Bidengeddon: Dank Brandon Rises

Discussion in 'The Mainboard' started by GoodForAnother, Nov 6, 2020.

  1. BellottiBold

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    I'm in the tenderloin right now.
    The way the bad faith and clueless talk about SF as a socialist hellhole is hilarious because it's actually a capitalist nightmare (pretty much already clarified but just wanted to chime in while I'm in the midst of it.)

    Also the smash and grabs have definitely been more of a thing recently, especially in the suburban malls. But, that's also why shopping in the union sq area feels like being in the middle of an about to unfold narco sting with all of the guards, dudes with wires behind their ears, etc etc. And also, who gives a fuck?
     
  2. Redav

    Redav One big ocean
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    Always funny how angling for tax breaks in the hundreds of millions isn't stealing
     
  3. seanofthedead86

    seanofthedead86 Well-Known Member
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    Oliver does a real good breakdown about how both sides of the modern American political system don't want to deal with it. Basically for liberal types it's an "I care, but I don't want to see or deal with it" attitude.
     
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  4. Daniel Ocean

    Daniel Ocean I only lied about being a thief
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    You tell me that my worth is tied to how much shit I have. You tell me that just about anything in the pursuit of getting more shit is cool. You tell me that it’s cool that people live in fear of going homeless and kids go to sleep hungry every night. Don’t be surprised when I tell you I don’t give a fuck that shit is being stolen from stores.
     
  5. Redav

    Redav One big ocean
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    The San Francisco stuff is like the "liberal media" on cbs just now talking about climate change affecting the wine industry. First off, lmao who fucking cares but second, they're "liberal" because they address climate change as a real thing. There's never any self realization though. There's no explainer about the things that are killing the planet or things that need to be done to fix it. No urgency whatsoever. It's addressed as this inevitable thing that there's nothing that could be done to stop it. I mean maybe that is what liberal means to a lot of people??
     
  6. WhiskeyDelta

    WhiskeyDelta Well-Known Member
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    Neo-liberalism does not equal liberal and sure as shit does not equal “leftist”. It’s just conservative capitalism with virtue signaling.
     
  7. Emma

    Emma
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    Governor Evers has the largest positive GAAP balance in Wisconsin state history, no big deal. Democrats fixing the Republican mess they inherent.

    “This record positive GAAP balance is great news for Wisconsinites as it puts our state in a solid fiscal position to ensure the long-term economic success and security of our state,” said Gov. Evers. “This report shows just how far we've come since the state reported a GAAP deficit of $1.25 billion in 2017-18—the last full fiscal year before I became governor. We've worked hard to pay down the state's debt and pay bills on time so we can continue building a strong economy by investing in the issues Wisconsinites care about from schools to roads to affordable, accessible healthcare.”

    Further, the state deposited a record-high $967.4 million into its Budget Stabilization Fund, also known as the “rainy-day” fund, earlier this year. The current balance in the state’s Budget Stabilization Fund now totals nearly $1.73 billion, a figure that is by far the largest in state history.
     
  8. VaxRule

    VaxRule Mmm ... Coconuts
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    It’s not just that. There’s a tie to the definition of liberalism that is also why the word is related to libertarianism. It’s a really bad spin on liberalism.
     
  9. NCHusker

    NCHusker We named our yam Pam. It rhymed.
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    We liberals have internalized the idea that government only exists to serve and protect the capital class and can't ever help normal people but also BLM
     
  10. Bruce Wayne

    Bruce Wayne Billionaire Playboy
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  11. VaxRule

    VaxRule Mmm ... Coconuts
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    The part of me that is “accelerationism as a backup plan is fine” is in favor of putting all of these assholes in Congress. The same with all of these morons in Mississippi that are absolutely convinced that California is a god forsaken hellhole. Just believe your dumb shit and let us break up this dumb country peacefully so that at least some of us can try and save the planet and advance humanity while the rest of you morons skinny dip in your own sewage.
     
  12. BellottiBold

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    lol peacefully
     
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  13. VaxRule

    VaxRule Mmm ... Coconuts
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    I already started with saying it was the part of me that thinks accelerationism could be fine. It’s the part of me probe to fantasy. Let me have that.
     
