11 Comments
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Garth Ponsonby's avatar

Strongly agree, well worth it. I decided to do so a few months ago.

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Andrew Kitching's avatar

This is a terrific blog and well worth it. I subscribe

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Bill Hilton's avatar

It's well worth a few quid each month — brilliantly clear thinking right into your inbox.

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David's avatar

Subscription upgraded today - Thank you for your excellent work it is very much appreciated

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Matthew Hamlyn's avatar

I signed up a while back and it is very good value!

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Ian Bloom's avatar

It's just essential reading. And for under £1 a week, great value.

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nigel's avatar

I always enjoy reading your considered opinions. I started following you in the fevered years after the brexit referendum and remember well your ‘brace brace’ and the end of posts. This is an excellent value Substack and I would encourage everyone who can to consider becoming a paid subscriber.

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Culverin's avatar

This is the first blog I subscribed to and it’s great value in my opinion. DAG’s posts are always very interesting and clearly a great deal of work goes into them.

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Colin Fleming's avatar

A paid subscription is worth every penny.

Why?

Because DAG's posts are top notch and first rate - for people with legal knowledge, and for people with little or no legal knowledge.

Lawyers are often hugely complimentary about DAG's posts, which is a good indication of the quality of DAG's writing.

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Neal Champion's avatar

Subscribed today

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Jim Cuthbert's avatar

Thank you for years of insight, and patient explanation, single sentence paragraphs, and wry humour

"Conditional law should not be interesting"

Sadly for us all, it has become intensely important, suddenly relevant to everyone of us, not just those paying attention

From the FT, via Twitter, your writing has been invariably insightful and therefire valuable

As a retired tech, the free internet is a broken feedback loop, in the modern broken free market illusion - you consume, you should pay for it, yet we all try to avoid paying

There's no technical reason why pay per page cannot be implemented

If only we were the platform's customers, instead of the advertisers, leaving us as the product they're paying for

Substack is a step forward for bloggers

Would it not be so much better if every reader was charged a couple of pennies, or even fractions of a penny?

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