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Legal analysis of Jay-Z's '99 Problems'

This should be required reading for street smarts class. So many people incriminate themselves by offering too much information or making bad situations worse.


I think of the song riding dirty as well.
 
good ass read, something interesting about Jay Z is he doesn't write his songs. He just goes into the studio with ideas in his head and whatever comes out becomes a song. Thje verse that was analyzed here's pretty damn deep for not having been written.


Maybe next he'll analyze Cookie Monster's version http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oC8bhN7hzSk - NSFW

i got 99 problems but a cookie ain't one lol.
 
You're right. Walls of text are super easy to read. That's why newspapers and magazines have all stopped using columned designs for their publications.
Of course, it's "too hard" to be even-handed, and the fact that the world is unfair is proof that it's the right way.

Maybe if we subsidized pages with lots of text on them, and charged more for all-white pages, that would help society slowly adjust to a more equitable situation.
 
I am surprised the editors of that Law Review failed to adequately check the article.

There are inaccuracies when it comes to the laws of two party consent states.

In the majority/almost all of the 13 two party consent states, the public exception(no expectation of privacy) applies to police performing their public duty/pulling you over. Specifically in Cali you may record a police officer when they are on duty, so long as you do not interfere with their duties. A few of the 13 states require you to openly record them/tell them they are being recorded, but you do not need their consent.
 
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