  14. theregionsitter

    theregionsitter Well-Known Member
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    Isn’t this really a story of the federal stimulus nationwide? Ohio has like a $3 billion surplus this budget year alone- Indiana is at like $5 billion. Wisconsin is just more of the same- the Midwest states except Illinois cuz lol didn’t spend
     
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  15. Emma

    Emma
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    Not my forte, I just see a pretty headline and say oh cool
     
  16. Bo Pelinis

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    Really the main difference between typical Democrats and Republicans is Democrats accept facts. Doing anything about them? Nah, but we’ll tweet about them!
     
  17. Can I Spliff it

    Can I Spliff it Is Butterbean okay?
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    Old man doesn't know an extremely lame code phrase repeated exclusively by grifters and losers, means he's unfit
     
  18. BellottiBold

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    (Also, he knows about it)
     
  19. Josey Wales

    Josey Wales Well-Known Member
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    Hmm. Biden doesn’t know his memes well enough to be president. Trump is too fucking old to know how to read.

    Right wing grifters are really taking down geriatrics this week.
     
  20. Duck70

    Duck70 Let's just do it and be legends, man
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    Interesting how the same people flashing 'Ok' signs were like "lol you dumb libs, it just means OK and definitely doesn't mean White Power" are the same ones saying "Let's Go Brandon! Get it... its coded language! Lolz"
     
  21. Prospector

    Prospector I am not a new member
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  22. Prospector

    Prospector I am not a new member
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    I also hate Kudlow
     
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  23. Prospector

    Prospector I am not a new member
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    Alaska’s anti-vaxx mayor turns off city’s water fluoridation for hours, later learns it’s illegal

    [​IMG]
    Anchorage Mayor Dave Bronson.
    The devoutly anti-science mayor of Anchorage, Alaska, was forced to admit to turning off the fluoridation of the city’s water supply Tuesday, after learning it was a violation of municipal code. Once again, this is why you don’t vote for someone with no experience governing and who is also a conspiracy theorist.

    According to reporting from The Alaska Landmine, a local news site, which cited unnamed sources, Mayor Dave Bronson shut off the city’s fluoridation during a visit to the Anchorage Water and Wastewater Utility Eklutna Water Treatment Plant on Oct. 1.
    Although, initially, the mayor’s office called the story “false,” three days after it was reported, the mayor’s spokesperson Corey Allen Young confirmed the shut-off in a statement.

    Young wrote that Bronson made the decision to turn off the fluoride because it was burning the eyes and throats of the workers who handled it. But, local leaders say the story is made up because according to the union that represents the workers, there were never any complaints about fluoride.

    “We have not had a single report from a member who works at the facility that this was of concern to them or that they had been harmed in any way by adding the fluoride to the water system,” Aaron Plikat, business agent at United Association Plumbers and Steamfitters Union Local 367, said in a phone interview with Alaska Public Radio.

    Plikat says workers wear the appropriate safety gear to handle the fluoride, telling The New York Times it “does a fantastic job.”

    The fluoridation was halted for about five hours, according to Young’s statement.

    Fluoride has been flowing in Anchorage’s taps for decades, but, now local officials are wondering whether Bronson may have been inspired by Alaska’s vocal anti-fluoride movement, a small but growing group that falsely believes that fluoride lowers IQs and increases cancer.

    In 2017, the Anchorage Assembly killed a ballot initiative to end fluoridation in the city’s water, but that hasn’t stopped activists from fighting.

    “I’m not against applying fluoride topically as needed,” Emily Kane, a Juneau-based naturopathic physician and fluoridation critic told Alaska Public Radio in 2017. “But I didn’t think it was good judgment to medicate the entire population.”

    Juneau, the state capital, shut off its fluoride system over a decade ago, with the cities of Fairbanks and Palmer soon following.

    “Alaska has one of the lowest rates of fluoridated water access per population in the U.S., which is really sad because they voluntarily chose to turn off programs that were working,” Jennifer Meyer, an assistant professor of public health at the University of Alaska Anchorage, told the Times.

