Sunday, June 28, 2026

Dear ChatGPT: What is a mandatory arbitration clause?

Besides something you often have to agree to, but limits your access to the courts. 

- Click here for the full answer.
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A mandatory arbitration clause is a contract provision that requires the parties to resolve certain disputes through arbitration rather than by filing a lawsuit in court. These clauses are common in employment agreements, consumer contracts, credit card agreements, cell phone contracts, software terms of service, nursing home admissions, franchise agreements, and many commercial contracts.

How arbitration works

Arbitration is a private dispute-resolution process in which a neutral third party (the arbitrator) hears evidence and issues a decision.

The typical process is:
- A dispute arises.
- Instead of filing a lawsuit, one party demands arbitration.
- An arbitrator (or panel of arbitrators) is selected.
- The parties exchange evidence, usually through more limited discovery than in court.
- A hearing is held.
- The arbitrator issues an award.
- Courts generally enforce the award and have only limited authority to overturn it.

Why it is called "mandatory"

The clause is "mandatory" because the parties agree in advance that arbitration will be the exclusive forum for resolving covered disputes.

For example: "Any dispute arising out of or relating to this Agreement shall be resolved exclusively by binding arbitration."

If such a clause is enforceable, a court will usually dismiss or stay a lawsuit and require the parties to arbitrate instead.

Common features
- Mandatory arbitration clauses often specify:
- whether arbitration is binding or non-binding (most are binding)
- which disputes are covered
- where arbitration will occur
- which arbitration organization will administer the case
- how arbitrators are selected
- who pays the arbitration costs
- what law governs the dispute
- whether appeals are permitted (usually they are very limited)

Many also contain class-action waivers, preventing consumers or employees from participating in class-action lawsuits.

Advantages

Supporters argue arbitration offers several benefits:
- Faster resolution
- Lower litigation costs
- Greater privacy
- Flexible procedures
- Decision-makers with subject-matter expertise
- Less formal than court

Businesses often argue that arbitration reduces legal expenses and discourages frivolous litigation.

Criticisms

Critics argue mandatory arbitration can:
- Limit access to the courts
- Restrict discovery
- Make appeals extremely difficult
- Favor repeat corporate participants over one-time consumers or employees
- Keep disputes confidential, reducing public accountability
- Prevent class actions, making small-value claims economically impractical

Whether arbitration is actually less expensive than litigation varies depending on the type of dispute and the arbitration provider's fee structure.

Legal basis in the United States

The principal federal law is the Federal Arbitration Act (FAA), enacted in 1925.

The FAA establishes a strong federal policy favoring enforcement of arbitration agreements. It generally requires courts to enforce valid arbitration clauses according to their terms, subject to traditional contract defenses such as fraud, duress, or unconscionability.
Important Supreme Court decisions

Several Supreme Court decisions have expanded enforcement of arbitration agreements:

 AT&T Mobility LLC v. Concepcion held that the FAA generally preempts state laws invalidating arbitration agreements because they prohibit class actions.

 American Express Co. v. Italian Colors Restaurant upheld class-action waivers even when individual arbitration might be economically impractical.

 Epic Systems Corp. v. Lewis held that employers may require employees to resolve workplace disputes through individual arbitration rather than class or collective actions.

 Lamps Plus, Inc. v. Varela ruled that class arbitration generally cannot be compelled unless the contract clearly authorizes it.

Limits on mandatory arbitration

Not every dispute can be forced into arbitration. Congress has created exceptions in some areas. For example, the Ending Forced Arbitration of Sexual Assault and Sexual Harassment Act of 2021 allows individuals alleging sexual assault or sexual harassment to choose whether to pursue their claims in court rather than being compelled to arbitrate under a pre-dispute arbitration agreement.

Courts may also refuse to enforce an arbitration clause if it is invalid under generally applicable contract principles, such as fraud, duress, or unconscionability.
Example

Suppose you sign a credit card agreement containing this provision: "Any claim arising from this agreement shall be resolved by binding arbitration. Neither party may participate in a class action."

If a dispute later arises over fees or billing practices, the issuer may ask the court to compel arbitration. If the clause is enforceable, the court will usually require the dispute to proceed before an arbitrator instead of a judge or jury, and you generally would have to pursue your claim individually rather than as part of a class action.

In short, a mandatory arbitration clause is an advance agreement to resolve specified disputes through a private arbitration process rather than through litigation in court. Under current U.S. law, such clauses are generally enforceable, though they remain the subject of ongoing legal and policy debate regarding consumer protection, employment rights, and access to the judicial system.

Today's Clips - 6.26.2026

- Click here

Some highlights: 

Editorial: The real problem with the Texas schools curriculum discussion.

Article: What to know about the push to make Bible stories required reading in Texas public schools.

Article: Texas might require Bible readings in schools. Some religious scholars fear the consequences.

Article: John Cornyn says Donald Trump needs reality check on SAVE Act.

