Joined February 2021
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"From George Washington to the Hebrew Congregation in Newport, Rhode Island, 18 August 1790" Excerpt — "For happily the Government of the United States, which gives to bigotry no sanction, to persecution no assistance... May the Children of the Stock of Abraham, who dwell in this land, continue to merit and enjoy the good will of the other Inhabitants; while every one shall sit in safety under his own vine and figtree, and there shall be none to make him afraid..." founders.archives.gov/docume…
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I first encountered the work of Gordon Wood as an undergrad history major. I thought then that "The Radicalism of the American Revolution" was a tour de force — and its reputation with me has only improved over time. Over the years, I purchased every single Gordon Wood book. Many years ago, when I was a young husband and new dad, Gordon Wood came to the Mall in Washington DC as part of a book festival. I brought several books for him to sign. I dropped off my wife with our young child (and the pile of books) and then searched for parking. Dear reader, I had to park very far away. So far, in fact, that Gordon Wood's window for signing books had long since passed. I finally found my wife and young child with Gordon Wood at an empty author's booth. He not only had signed all my books, but he had stayed well past his time to leave and graciously chatted with my wife, who had implored him to wait **just a little longer** so that I could meet him. He was so kind to my wife, our child, and — when I finally showed up — me. Imagine my delight earlier this year when Gordon Wood agreed to be filmed for The Federalist Society @FedSoc for two days, to talk about America250 and the Founding (in particular, the path from the Declaration to the Constitution) and also to talk about his own life and career as a historian. I was honored to witness my good friends @kurtlash1 and Steve Calabresi interview Gordon Wood. ... and then Gordon Wood stayed long past the agreed upon filming time to talk to me about his life and our shared love of America's Founding. We lost a brilliant man today. We also lost a good man, a kind man. Too often, that Venn Diagram of brilliance and kindness does not overlap. It did with Gordon Wood. May God receive his soul, and may his memory be a blessing.
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Sheldon Gilbert retweeted
Like the rest of the country, young students and professionals in the Federalist Society network are shocked and in mourning over the murder of Charlie Kirk at a campus debate in Utah on September 10. Please read these two tributes to Charlie Kirk from Julien Mourad—a current student at Ave Maria University who is both a Federalist Society chapter president at his school and a Vice President of his schools Turning Point chapter—and Rory Smist, a 2025 graduate of Mount St. Mary's University who is now on the staff of the Federalist Society.
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"My Grandfather's Son" is one of my favorite memoirs. Congratulations Justice Thomas!
🧵Today, Justice Clarence Thomas became the 6th longest serving Justice in our nation’s history, sharing this distinction today with one of our greatest Justices who is also a guiding light for Justice Thomas, Justice John Marshall Harlan. Justice Harlan’s solo dissent from a shameful majority opinion in Plessy v. Ferguson in 1896 establishing the racist “separate but equal” rule set him apart as a man of courage and first principles. As Justice Thomas wrote in his magisterial concurrence in the 2023 Harvard case: “Only one Member of the Court adhered to the equality principle; Justice Harlan, standing alone in dissent, wrote: ‘Our constitution is color-blind, and neither knows nor tolerates classes among citizens. In respect of civil rights, all citizens are equal before the law.’ Id., at 559. Though Justice Harlan rightly predicted that Plessy would, ‘in time, prove to be quite as pernicious as the decision made . . . in the Dred Scott case,’ the Plessy rule persisted for over a half century. Ibid. While it remained in force, Jim Crow laws prohibiting blacks from entering or utilizing public facilities such as schools, libraries, restaurants, and theaters sprang up across the South. This Court rightly reversed course in Brown v. Board of Education. The Brown appellants—those challenging segregated schools—embraced the equality principle, arguing that ‘[a] racial criterion is a constitutional irrelevance, and is not saved from condemnation even though dictated by a sincere desire to avoid the possibility of violence or race friction.’” Following the courageous example of Justice Harlan, Justice Thomas has been the most forceful advocate for the Court to follow the Constitution’s command that the use of race is never permissible - that the Constitution, in Justice Harlan’s words, is “color blind.” It has been a long road on this issue since Justice Thomas first arrived on the Court on October 23, 1991, and he has written many compelling dissents and concurrences, including his powerful Grutter dissent in 2003, all of which laid the groundwork for the Supreme Court to arrive at its superb holding in the 2023 Harvard case striking down the use of race in college admissions. Justice Thomas’ 60 page concurrence in the Harvard case is a tour de force for the ages (link below). It’s worth celebrating when Justice Clarence Thomas and Justice John Marshall Harlan share the exact number of days of years of service on the Supreme Court (12, 360 days). Learn more about Justice Thomas’s inspiring life from being born into abject poverty in the segregated south to becoming our greatest Justice by watching the documentary, Created Equal: Clarence Thomas in His Own Words or reading his memoirs, My Grandfather’s Son. (links below)
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Sheldon Gilbert retweeted
As we approach the 250th anniversary of the Founding of the United States in 2026, the Federalist Society will be launching a year-long series marking this historic milestone. Through events, programming, and multimedia, we’ll celebrate the ideas and figures that defined our constitutional framework. Find out more at fedsoc.org/250
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The Supreme Court's recent Mahmoud case, about parental rights in education, cites a 1972 case called Wisconsin v. Yoder about Amish parents' challenge to a school truancy law. If you want to learn about the "case behind the case," check out this great short film by the @FedSoc team.
An Amish rebellion against public school laws in 1972 reshaped religious freedom in America. Now, that same case is influencing a new Supreme Court showdown: Mahmoud v. Taylor. Learn the story of Wisconsin v. Yoder in our new film "The Amish Exception."
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So delighted to see my former boss* Professor Bob Cottrol receive the Georgetown Center for the Constitution's prestigious Thomas M. Cooley book prize for his joint work on the history of the Second Amendment. @GUConstitution @RandyEBarnett @shbarclay *I was his Research Assistant in law school.
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With Bob Cottrol, standing next to the Bill of Rights at the National Archives
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Sheldon Gilbert retweeted
On April 19th, 250 years ago, "the shot heard round the world" rang out, marking the start of the American Revolutionary War and lighting the spark that would lead to independence for a new nation. To commemorate this crucial day in American history, the Federalist Society is proud to present a conversation between renowned historians Gordon Wood and Robert Gross, as they discuss the enduring relevance of this day in our upcoming short film "Let It Begin Here: The Battles of Lexington and Concord. 🇺🇸 Film coming this April!
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575 days until the United States Semiquincentennial. America's 250th birthday party better be lit. 🔥
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Sheldon Gilbert retweeted
Happy Thanksgiving. Remember: judges aren’t back in court until tomorrow morning for first appearances.
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i feel this energy
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using the final olive garden breadstick to alert my server across the room that I need another basket