    Vice chair of the Anchorage Assembly, Christopher Constant, a Democrat, is investigating the reasons behind Bronson’s decision to shut off the fluoride. He told the Times via text that he isn’t sure of the facts yet, “But if proven true, this fits squarely into the Venn diagram of antiscience arguments so common these days: Covid denial, antivaccine rhetoric, and antifluoride politics.”

    Bronson made headlines in September for comparing vaccine mandates to the yellow Star of David Jews were forced to wear by the Nazis during the Holocaust. Bronson took to Facebook to discuss his burgeoning coronavirus numbers, but instead of talking about masking up and getting the vaccine, he chose to indict “some employers forcing employees who chose not to be vaccinated to lose their jobs” as the reason behind hospital “staffing shortage.”

    Also reported by The Alaska Landmine, Anchorage Police Chief Kenneth McCoy, a 27-year veteran and the city’s first Black police chief, will be stepping down on Feb. 1, 2022. The outlet reports that according to multiple sources, McCoy is leaving after a series of improper demands by Bronson and Municipal Manager Amy Demboski.

    One of the alleged demands was: “that Mayor Bronson’s office ordered Chief McCoy to have APD officers enter Anchorage medical facilities in order to “rescue” a man sick with COVID and/or compel medical providers to treat the man with Ivermectin,” according to the Landmine.

    The unnamed sources also said that the Bronson administration instructed McCoy to have “doctors, nurses, or other hospital personnel who attempted to interfere with APD’s operation arrested.”

    Bronson’s team denies the allegations.
     
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  24. Prospector

    Prospector I am not a new member
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  25. Drown ‘Em

    Drown ‘Em The Candy Man
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    Because their parents thought the same thing. And their parents before that. And so on.
     
  26. WhiskeyDelta

    WhiskeyDelta Well-Known Member
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    Lord, this guy looks exactly like you’d think he does.
     
  27. Bruce Wayne

    Bruce Wayne Billionaire Playboy
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    God this fuck face thought he was so cool

     
  28. Tobias

    Tobias dan “the man qb1” jones fan account
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    liberals will kill us all

     
  29. Prospector

    Prospector I am not a new member
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    Just how much is Trump’s judiciary sabotaging the Biden presidency?
    More than a year after Trump’s defeat, Biden is forced to share power with increasingly partisan judges.

    By Ian Millhiser Dec 27, 2021, 7:00am EST
    [​IMG]
    Then-President Donald Trump greets Supreme Court Justice Neil Gorsuch ahead of the State of the Union address in the chamber of the US House of Representatives on February 4, 2020, in Washington, DC.
    Mario Tama/Getty Images
    No one has ever elected Matthew Kacsmaryk to anything.

    Kacsmaryk, whom former President Donald Trump appointed to the federal bench in 2019, was previously a lawyer for a Christian right law firm. He once claimed being transgender is a “mental disorder” and that gay people are “disordered.” He’s also one of the most powerful immigration officials in the country, having successfully wrested control of much of America’s border policy away from the man Americans elected president in 2020.

    With the Supreme Court’s blessing, Kacsmaryk ordered President Joe Biden’s administration to reinstate Trump’s “Remain in Mexico” policy, which requires many asylum seekers who arrive at the United States’ southern border to stay in Mexico while they await a hearing.
    Even if you ignore the moral implications of reinstating such a policy, there are good reasons to doubt that the policy is a good use of America’s limited border security resources. And Kacsmaryk’s decision is also unlawful for numerous reasons.

    One of the most important reasons is that it upends the balance of power between the president and unelected judges. Reinstating the Remain in Mexico program requires the Mexican government’s cooperation — which means that Kacsmaryk ordered the United States to change its diplomatic stance toward Mexico. And that’s despite decades of warnings from the Supreme Court that judges should be “particularly wary of impinging on the discretion of the Legislative and Executive Branches in managing foreign affairs.”

    Kacsmaryk’s decision, and the Supreme Court’s decision to stand with Kacsmaryk against President Joe Biden, is one of the most dramatic examples of the Republican-controlled federal judiciary's many conflicts with America’s Democratic president. But it’s hardly an isolated incident.

