except, reading one paragraph into the article, this is not about charging the public to read the law, but to read PRIVATELY CREATED ANNOTATIONS of the law so ¯\_(ツ)_/¯https://twitter.com/radleybalko/status/1201614783935586304 …
do they, though? article says this: > But the annotations, which includes things like commentaries, case notations, and editor’s notes, don’t have the force of law. RBG's question in the next paragraph gets to the exact point I'm making, and I don't see any response to that.
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> If they are private, and the state doesn’t provide a way to get the text of the law without the annotations I see no evidence to support the second branch of the "if"
End of conversation
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I think the crucial question is probably "do the courts use and cite this?"
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