Article: NRG Energy opens first power plant in over a decade with funding from the Texas Energy Fund.

Guest Commentary: Guest commentary: Property taxes aren't bad, they protect us.

Among others

Tuesday, June 23, 2026

Dear AI Overview: What does the future of agriculture in Texas hold?

The future of Texas agriculture is a balancing act of technological innovation and intense strain on natural resources. While producers face threats from urban sprawl, water scarcity, and extreme weather, the industry is combating this by embracing AI-driven precision farming, automated robotics, and a push for conservation easements. [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]

Several key drivers will define the state's agricultural landscape in the coming decades:

1. Land & Development Pressures

Rapid Urbanization: Texas contains the highest concentration of threatened agricultural land in the country, with millions of acres at risk of being converted to real estate developments or industrial sites by 2040. [1]

Energy & Data Center Booms: Sprawling solar, wind, and massive data center projects are increasingly encroaching on productive family farms, sparking debates over grid reliability and land use. [1, 2, 3]
Preservation Efforts: Organizations like the Texas Agricultural Land Trust are utilizing voluntary conservation easements to keep working lands in production and out of developers' hands. [1]

2. Technology & Innovation

Precision Agriculture: Through research from institutions like Texas A&M AgriLife, producers are adopting AI-powered tools and automated greenhouse robotics to boost efficiency and safeguard food security. [1, 2]

Biotechnology: Advanced genetics and drought-resistant crop varieties are being tailored to survive the state's increasingly volatile weather patterns and water shortages. [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]

3. Resource Management

Water Scarcity: Extended droughts and La NiƱa climate patterns create massive uncertainty for major row crops like cotton, making water conservation and efficient irrigation central to long-term farm viability. [1, 2]

Policy Shifts: State leaders and advocacy groups are pushing to protect agricultural strongholds through concepts like "Agriculture Freedom Zones," aiming to establish responsible guardrails that prioritize food production over permanent industrial land conversion. [1, 2]

4. Generational Transition

Aging Demographics: The vast majority of Texas farms are family-owned, but the economic stressors of weather disasters and high input costs are making it difficult for younger generations to take over. [1, 2, 3]

Next-Gen Education: The focus is shifting heavily toward cross-training young producers to be business-minded, tech-savvy, and effective advocates for the industry.
- AGRICULTURE CODE: TITLE 1. GENERAL PROVISIONS: CHAPTER 2. STATE AGRICULTURAL POLICY.

Opinion: For the Future of Texas, Pause Data Centers.

Texas Legislature: Bills By SubjectGeneral Subject Index: Agriculture.

- The Texas Bison Association.

Opinions for Tuesday, June 23.

New York’s primary went from celebrity contest to AI proxy war. See live election results.

New York's 12th Congressional District.

Tuesday, June 16, 2026

Dear ChatGPT:

 - What were the top national political stories from June 1 - June 15, 2026?

1. Immigration Enforcement Funding and Border Policy
2. Supreme Court End-of-Term Decisions
3. Trump Administration vs. Democratic Governors
4. Executive Power and Federal Agency Control
5. Congressional Polarization and Funding Battles
6. Federal Response to Protests and Civil Disorder
7. Foreign Policy and Domestic Politics


What were the top political stories in Texas from June 1 - June 15, 2026?

1. Texas Congressional Redistricting and the 2026 Elections
2. Fallout from the 89th Legislature's Major Policy Changes
3. Governor Abbott's New Focus on Data Centers and the Electric Grid
4. Texas Republican Convention in Houston
5. Election Administration and Voting-Rights Disputes
6. Rising Concern About Water and Infrastructure Policy
7. Early Positioning for the 2026 Midterm Elections


What were the top political stories from the Houston area from June 1 - June 15, 2026?

1. Houston City Council Approves Whitmire's $7.5 Billion Budget
2. The New Houston Trash Fee Controversy
3. Harris County Flood-Control Projects Face Delays and Funding Questions
4. Judicial Accountability Questions in Harris County
5. Houston's World Cup Preparations Become a Political Issue
6. Harris County Public Health Expansion in Third Ward
7. Houston Park Investment Proposal
8. Ongoing Fallout from the 2026 Primary Elections
9. Investigation Into a Whitmire Adviser
10. Houston-Area Flooding and Emergency Response

From the Miller Center: James Madison: Life Before the Presidency

In Federalist 10 James Madison argues that people are driven by personal interests. 

What were his? 

- Here's one way to find out.


Land was the lifeblood of the Madison family wealth, and James would come to consider it the lifeblood of the nation. In 1722, James Taylor II (1674−1729) patented 13,500 acres in the Piedmont of central Virginia. He was one of twelve men to survey the region with Governor Alexander Spotswood, a group known as the Knights of the Golden Horseshoe, a mark of Taylor’s affluence. One year later, Taylor’s daughter Frances and her husband, Ambrose Madison, settled on almost 3,000 acres of the land. Like most affluent Virginians, they planted tobacco, a crop that wreaks havoc on the soil’s nutrients and necessitates continual expansion to new, fertile grounds.