    In just four years as president, Trump remade the federal judiciary — all with a big assist from a Senate Republican leader willing to break any norm in order to ensure GOP control of the courts. Trump appointed a third of the Supreme Court and nearly a third of all active appeals court judges. He also peppered federal trial courts with conservative activists like Kacsmaryk, who are eager to overturn some of the most fundamental assumptions of US law.


    Nearly one year into Biden’s time in office, the result hasn’t exactly been a bloodbath for his policies — in contrast to the seemingly never-ending array of lawsuits seeking to repeal Obamacare, no federal judge has yet tried to repeal Biden’s major legislative accomplishments such as the American Rescue Plan or the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act. But in two areas in particular, immigration and public health, the courts have been unusually aggressive.

    Just days after Biden took office, a Trump-appointed judge in Texas relied on highly dubious legal reasoning to block a Biden administration memo pausing most deportations for 100 days. More recently, the same Trump judge, Drew Tipton, relied on similarly dubious reasoning to prevent the administration from setting enforcement priorities for immigration officials.

    Meanwhile, the judiciary has done more than virtually any other institution in America to frustrate efforts to control the Covid-19 pandemic. Almost immediately after the Biden administration announced new rules encouraging most workers to get vaccinated, for example, a right-wing panel of the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit raced to hand down a procedurally improper order blocking those rules (although that order has since been lifted by a more centrist panel). Trump-appointed judges handed down similar orders blocking a more modest rule requiring many health care workers to be vaccinated.

    So, while right-wing judges have not yet launched a wholesale assault on the Biden presidency, they’ve handed down a raft of decisions that endanger the public health and that force some of the most vulnerable people on the planet to live in squalid, often dangerous conditions. And these judges could get even more aggressive in the future.

    While judicial sabotage of the Biden administration’s policies has thus far been limited in scope, it’s likely to expand rapidly, and soon. The Supreme Court announced in late October that it will hear West Virginia v. EPA, a case that, at its most extreme, could potentially give the judiciary veto power over every regulation pushed out by any federal agency.

    Such a decision would only embolden judges who wish to hobble Biden’s presidency.

    Right-wing judges are testing the limits of their power
    The federal courts are hierarchical, and they are supposed to be creatures of precedent. If a higher court hands down a legal rule that governs future cases, lower court judges are supposed to be bound by that rule for as long as it is in place — even if the judge disagrees with the rule, and even if the judge thinks that the higher court is likely to overrule it in the future.

    For this reason, conservative judges who respect this rule of law are somewhat constrained by existing precedents — whether they are famous cases like Roe v. Wade (1973), or less well-known cases like Mistretta v. United States (1989) or Chevron v. Natural Resources Defense Council (1984), which form the backbone of the modern administrative state.

    Republicans did not gain their current supermajority on the Supreme Court until about a week before Biden was elected president. So even if the Court’s new majority is inclined to ignore stare decisis (the principle that courts should be reluctant to overrule previous decisions), it simply hasn’t had time to overrule every precedent that is out of favor within conservative legal circles.

    That means that, at least for now, the most aggressive decisions undercutting President Biden are being handed down by judges who do not feel constrained by precedent, or who want to nudge the Supreme Court into overruling past opinions by handing down decisions that are inconsistent with those opinions and that need to be reviewed on appeal.

    As mentioned above, these most aggressive decisions are concentrated in two policy areas — immigration and public health — so let’s take a quick look at some of the more legally dubious decisions in these two policy spaces.

    Tipton v. Biden
    Consider both of Judge Tipton’s orders blocking the Biden administration’s immigration policies. Both of these decisions are flawed in the exact same way.


    On January 20, 2021, the first day of the Biden presidency, acting Secretary of Homeland Security David Pekoske issued a brief memorandum announcing two temporary immigration policies. Pekoske’s memo ordered a 100-day pause on most deportations, to give the new administration time to “ensure that our removal resources are directed to the Department’s highest enforcement priorities.” It also laid out new interim priorities that should govern immigration enforcement.

