New Conference Guest: Judge Napolitano. https://vivabarneslaw.locals.com/post/7895049/1776-law-center-conference-schedule
I. THE INTRODUCTION
A. Art of the Week
- Venezia. The Atlantis-like ancient city with its bridges over canals, long boats mastered by the gondolier, the city whose balls made masquarade masks famous, where artisans of show-making spend a whole day to make a single show of artistic wonderment, a hidden restaurant in a corner alley uncovers the best Italian cuisine, and the city whispers of its centuries of stories from its cathedrals and water-hugging mansions of Casanova’s fame.
B. Wisdom of the Week
- You’re never out of the race.
C. Cultural Recommendation of the Week
- Massie grassroots documentary.
D. Appearances
- LIVE What Are the Odds w/ Baris
II. THE EVIDENCE
A. Barnes Library: Weekly Curated Articles
- Economics: Yield Curve Frowns.
- Politics: RFK challenges SSRIs. https://unherd.com/newsroom/rjk-jrs-anti-ssri-campaign-is-long-overdue/?edition=us
- World: China profits from lost Iran War. https://www.chathamhouse.org/2026/05/china-will-benefit-iran-war-regardless-any-deal-between-trump-and-tehran
- Culture: Angel Studio’s Animal Farm mistake.
- Law: Waiting on SCOTUS. https://rollcall.com/2026/05/06/supreme-court-yet-to-decide-on-election-day-trump-firings/
*Bonus: Shitfing battlefields. https://weapons.substack.com/p/drones-and-ancient-revolutions-in
B. Homework: Sunday Show Cases
- Malpractice. https://www.foxnews.com/us/iowa-woman-died-hernia-repair-nurses-dismissed-painful-post-surgery-symptoms-lawsuit
- Gates fake meat goes to court. https://texasagriculture.gov/News-Events/Article/10760/Opinion-Fake-Meat-Real-Trouble-Texas-Won-t-Bow-to-Billionaires-or-Bureaucrats
- DOJ sues Commierado for 2A.https://www.justice.gov/crt/media/1439591/dl
- DOJ promises action against Big Ag. https://www.fooddive.com/news/beef-prices-trump-antitrust-doj-investigation/819331/
- Democrat raided. https://courthousenews.com/fbi-raids-democratic-virginia-state-senators-office/
- Insider trading indictment. https://www.justice.gov/d9/2026-05/usa_v._fejal_et_al_-_indictment.pdf
- Insider trading investigation https://seekingalpha.com/news/4588393-doj-probes-26b-in-war-linked-oil-trades---report
- Pay for play investigations https://www.cbsnews.com/news/trump-pardon-recipients-democrats-congressional-investigation-pay-to-play/
- EU: must allow welfare for migrants. https://www.courthousenews.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/kh-inps-cjeu-judgment.pdf
- DEI may lose, even in Twin Cities. https://courthousenews.com/minneapolis-public-schools-struggles-in-trump-suit-over-dei-policy/
- China spies on trial. https://courthousenews.com/feds-describe-global-network-of-chinese-police-stations-at-nyc-spy-trial-opening/
- Tiger’s DUI: Implied Consent Constitutionality Questions. https://scholarlycommons.law.emory.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1401&context=elj
*Bonus: Cop shooting escapes liability. https://courthousenews.com/jury-finds-la-not-liable-for-police-shooting-of-14-year-old-girl/
**Bonus: Marilyn Monroe’s home historic. https://www.courthousenews.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/milstein-vs-la-court-order.pdf
***Bonus: Fake discount class. https://www.courthousenews.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/Shein-Services-class-action.pdf
C. Deep Dive: The Economy
- Stock Market & Commodities:
- AI Bubble & Capital Shift
- Housing
- Gold’s future. https://substack.com/inbox/post/196409142
- Inflation expectations. https://www.zerohedge.com/economics/inflation-expectations-jump-3-year-high-financial-pessimism-surges-ny-fed-survey
*Bonus: Consumer-driven weakness. https://www.americanbanker.com/opinion/the-myth-of-the-resilient-consumer
D. Best of the Board
- Beauty. https://vivabarneslaw.locals.com/post/7910121/church-of-st-mary-and-st-finnan-glenfinnan-scotland
- Debate. https://vivabarneslaw.locals.com/post/7892823/board-poll-discussion-trumps-mental-state
- Well-spoken. https://vivabarneslaw.locals.com/post/7909915/re-the-growing-authoritarianism-on-the-right-or-in-general-discussed-in-last-nights-bwb-whe
- All politics is local. https://vivabarneslaw.locals.com/post/7910058/little-rock-township-is-one-of-the-first-townships-in-the-u-s-to-require-a-public-vote-on-data-cent
- The bloody midterms. https://vivabarneslaw.locals.com/post/7909985/the-bloody-midterms-of-26-repost-from-original-on-people-s-pundit-locals-this-mid-term-is-g
*Bonus: Viva rescues baby ducks. https://vivabarneslaw.locals.com/post/7905472/operation-baby-duck-rescue
III. THE CLOSING ARGUMENT: Constitution Masterclass -- The 30,000 Cap
- Article I, Section 2, Clause 3 provides: “The Number of Representatives shall not exceed one for every thirty Thousand, but each State shall have at least one Representative.” Interpretations clash: was this intended to impose a cap on the number of people a member of the House could represent, or the number of Representatives that could ever be in the House? Equally, who can enforce the rights of Section 2 as applied to Representatives?
- Congress capped the number of representatives by the Permanent Apportionment Act of June 18, 1929, and has not changed it since. A 1941 federal law provided the means to assign seats after the Census. States contested this when it lost a seat after the 1990 census due to this cap. The Supreme Court acknowledged this was not a question submitted exclusively to the Legislative branch as a “political question” beyond its jurisdiction to resolve. Thus, the question turns to the import and intent of the 30,000 rule — is it a cap on the number of representatives or is it a ceiling on the number of people represented?
- The phraseology can be read either way — that the restaint is on the “number of” Representatives in a ratio to the population rather than the population size represented by the District; or that the ratio intends a cap on the number of people represented by each representative. Linguistically, the former argument holds more sway; historically and philosophically, the latter argument proffers more persuasive evidence.
- If we see it as sufficiently ambigious to turn to the Constitutional record, we find that the ratio of the house to the population was intended to be close to the people at a size no more than 30,000 people, reflected in the papers of the Founding Fathers themselves.
- Indeed, the controversy over this language almost sunk the Constitution itself, despite the supporters arguing in Federalist Papers throughout that this was a minimum of people to be represented not merely a cap on the number of representatives in the House. So much so, that the very first amendment ever proposed was to clarify this point: that the minimum number of representatives must be proportional to the population in a strict ratio. Due to an editing error as passed by Congress, the amendment never passed, though mostly it faded as the Founding generation protected the intended ratio in fact.
- The best plaintiff to seek such a relief would likely be a state without representation due to the absence of this maximum number of people per representative, given the prior case-law on the subject, or, of course, Congress itself could remedy the problem all by itself.