ALT Giving The Sign Timothee Chalamet GIF

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"I ordered the same meal from Olive Garden and Carrabba's, and the winner blew me away with generous portions" @westminsterabby @olivegarden #TheOG insider.com/olive-garden-vs-…
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Happy Yorktown Victory Day, Virginians! § 2.2-3300 law.lis.virginia.gov/vacodef…

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As a kid no one tells you "Where's Waldo" is training for the high-stakes grown-up versions, "Where's That Sound Coming From," "Where's That Smell Coming From," and my favorite, "Where's Your Shoe This Is Why I Tell You to Put Them Away We're Going to Be Late Again" #parenting
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ALT Its All Good Doug Emhoff GIF

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Sheldon Gilbert retweeted
Give all the encouragement you can to a young word-lover. This is one page of my multivolume vocabulary notebook—all written out by hand when I was 15 to 19. Tell kids not to be verecund about it! #vocabulary #words #language #logophiles @sheldongilbert
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This is why @IJ wins so many cases.
Replying to @SheldonGilbert
@SheldonGilbert, litigation lunch from Olive Garden. Just trying to make you regret leaving.
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Got my copy of @IJSanders new book, Baby Ninth Amendments. I guess that makes the US Constitution's 9th Amendment the Daddy Ninth Amendment?? In which case, happy father's day, Daddy Ninth!
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