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Talk:State law (United States)

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The Connecticut material is a non sequitur

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It doesn't flow at all. It comes out of nowhere, a sudden digression to Connecticut statutes, then a sudden switch back to a completely different topic, codification. Or as we say in the legal profession, objection, relevance. Okay, it's not a word salad, but it's close. --Coolcaesar (talk) 05:25, 19 March 2018 (UTC)[reply]

Hey Coolcaesar (talk · contribs), on my talk page you asked What relevance does the printing of the statutes of Connecticut possibly have in the middle of a discussion of interstate (not intrastate) diversity of state law? - but the discussion of Connecticut statutes comes after the section on State_law_(United_States)#Interstate_diversity right? It's in the next section. Prior to my restoration of the Connecticut section, it started with The first reaction, codification, was an attempt - there was no sense of what had been reacted to, whereas the Connecticut thing at least set the stage of unwritten law (albeit in that state). After reading it more carefully, I see what you mean and I replaced the Connecticut section with a citation which starts to discuss the early movement. II | (t - c) 15:20, 9 April 2018 (UTC)[reply]