01
The headline
Start with a current event, major case, law, or campus issue people are debating.
Elliot's Bench
Legal analysis for students
Headlines, translated into legal reasoning
Named for the judge's bench, Elliot's Bench helps college students understand the law underneath political headlines, major cases, and public controversies by showing the strongest arguments on each side and where the disagreement actually turns.
Latest story
Constitutional LawA student-focused analysis of speech rights, campus safety, and how one First Amendment framework can support competing legal arguments.
What this is
Bench Brief No. 001The goal is simple: take issues people are already arguing about and explain the law, the strongest left and right arguments, and what readers should understand before forming an opinion.
01
Start with a current event, major case, law, or campus issue people are debating.
02
Read the strongest version of each side before reducing the issue to politics.
03
Find the rule, fact, precedent, or interpretation that decides the legal fight.
Not hot takes
Not law school jargon
Not one side only
Start reading
Constitutional Law
A sample post showing how Elliot's Bench can frame a polarized issue without turning it into a political performance.