Andrew Leahey
LSAT Logic Applied
“LSAT Logic Applied” breaks down everyday arguments in news, politics, and ads using the tools of LSAT logical reasoning. Learn to spot flawed assumptions, strengthen arguments, and think like a law student—without "prepping" for the test. Quick, clear, and a little nerdy.
Author
Andrew Leahey
Category
Podcast website
Latest episode
May 8, 2026
Where to listen?
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Episodes
FCC Chair Worries About Competition 29.01.2026 3:58
FCC Chair Brendan Carr recently said there are “legitimate competition concerns” about Netflix’s proposed $83 billion acquisition of Warner Bros. studios and HBO Max. Here’s the twist: the FCC has no authority to review or approve the deal. The FCC regulates broadcast licenses, which aren’t part of this transaction. But Carr made public comments anyway, raising red flags about consolidation in the...
Lilliputian Figures and Undercooked Mushrooms 26.01.2026 4:22
The story comes from a BBC report about a mushroom called Lanmaoa asiatica — native to parts of China and the Philippines — that causes remarkably consistent hallucinations of “lilliputian figures”: tiny humans marching on tabletops, climbing up walls, even clinging to your soup spoon. These hallucinations only seem to happen when the mushroom is undercooked, and they’ve been reported across diffe...
Tariffs and Causal Claims 24.01.2026 3:42
The claim comes from Donald Trump, who has said, more than once, that tariffs made the United States the richest nation in the world. FactCheck.org pushed back on that — pointing to economic data and broader historical context that challenges the accuracy of the statement. But for LSAT purposes, we don’t need to resolve the economics. We’re not here to litigate macroeconomic history. We’re here to...
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