Maine Lobsterman Asks the Supreme Court To Strike Down a Rule Allowing the Government To Track His Boat 24/7
Source: Reason.com · Bias: Center Right
Summary
The case could give the Court a chance to clarify what a "closely regulated" business is and what constitutional protections it enjoys.
Related Coverage
- Trump Scores Appeals Court Victory in Battle Over National Park Historical Displays (Right — RedState)
- Lawfare: Kangaroo court picks fight with state’s conservative attorney general (Far Right — WorldNetDaily)
- UPDATE: Louisiana Supreme Court Temporarily Blocks Politically Motivated Indictment Against AG Liz Murrill (Far Right — The Gateway Pundit)
- Iran’s supreme leader bails on first day of late dad’s funeral ceremonies (Right — New York Post)
- Louisiana court halts criminal indictment against state attorney general (Center Left — US news | The Guardian)
- Some Thoughts on the Court's Opinion(s) in the Birthright Citizenship Case (Center Right — Reason.com)
- Dissecting the Supreme Court's Scary 'Birthright' Betrayal (Center Right — RealClearPolitics - Homepage)
- The Supreme Court ruled seven years ago. Taxpayers are still paying the price (Center Right — Washington Examiner)
Daily Analysis
Read the full Parallax Pulse for March 29, 2026 — an AI-powered analysis of how Left and Right media covered the biggest stories this day.
More Headlines From March 29, 2026
- Booker on Trump paying TSA: ‘Why didn’t he do this weeks ago’ (Center)
- Rand Paul on being a Republican willing to check the president on various policies (Center)
- WATCH: Senator Chris Van Hollen CALLED OUT by Leftist ABC Host for Lying About Defunding Homeland Security in Brutal Exchange (Far Right)
- Zelenskyy: Russia Took Images of US Air Base Before Iran Strike (Center Left)
- Scale of carnage at LA’s ‘No Kings’ protest laid bare — as sinister past of ‘Statue of Liberty lady’ revealed (Right)






