Today’s guest is Billy Binion, who joined Reason’s staff in 2019 after stints at an opera company (!) and as a contractor for NATO (!!). He has written blockbuster stories about the abuse of power by cops and courts, and he just produced an incredible documentary about a citizen journalist in Laredo, Texas, who sued the city after they arrested her for reporting on a couple of controversial local stories. It’s a case that could have major First Amendment implications for independent reporters.
Nick Gillespie talks with Binion about what drives his interests in such topics as civil asset forfeiture, SWAT teams run amok, and people who get arrested after using unlicensed guns to ward off would-be killers. They discuss how, contrary to most news accounts, today’s Supreme Court is less polarized than the country it serves. And they also talk about how Binion’s time living in California and Texas back to back gives him a distinct perspective on blue and red America—and insight into what sort of government governs better, if not quite best.
0:00- Ad: St John’s College
1:17- Introduction
2:24- Priscilla Villarreal documentary
9:55- James O’Keefe
14:56- Qualified immunity & absolute immunity
21:08- Charles Foehner self defense/gun possession case
23:16- LaShawn Craig self defense case
25:20- Dexter Taylor ‘ghost guns’ case
28:38- Civil liberties shouldn’t be granted based on class
33:46- SWAT damage cases
42:38- Is policing getting better or worse?
46:18- Binion’s background
49:48- Are the arts politically homogenous?
53:04- Being disillusioned by Los Angeles
57:08- Leaving California for Texas
1:01:41- Finding libertarianism
1:04:49- The Supreme Court is not ‘radical’
1:09:08- The complicated story is more interesting
Today’s sponsors:
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