1) Extemporaneous speaking is hard.
2) I sure would hate to see my own conversations transcribed for the world to read.
3) If even the most brilliant lawyers stumble over their words so often, maybe people should give George Bush a little slack.
UPDATE: A couple of examples to show what I mean:
Question from a Justice on p. 7 of the transcript:
Do -- do we have a case in which we say that a -- a civil scheme -- I -- I suppose there are some criminal remedies here, but let's just think about this as a civil scheme, that a civil scheme of this type is so burdensome, so extensive, that it chills speech and is therefore invalid? I --- I ---And a followup question:
We -- we have plenty of criminal cases that the criminal laws are either vague or overly broad and that they chill speech.
From Laurence Tribe, p. 8 of the transcript:
I mean, the central meaning of New York Times v. Sullivan and Gertz and, you know, and Time v. Hill is that even when you have someone who is harmed, reputational harm, concrete harm, so that the regulation of speech is simply ancillary to vindicating tangible interest, even there the chilling effect is so great that even though there's no positive value in false statements you have to put a burden --- it's a matter of public interest.
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