Me: Like when it comes to education, the teachers, who are the experts should really be deciding things.
Normies: OH MY GOD! NO, what! EVERYONE SHOULD HAVE A SAY!
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Fast forward a few days:
Normies: OH MY GOD! The SC is RUINING EVERYTHING, only EXPERTS should be consulted on deciding things!
I mean, at least give me my props, for being right, again.
Okay, I am off to Jiffy Lube to try and convince the guys that work their that I know what the f#&% they are talking about when I hand them my debit card and pin number because my "johnson rod" needs to be replaced.
State government in most states.Do you know who decides whether a school board should be elected by the public?
Do you think Obama and Trump should be charged for the innocents killed with drone strikes?What could have possibly changed?
Do you think Obama and Trump should be charged for the innocents killed with drone strikes?
Do you believe Congress should be able to be sued for Libel or Slander for what they say during hearings?
They have immunity from them. Meaning they currently are above the law. And have been I should add.Have presidents/members of congress had those things happen to them before?
The executive branch should not and cannot have absolute authority on how to interpret laws made by Congress. This is why Chevron was decided the way it was. People having a hissy fit about Chevron have blinders on thinking the bureaucrats have zero power in deciding how to interpret the laws they are tasked at implementing. They now don’t have the unchecked power they previously enjoyed.
The executive branch never has had absolute authority. The executive branch interprets, administers, and enforces. The courts are there to rule if the law, as interpreted and applied by the executive branch, is in line with the intent of the law. Chevron never gave the executive branch absolute authority and to suggest and argue otherwise, when you know better, is asinine, in poor faith, and rudimentary parroting of talking points. Bad take.
Not in America that I know of...Bush was supposed stand trial with the international court but that will never happen.Have presidents/members of congress had those things happen to them before?
For real though, he could do that.Joe Biden: "In my first official act under the new authority granted to the Presidency by the Supreme Court. I am canceling the 2024 election do to lack of a viable candidate from another major party. This is an official act of the Office of the President of the United States."
Good thing that is outside his limited constitutional powersJoe Biden: "In my first official act under the new authority granted to the Presidency by the Supreme Court. I am canceling the 2024 election do to lack of a viable candidate from another major party. This is an official act of the Office of the President of the United States."
Why are we presuming Republicans are operating in good faith? They were already inplementing this system prior to this ruling.While I don't disagree, the question that @knapplc raised is of the previous system was the best we could do given the obvious constrains Congress has when writting laws.
We traded "annoying bureaucrats get it right most of the time" to "exploitable, non-experts making political choices where they have no business making them".
While not perfect, one system is preferable to another.
Not in America that I know of...Bush was supposed stand trial with the international court but that will never happen.
For real though, he could do that.