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Re: The Supreme Court decision

Posted: Tue Jul 09, 2024 6:18 am
by Rideback
New power grab Trump is talking about.
https://popular.info/p/the-alarming-new ... irect=true

Re: The Supreme Court decision

Posted: Mon Jul 08, 2024 10:27 pm
by dorankj
Whatever Jim, you’re pretty ridiculous now.

Re: The Supreme Court decision

Posted: Mon Jul 08, 2024 10:18 pm
by just-jim
dorankj wrote: Mon Jul 08, 2024 1:03 pm ….. and Uber rich….
Just asking for a curious friend…..

Is “Uber-rich” someone who owns a LOT of Uber cars? Or, someone who uses a lot of them?

Can you earn a lot of ‘Uber’points/status for getting into that category? Is it like airline miles?

I have an Uber account…but I dont use it often….I musta missed this classification…..
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Re: The Supreme Court decision

Posted: Mon Jul 08, 2024 7:20 pm
by dorankj
I didn’t name call PAL, do you think you’re guilty?

Re: The Supreme Court decision

Posted: Mon Jul 08, 2024 7:18 pm
by just-jim
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dorankj wrote: Mon Jul 08, 2024 1:03 pm ….. truth is breaking through your media, Hollywood, academia and Uber rich cabal.
Translation:

Let the stupid, illiterate, uneducated, uninformed, superstitious, un-scientific, religiously hide-bound, intolerant, racist, xenophobic, criminal class run the Country. We will do better….when we pull our heads out….
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Re: The Supreme Court decision

Posted: Mon Jul 08, 2024 7:12 pm
by PAL
Back to name calling because you have nothing else. Trump is not the right person to lead this country and perhaps Biden too.

Re: The Supreme Court decision

Posted: Mon Jul 08, 2024 6:36 pm
by dorankj
Only concerned about your type. They let stupid people vote too!

Re: The Supreme Court decision

Posted: Mon Jul 08, 2024 1:38 pm
by PAL
You're scared aren't cha. I love this country with it's flaws. Work needs to be done to improve it. Don't want your sympathy. Why would you even say or think that we would want your sympathy, which you lack anyway.
Toddler like temper tantrums. Hmm, what was your post?

Re: The Supreme Court decision

Posted: Mon Jul 08, 2024 1:03 pm
by dorankj
You fools are the biggest danger to this country ever! JB has been after DT illegally and ridiculously this whole time, and Dementia Joe is the unlawful president who refuses to respect SCOTUS by paying student debt anyway. You hypocrites are so ridiculous with your gaslighting and excessive hyperbole. But I think you’re realizing the jig is up, truth is breaking through your media, Hollywood, academia and Uber rich cabal. I can’t say I’m really going to be able to muster any sympathy for your squealing and knashing of teeth when you don’t get your way. But I’m sure you’ll keep it interesting with your toddler like temper tantrums! (Maybe you’ll hold your breath to show us all, lol)

Re: The Supreme Court decision

Posted: Mon Jul 08, 2024 11:30 am
by PAL
Brilliant David. Maybe you will laugh, but I have been emailing Kamala weekly with ideas via the White House website. Right, what a joke, but then again maybe a staffer won't dump it and would pass it on.

Re: The Supreme Court decision

Posted: Mon Jul 08, 2024 9:14 am
by mister_coffee
I suspect there is a furious debate within the Biden Administration on how to best use the new powers granted to the Presidency by the Supreme Court to screw over Donald Trump and the MAGA cult. One fairly graceful way out of it all would be for Biden to use that power to wreck Donald's chances of being elected President again, then announce that he regrets "crossing the line" and resigns, leaving an untainted Kamala Harris to run against a greviously wounded Donald Trump. It might actually even work...

Re: The Supreme Court decision

Posted: Mon Jul 08, 2024 8:03 am
by Rideback
The SCOTUS ruling granted a president immunity from acts done in his official capacity. The ruling also lays out that his motive cannot be questioned. The case that was before the Court was narrow regarding Trump specific immunity yet the Court went way beyond that narrow question, opening the door to a President acting without the checks and balances of Congressional oversight.

To bring it home to the Justices, Biden could now pardon the man who attacked Justice Kavanaugh's home. He won't but think of how that power could be missused in the hands of a President who is intent on implementing the 2025 scheme.

Re: The Supreme Court decision

Posted: Mon Jul 08, 2024 7:30 am
by dorankj
Opinions are not how SCOTUS is supposed to (and lately has) rule on, fidelity to the constitution, balance of powers and separation of powers is. Just because many media stir up hate and discontent by misleading and misrepresenting what’s happening and many people WANT that to be true doesn’t actually make it law or in our constitution.

