Contra Alito issuing a public dissent against the unsigned order, there is no First Amendment issue at stake.
What's at stake is simply whether National Review defamed Mann or not by calling him the "Jerry Sandusky of climate science." Period.
That's a matter for a trial court (and jury, if NR wants one) to decide. The Supreme Court, if the case is appealed all the way there, then can eventually make findings of fact about how the federal district court handled the case. Period.
As for that case? I think Mann was libeled. Reminder — here are the specifics:
A National Review post discussed an investigation by Penn State into Mann clearing him of data manipulation accusations, which found no wrongdoing. It compared the Mann investigation to the university's investigation of child molestation charges against then-football assistant coach Jerry Sandusky, saying Mann is "the Jerry Sandusky of climate science, except that instead of molesting children, he has molested and tortured data."
Editor Rich Lowry should have thought of that before letting this be posted. Short of that, he should have thought about that in issuing a formal apology and otherwise coming to terms with Mann long ago.
Remember, this is the Alito who hates the First Amendment in other ways, like in being a solo holdout in not wanting to extend it — either freedom of speech or freedom of assembly — to Westboro Baptist Church, nor, more recently, on freedom of religion re Bladensburg Cross.
That said, Alito has a long history of churlishness — including and specifically toward fellow justices — so Monday's escapade in that sense really is not anything new.
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Sidebar: This ruling comes as disgraced former Congresscritter Smokey Joe Barton, a climate change denier, tells how he got the ban lifted on US oil exporting.
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