in both cases.

In Austin v. U.S. Navy Seals 1-26, the court blocked an injunction against a Department of Defense rule requiring all active-duty personnel to get the COVID-19 vaccine. A group of Navy Seals challenged the rule on religious grounds. Justices Thomas, Alito, and Gorsuch would have allowed the injunction against the regulation to go into effect.

David Karp is an appellate lawyer at Carlton Fields and moderator of the Florida Bars Annual Seminar on the First Amendment cases of the U.S. Supreme Court term.

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Top 10 First Amendment Cases of the Supreme Court Term - JD Supra