Re: The Supreme Court decision

Posted: Mon Jul 08, 2024 6:37 am
by PAL
Those on the radical right want the Supreme Court's decision to rule in favor of immunity, so that Maga supporters can be lawless as well and slit the majority of American's throats and they can be gleeful. We are headed to lawlessness if Trump is elected.
The majority of Americans are not in favor of the Supreme Court's decisions on a number of issues. Immunity being one and abortion the other.

Re: The Supreme Court decision

Posted: Sun Jul 07, 2024 8:37 pm
by dorankj
Funny, he never ‘arrested’ Killary after freaking your type out with the “lock her up” chants, so why should anyone engage your stupid hypothetical nonsense?

Re: The Supreme Court decision

Posted: Sun Jul 07, 2024 7:25 pm
by mister_coffee
A practical question.

Let's suppose after Donald Trump is inaugurated he illegally orders Joe Biden arrested. Let's assume he crosses as many t's and dots as many i's as he humanly can, so everyone down the chain of command to the arresting officers is issued a Presidential Pardon.

So what about state laws? You could argue the federal officers unlawfully arresting Joe Biden in Delaware are kidnapping him. So they could be arrested and charged in Delaware pardon or no pardon. Yes, federal laws have supremacy. But federal lawlessness would not. At least not without another messy Supreme Court decision.

This is a catastrophic and idiotic mess.

Re: The Supreme Court decision

Posted: Sun Jul 07, 2024 7:05 pm
by Rideback
You used to like YouTubes Ken, so here's a Constitutional scholar being interviewed about what the SCOTUS decision does to our Constitution.
https://meidasnews.com/news/exclusive-f ... p-immunity

Re: The Supreme Court decision

Posted: Sun Jul 07, 2024 4:43 pm
by dorankj
Wow, triggered! Must have hit a nerve, you recognize hypocrisy at least.

Re: The Supreme Court decision

Posted: Sun Jul 07, 2024 4:40 pm
by Rideback
The court was addressing Trump's case but if you think that Obama's drone attack somehow lets Trump off the hook then you are truly mixing apples and oranges. Obama's decision was based on policy advice from Pentagon, Joint Chiefs, advisers and CIA. Trump on the other hand fabricated a stolen election, lost in the courts as his team presented their over 60 cases, designed and built a coup on his own country's govt. So good luck equating those two.

And, again, the SCOTUS decision paves the way for the 2025 project and since Trump is their guy their decision will give him immunity for acts during his dictatorship. Borrowing dictatorship because he's already said in an interview that he will be a dictator.

Re: The Supreme Court decision

Posted: Sun Jul 07, 2024 4:23 pm
by dorankj
What about Obama’s killings?

Re: The Supreme Court decision

Posted: Sun Jul 07, 2024 2:54 pm
by Rideback
I have read the decision as well as every Constitutional scholar's analysis I can find. Have you? Official acts are protected with full immunity.

Re: The Supreme Court decision

Posted: Sun Jul 07, 2024 2:14 pm
by dorankj
You need to read the decision of the majority and quit with just fretting about the side you support only. Really those examples are ridiculous, I don’t recall you freaking out when Obummer actually killed Americans with drones! Should we now prosecute and throw him in jail for obvious murder? (There’s no statute of limitations for murder)

Re: The Supreme Court decision

Posted: Sun Jul 07, 2024 9:47 am
by Rideback
As the days have passed after the Immunity decision and the various punditry have weighed in, the one that's stuck with me is the history lesson of Hitler. He made executive decisions that led to the attempted extermination of the Jewish peoples in his Country. Under this ruling those decisions would have been immune from prosecution. I can't get that one out of my head.

Re: The Supreme Court decision

Posted: Wed Jul 03, 2024 5:55 am
by mister_coffee
I think this will go down in history as a pretty boneheaded decision.

They basically made it all up. There is explicit immunity in the constitution only for Congress (the Speech and Debate clause). Nothing at all for the President (or the Supreme Court for that matter).

I think the short-term result will be a very confusing body of case law around Donald Trump. I think the longer-term result will be some very limited form of presidential immunity encoded into law by Congress.

When you get to the "Seal Team Six" example, the absurdity of this decision shows up in bright blinking red: you could have a President issue a clearly illegal order and be immune from prosecution, but everyone in the chain of command would be liable to prosecution for the same acts and at the same time could be liable for prosecution if they refused to obey an unlawful order. WTF?