In Virginia, owning vast acreage went hand-in-hand with enslaving men, women, and children to work the land and run the plantation. Ambrose and Frances’s son, James Madison Sr., and his wife Eleanor (Nelly) Conway grew the family land holdings, which expanded slavery on their plantation. As slaveholding became a mark of wealth in the colony, the Madisons’ dozens of enslaved laborers, who helped build the fine brick house called Montpelier, marked them among the most prominent families in Virginia and the most prominent of Orange County.

James Madison Jr. was born on March 16, 1751, in Port Conway, Virginia, and spent his early years at a farm house in Orange county, Virginia. Montpelier was completed when he was nine years old, one year after he inherited an enslaved infant held in trust by his father. For the young Madison, the social order of master and slave seemed as natural as parent and child.

For 6.16.2026

Here are the PACs spending big on Texas statewide and legislative elections.

- HillCo Partners.

- Oyez: Buckley v. Valeo.

- AISD 2024 Bond Proposal

What Does the Constitution Say About the Right to Vote?

 

Monday, June 15, 2026

2305

Elections

US Constitution
- Article 1
- - Section 2
- - Section 3
- - Section 4
- Article 2
- - Section 1
- - Section 2
- Article 3
- - Section 1

U.S. Code 
- Title 2 - The Congress
- Title 3 - The President
- Title 5 - Government Organization and Employees
- Title 28 - Judiciary and Judicial Procedure

Texas Constitution
- Article 3
- Article 4
- Article 5
- Article 6

Texas Election Code

City of Pearland Charter.
- Article 5
- Article 6

Brazoria County
- Brazoria County Elected Officials.
- Elections and Voter Registration.

Alvin Independent School District.

Alvin Community College Board of Regents.



Politics

Federalist 10
First Amendment: Political Freedoms
- Speech
- Press
- Assembly
- Petition

How do Interests Organize?

Interest Groups

Political Parties

Independent Expenditure Organizations

Interests over American History.

Tuesday, June 9, 2026

Wednesday, June 3, 2026

From Scotusblog: The Roberts court’s record on the First Amendment

For our look at the U.S. Bill of Rights, as well as the impact of the Roberts Court after the addition of Amy Coney Barrett.

- Click here for the article.

The Roberts court is often treated as especially protective of the First Amendment. It is true that the court has reshaped free speech law across such areas as campaign finance, student speech, government speech, and online platforms. It has also transformed religious doctrine through expanding the free exercise clause and the establishment clause, and in several religious-accommodation cases.

But these two First Amendment stories are not the same. The court’s speech cases are often favorable towards speakers, but speech claimants do not win uniformly. Religion is more consistent. Across the Roberts court, religious claimants have done unusually well. That pattern predates Justice Amy Coney Barrett, but it has become sharper since she joined the court. And when cases sit at the boundary between speech and religion, the claimant often fares especially well.

The takeaway is that the Roberts court, particularly post-Barrett, is not simply pro–First Amendment. It is more precise to say that the court is often pro-speech, strongly pro-religion, and most consistent when speech overlaps with religious identity or conscience. That distinction is fundamental for understanding the court’s current direction, including its decision to hear the case of St. Mary Catholic Parish v. Roy, which challenges long-standing religious precedent.

- What is the Roberts Court?

From Governing: How AI, Cameras and Drones Are Reshaping Local Policing

Think of how this impacts the 4th Amendment.

- Click here for the article.  


. . . Raven and the Flock cameras are part of Flock Safety, a security technologies company based in Georgia that uses hardware powered by artificial intelligence to build surveillance networks that combine automated license plate readers, video cameras and audio detection to help solve and deter crimes.

Cities all over Idaho and across the country are using an array of mass surveillance programs, such as Flock cameras, AI-equipped license plate readers, audio detection systems for identifying gunfire and facial recognition software. The rollout of some of these technologies has been quick, and departments are beginning to confront the risks of abusing the technology and changing the way laws are enforced. Other Idaho police departments, such as Boise, Nampa, Twin Falls, and Jerome County, use the same Flock camera systems. The Meridian Police Department uses a similar technology for license plate reader cameras.

Such AI tools are quickly becoming a standard part of the policing toolkit. As of 2025, nearly 18,000 state and local law enforcement agencies across the country were actively using AI to assist them, according to a report by the National Council of State Legislatures. About 28% of them use Flock, according to reporting by NPR and Flock Safety’s own website.

But the use of AI, Flock cameras in particular, has come under intense criticism because of concerns about privacy and data sharing.

“We are always hesitant to allow people to forfeit their rights to privacy, their right to due process, and any other individual freedoms in the name of ‘community security,’” Rebecca De LĆ©on, communications director for the ACLU of Idaho told the Statesman via email. “But in the case of Flock cameras, it has been proven that their use goes far beyond what initially justified them.”