    Under these interim priorities, immigration enforcement officers were instructed to target non-citizens who pose a threat to national security; undocumented immigrants who entered or attempted to enter the United States on November 1, 2020, or later; and immigrants convicted of an “aggravated felony” who “are determined to pose a threat to public safety.” The memo was explicit that it did not prohibit “the apprehension or detention” of other people unlawfully in the United States, but the Biden administration wanted to shift enforcement resources to the three identified groups.

    The legal basis for both of these temporary policy shifts is a doctrine known as “prosecutorial discretion,” which permits law enforcement to set enforcement priorities and even to decide not to enforce a particular law against a specific individual. If you’ve ever been pulled over by a cop and then let off with a warning, you’ve benefited from this kind of discretion.

    Under the Supreme Court’s current precedents, moreover, executive branch officials who oversee entire law enforcement agencies also have broad authority to exercise such discretion, and especially in the immigration context. As the Court explained in Arizona v. United States (2012), “a principal feature of the removal system is the broad discretion exercised by immigration officials.” Similarly, the Court held in Heckler v. Chaney (1985) that “an agency’s decision not to take enforcement action should be presumed immune from judicial review.”

    One important reason why executive branch officials have such discretion is that law enforcement agencies do not have infinite resources. As the Obama administration explained in a 2014 memo, “there are approximately 11.3 million undocumented aliens in the country,” but the Department of Homeland Security only “has the resources to remove fewer than 400,000 such aliens each year.” So it is inevitable that senior law enforcement leaders will have to make decisions about what kinds of enforcement to prioritize.

    The Biden administration wanted to focus these limited resources primarily on immigrants who could threaten public safety. Tipton’s orders ensure that immigration enforcement will be much more arbitrary.

    Just as importantly, Tipton’s orders show contempt, not just for the principles announced in decisions like Arizona and Heckler, but for the very idea that, as a lower court judge, he is bound by Supreme Court precedent. But they also reflect a kind of regressive optimism that infuses so many Republican appointees to the federal bench. Sure, the law may permit Biden to liberalize immigration policy today. But, by denying Biden his lawful authority, judges like Tipton might accelerate the day when the Supreme Court strips Biden of a power that was enjoyed by every recent president.

    The Fifth Circuit v. Biden
    Tipton is an unusually aggressive ideological innovator within the judiciary, but he’s hardly an isolated case. Take the Fifth Circuit’s opinion in BST Holdings v. OSHA, the decision blocking the Biden administration’s rule requiring most workers to either get vaccinated against Covid-19 or be tested weekly for the disease. As I’ve written, there are plausible arguments that this rule exceeds the Department of Labor’s statutory authority, but Judge Kurt Engelhardt’s opinion in BST Holdings largely bypasses these arguments in favor of others that range from implausible to ridiculous.


    Engelhardt’s opinion relies heavily on arguments the Trump administration made in mid-2020 that it should not impose additional requirements on workplaces in order to stop the spread of Covid-19. But these arguments are completely irrelevant to the issues at stake in BST Holdings. Whatever their merits might have been in the middle of 2020, vaccines were not available until the final days of the Trump administration, and then only to a select group of people. So the Trump administration never even considered whether to issue a rule encouraging workers to vaccinate.

    Similarly, Engelhardt’s opinion interprets federal law in ways that would baffle any reasonably fluent English speaker. At one point, he claims that the Covid-19 virus does not qualify as a “substance” or “agent” that is “toxic or physically harmful” (the Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970 permits the federal government to issue an “emergency temporary standard” to protect against such dangers in the workplace).

    Engelhardt’s most aggressive argument suggests that Congress itself lacks the authority to pass a new law requiring workplace vaccination. “The Mandate likely exceeds the federal government’s authority under the Commerce Clause because it regulates noneconomic inactivity,” he writes, adding that “a person’s choice to remain unvaccinated and forgo regular testing is noneconomic inactivity.” To justify this argument, Engelhardt cites the Supreme Court’s decision in NFIB v. Sebelius (2012), which held that Congress could not order people to purchase health insurance (although it could impose higher taxes on the uninsured).