The Supreme Court decision

Posted: Tue Jul 02, 2024 7:30 pm
by just-jim
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Heather Cox Richardson says it VERY well. Interview on PBS Newshour, tonite 7/2.
Transcript below. Video on the link at bottom.



The Supreme Court's landmark decision former President Donald Trump's immunity from some legal prosecution has potential to transform the powers of the presidency. Our Jeffrey Brown takes a deeper look at how the ruling fits with history.


Jeffrey Brown:

How much power for the executive branch? What kind of legal restraints? Those are questions that have been debated since the beginning of the country.

But now, by any account, there's been a major new development. We look at the past and potential future with historian
Heather Cox Richardson, a professor at Boston College.

And welcome back to the program.

Let's start with history. What do you see when you look at these early debates about presidential power that might help us think about now?


Heather Cox Richardson, Boston College:

Well, I want to be clear that, in fact, there hasn't been much dispute about the power of the president since the founding of the United States of America.

The people who framed the Constitution as well as the people who wrote the Declaration of Independence, were very clear that they did not want a king, that it was important for the chief executive to have guardrails around him at the time, is what they thought, and that those — that it was imperative that the president always was answerable to the law.

So we had Alexander Hamilton, for example, in Federalist 69 being very clear that the president could be impeached, the president could be convicted of treason or bribery or high crimes or misdemeanors, could be removed from office, and, crucially, would always, as he said, be liable to prosecution and punishment in the ordinary course of law.

They contrasted that with a king. Now, that really has not been in dispute, as we know, certainly we have got from 1974, when President Richard Nixon stepped down because he had broken laws and received and accepted a pardon from Gerald Ford, which suggested that he recognized that a president could be held liable for crimes.

And we have had in the confirmation hearings of many of the Supreme Court justices who yesterday overturned that central rule of law saying they too believe the president was under the control, should be under the control of the law.

So this is not a question of we have jockeyed with this. This is a question of, this is a brand-new development that undermines the central American principle that we are all answerable to the law. No one is above it. No one is below it.


Jeffrey Brown:

Let me push back a little. The majority of the court yesterday says it's distinguishing now between official and unofficial acts.

Now, why is that not a reasonable demarcation line? Why won't courts in the future be able to distinguish between those?


Heather Cox Richardson:

Well, that was an interesting part of the decision, now, because — because, as they said, that we have never had to explore what an official act is for the presidency.

What they did was they suggested that the people who would have to arbitrate that would be the court itself. So, in a way, what they have done is they have set themselves up as the people who got to — get to decide whether or not what a president does is legal or can be can be prosecuted.

But, just to be clear, this has never come up before, in part because presidents have never been unconstrained by fear of criminal prosecution. Now, that's not to say that we might not have had presidents who crossed over that line, and we could have a great discussion about who they might have been and what they might have done.

But this is the first time anybody has suggested that a president acting within an official capacity can break the law. And think about what that looks like. For example, you could say that, as George W. Bush did with his signing statement, that, regardless of what Congress said about torture, he could engage in that.

Now, think about the things that a president could do. And, in fact, somebody put on social media yesterday, an A.I. program that could — that said, say what crime you want to commit, and A.I. will tell you how you can say it's an official act.

Think of what somebody who is not liable for criminal acts might behave.


Jeffrey Brown:

Well, what do you fear now? We have a — former President Trump has a track record, his first administration. He's spoken of things he wants to do in the future if elected.

What do you fear and why do you think that these constitutional checks and balances that we have had will not hold?


Heather Cox Richardson:

Well, they're gone.

I mean, that's not — it's not a question — people are saying this might be a problem in the future. No, we're in the problem, because the rule of law, law and order underpins our entire system, the idea that everybody should be treated equally in the courts. The Supreme Court just ripped that up.

So what am I afraid of? I'm afraid of, first of all, that people don't recognize what a big deal this is. This isn't an adjustment in the law. This is a change in our entire constitutional system. It says that there is one of the three branches of government that cannot be checked by the other two.

And I don't think that people necessarily understand what that means. And all you have to do is look to any authoritarian country. Look, for example, right now in Hungary, where Viktor Orban is busily taking control of other countries' companies that are within his country, because he can do that now. He's not checked by the courts.

Look at Vladimir Putin's Russia, for example, where he can simply throw his people into the maw of a meat grinder in that war because they can't say no. We have just — our Supreme Court has just done the same thing.


Jeffrey Brown:

All right, Heather Cox Richardson, thank you very much.

https://www.pbs.org/newshour/show/histo ... ial-powers


HCR’s equally well-written Substack column, today, can be found here: https://open.substack.com/pub/heatherco ... uly-1-2024
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