“Kentucky claims that writing an advice column that appears in a newspaper in the state—in the specific case of their complaint, the Lexington Herald-Leader, though it appears in others as well—is not an act of freedom of the press, but rather practicing psychology without the required license. Rosemond has written an advice column since 1976, which is currently syndicated by McClatchy-Tribune (and by Rosemond himself to a different set of publications). It appears in around 200 papers. He’s also the author of many books of parenting and family advice, including five best-sellers.”
http://reason.com/archives/2013/07/16/banning-advice-columnists-in-the-name-of/print
Related posts:
Sysco facing thousands in fines for ‘runaway train’ of food storage violations
The Most Fascinating Profile Ever About a Guy and His Boring Startup
Tuna Drone Joins Homeland Security Arsenal
What 1 Ton Of Gold Looks Like
Republicans to declare ‘We Built This!’ in stadium built with government funds
How to Build a Huge Bonus in Your Portfolio
Snowden Leak: U.S. Paying Contractors Ten Times as Much as Bureaucrats
Will Saudi Arabia Allow the U.S. Oil Boom?
Airbnb might be closer to accepting Bitcoin: CEO requests opinions
Polish Finance Official: Bitcoin is Not Illegal
Illinois Legislative Leaders Sue Governor Over Vetoing Lawmakers' Pay Raise
California Elementary School Hosts Toy Gun Buyback, Fingerprinting Fair
US govt attempts to block lawsuit against NSA
Police Go to Wrong House, Shoot Dog
Second New York cop confirms illegal arrest and ticket ‘quota’ system