    But Engelhardt massively overreads NFIB. That decision limited Congress’s power to “compel individuals not engaged in commerce” to take a particular action. But the Biden administration’s workplace vaccine mandate doesn’t target people who are “not engaged in commerce.” It targets workers and their employers. Performing labor, in return for pay — and hiring others to do so — is a form of commerce.

    There was a time when the Supreme Court denied that most workers participate in commerce. That denial formed the basis of the Court’s decision in Hammer v. Dagenhart (1918), which struck down a federal ban on child labor. But Hammer was overruled more than 80 years ago! Even on the current Supreme Court, only Justice Clarence Thomas has thus far endorsed a return to this long-dead regime.

    So, at the very least, Engelhardt’s opinion endangers workers and frustrates efforts to quell the Covid-19 pandemic. And the most radical parts of that opinion could endanger very basic protections for workers and children.

    More broadly, lower court judges are playing with ideas that are not the law and that are soundly rejected by all but the most reactionary elements of the legal profession. And yet, with the judiciary now led by the most conservative Supreme Court since the early years of the Franklin Roosevelt administration, there’s no guarantee that the federal judiciary as a whole will not embrace at least some of these ideas.

    No one is providing adult supervision of the most reactionary judges
    Of course, if the Supreme Court wanted lower-court judges to stop ignoring precedents that permit President Biden to govern, it could intervene to stop them from doing so. Instead, it has rewarded many of the most aggressive conservative innovators within the judiciary.

    Recall Judge Kacsmaryk’s order requiring the Biden administration to reinstate Trump’s Remain in Mexico policy. There are many flaws in that order, but the most significant is that it runs roughshod over many decades of Supreme Court opinions warning against “the danger of unwarranted judicial interference in the conduct of foreign policy.”


    When foreign nations negotiate with the United States, they need to know that America’s bargaining position won’t change abruptly because just one of the 1,392 men and women currently sitting as federal judges decides to take issue with that position. And when American diplomats make a promise on behalf of their country, they need to be able to keep that promise.

    And yet, in siding with Kacsmaryk over Biden, the Supreme Court effectively abandoned its longstanding practice of deference to the executive on questions of foreign relations. That decision to abandon one of the fundamentals of US separation of powers will only embolden other judges who are trying to decide whether they can get away with ignoring the Court’s precedents.

    If anything, the justices are sending loud signals that they want lower court judges to innovate in ways that shift power from the executive to the judiciary. In a few months, the Court plans to hear the West Virginia case, which asks it to revive a long-defunct doctrine known as “nondelegation.” The idea behind this dead-but-dreaming doctrine is that the Constitution places strict limits on Congress’s power to delegate power to agencies. In practice, nondelegation could allow the judiciary to veto any regulation promulgated by any federal agency.

    Given these signals from the Supreme Court, some lower court judges are behaving as though the Court has already fully embraced nondelegation. Judge Engelhardt named nondelegation as one of the myriad reasons why he objects to the workplace vaccination rules (that case was transferred to the Sixth Circuit, which dissolved Engelhardt’s order. The case is now pending before the Supreme Court). One judge relied on nondelegation in an opinion blocking federal rules intended to prevent the spread of Covid-19 on cruise ships (that opinion is still in effect, after an appeals court decided not to block it). A panel of two Trump judges and one Reagan judge cited nondelegation as a reason to strike down an eviction moratorium (that the Supreme Court eventually rejected for other reasons).

    Yet, if the justices are telling conservative judges that they will suffer no embarrassment if they ignore longstanding Supreme Court precedents, the Biden administration is also doing very little to stand up for itself.

    The Biden administration has taken some steps to try to dissolve Kacsmaryk’s order. When the Supreme Court sided with Kacsmaryk over Biden, it claimed to be doing so because the Biden administration didn’t adequately explain why it wanted to end Remain in Mexico. So the administration released a new memo last October giving a more fleshed-out explanation, and it asked the Fifth Circuit to issue a ruling that would allow it to escape Kacsmaryk’s injunction (a right-wing panel of the Fifth Circuit that includes Judge Engelhardt rejected that request in a 117-page opinion dripping with contempt for the Biden administration).

