

Patrick J. Gauding
3.5K posts

@patrickgauding
Assistant professor of Politics, @univofthesouth. Regulatory, environmental, crim. justice, guns. CLE native.




The University of the South will be hiring for a one-year VAP in public policy for AY26-27. Candidates should be comfortable teaching introductory public policy, environmental policy, and research methods. Ad to follow. I am on the committee—please reach out!


Results - Texas SD 09 - 95% Reported 🔵 Rehmet 57% 🏆 🔴 Wambsganss 43% Money spent 🔴 Wambsganss - $2.4M 🔵 Rehmet - $200K 2022 results - Republicans +20

The University of the South will be hiring for a one-year VAP in public policy for AY26-27. Candidates should be comfortable teaching introductory public policy, environmental policy, and research methods. Ad to follow. I am on the committee—please reach out!

“For months, radical progressive politicians like Tim Walz have incited violence against law enforcement officers who are simply trying to do their jobs. Unsurprisingly, these calls to dangerously interject oneself into legitimate law-enforcement activities have ended in violence, tragically resulting in injuries and fatalities. As there is with any officer-involved shooting, there will be a robust and comprehensive investigation that takes place to determine if the use of force was justified. As we await these facts and gain a clearer understanding, we urge the political voices to lower the temperature to ensure their constituents and law enforcement officers stay safe.” - @NRA

The verification problem is worse than you think. Legal databases (Westlaw, Lexis) can verify case existence. But they CAN'T verify: - Whether the case supports your argument - If the quoted language is accurate - Whether precedent applies to your facts LLMs hallucinate CONNECTIONS between real cases. That's undetectable by database lookup.


This goes to show how wildly varied even "good" academic jobs are. In a typical academic year, I am: - teaching (seminar style) for ~ 300 hours, across 6 classes and 3-4 distinct course preps. - grading all of the work for ~180 total students. - advising two dozen students. - mentoring 2-5 undergraduate researchers, who I meet with weekly. - organizing and attending events for undergraduates. - spending 4-5 hours a week in office hours answering questions from students, mentoring, etc. - writing full letters of recommendation for 8-10 students, and many smaller reference forms for others. - serving on committees for, or supervising several undergraduate thesis projects. - serving on departmental, college, and University committees. - writing enough to maintain an active research agenda (impossible difficulty). Even so, I love my job and can think of almost nothing I would rather do. I do enjoy unbelievable intellectual independence and ability to manage my own life. The upsides to this job are massive. But Gandhi's job is far from the median tenure track job in academia.