    Yet, even as it seeks mercy from hostile Republican appointees, the Biden administration has hardly acted as though it wants to regain its lawful authority over immigration policy. Earlier this month, the administration reached an agreement with Mexico to reinstate Trump’s policy, and it even plans to expand it. Under Trump, the Remain in Mexico policy applied only to Spanish speakers; now it applies to many migrants who don’t even speak the same language spoken by most Mexicans.

    Both the Supreme Court and the Biden administration are signaling that there are no consequences — and there won’t even be significant pushback — when revanchist judges defy the law.

    If you were a right-wing judge who loathes Joe Biden but who also tends to be more careful than judicial arsonists like Engelhardt, Tipton, and Kacsmaryk, how would you react to this series of events?
     
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  30. wes tegg

    wes tegg I'm a Guy's guy, guys.
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    And she "just read" a Michael Shellenberger book that got her thinking... The whole twitter thread is in bad faith.
     
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  31. Bruce Wayne

    Bruce Wayne Billionaire Playboy
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    I'd say ruin this guy's life but he'll probably be in Congress in 2024 at this rate

     
  32. wes tegg

    wes tegg I'm a Guy's guy, guys.
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  33. bro

    bro Your Mother’s Favorite Shitposter
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    yeah, go ahead and ruin his life.
     
  34. afb

    afb Spoiler Alert: Pawnee, IN may not be on a map.
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    "i'm really sick of all the attention and hate that i'm getting

    but also, i'm gonna talk to steve bannon"
     
  35. Beeds07

    Beeds07 Bitch, it's Saturday
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    I feel like I say this once a week on different aspects of America, but when you don’t view them as human being you can treat them however you want.
     
  36. timo

    timo g'day, mate
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    I'm sure this has probably been said 100x already in this thread, but which one of Biden's handlers thought it would be a good idea to call up some peckerwood family from Methmouth, Oregon?

    Jesus help me, the Democrats love to Joe the Plumber themselves over and over again.
     
  37. IV

    IV Freedom is the right of all sentient beings
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    I actually think that was a win for Biden
     
  38. Duck70

    Duck70 Let's just do it and be legends, man
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    Same here. This dude looks like a fucking idiot on a national stage and Biden handled it well.
     
  39. Lyrtch

    Lyrtch My second favorite meat is hamburger
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  40. RSK

    RSK Well-Known Member
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    I refuse to find out what lets go brandon means
     
  41. WhiskeyDelta

    WhiskeyDelta Well-Known Member
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    It sure how accurate this is but it would explain a lot.
     
  42. Daniel Ocean

    Daniel Ocean I only lied about being a thief
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    what?
     
  43. cutig

    cutig My name is Rod, and I like to party
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    Clemson TigersNebraska CornhuskersCarolina PanthersKansas City Chiefs

    Fuck Joe Biden

    Now you found out
     
    bertwing and GoodForAnother like this.
  44. beerme

    beerme Well-Known Member
    Donor
    Penn State Nittany LionsNew York YankeesGreen Bay Packers

    I really doubt that banks need it. They would just lend to or invest in other assets
     
  45. PeterGriffin

    PeterGriffin Iced and/or sweet tea is for dirty rednecks.
    Florida State SeminolesPhoenix SunsTottenham HotspurAvengersSan Diego PadresBorussia MönchengladbachFormula 1

    So can I like, Big Short and crash the SLABS market?

    I didn't watch the movie, I think I'm using the reference correctly.
     
  46. Anison

    Anison Fair and square
    Donor
    Michigan WolverinesDetroit PistonsDetroit LionsArsenal

     
    BWC, *DIESEL*, bertwing and 23 others like this.
  47. Marbles

    Marbles Trudging the road to happy destiny
    Donor
    Auburn TigersAtlanta Braves

    My application for the borrowers defense forgiveness for my physician assistant school student loans is still pending. I applied for it in March. As my PA school told me to go to rehab then when I got to rehab kicked me out of school not letting me finish my last month. I hope it’s forgiven but I’m surprised it’s still pending and not declined yet.