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@StOnSoftware @LFpete @rbreich

The debt ceiling is just what we call the amount of money that Congress has authorized the president to borrow.

You say the ceiling needs to go away, but really it can't go away because it is simply the power that one branch of government gives to another.

@MugsysRapSheet

The Treasury says the Treasury payout doesn't match how much Congress budgets.

On their website they release monthly numbers showing so.

Congress doesn't have to raise the debt ceiling. That's the whole point.

That the credit rating was downgraded shows that the debt ceiling doesn't have to be raised. So your own observation disproves the claim.

If the debt ceiling had to be raised and the Treasury had to pay these debts then there would not have been a downgrade. That there was a downgrade shows that the story isn't true.

@stevengoldfarb

Or to put it another way, this is not a question of politics, it's a question of law, and the FDA broke the law.

The FDA is free to put peer-reviewed data to the forefront any day now, but under this president so far it is declining to do so.

So we're left with courts having to deal with an administration acting in violation of law, and putting politics aside, there is no good solution to that mess.

@MugsysRapSheet

The Treasury absolutely does pick and choose what government spends money on.

Keep in mind that every single year the Treasury does not spend exactly what Congress has appropriated.

That fact alone disproves the idea that Congress spends money.

Congress has the power to control access to the purse, but once Congress authorizes access to the purse, it's an Executive Branch function to actually spend money.

In short, what you're saying can easily be debunked by simply looking at the difference between what Congress appropriates versus what the Treasury spends.

@stevengoldfarb

The problem with that is that it speaks to normalizing an administration being above the law.

When a president is breaking the law, that shouldn't be off limits to the courts. That's why we have courts in the first place, to rule on laws, especially those created by our democratic processes.

And to emphasize based on that point, if the law is bad then we need to change the law. If it shouldn't have been illegal for the FDA to approve this drug despite its own scientific misgivings, then we should put forward legislation to change those legal protections against questionable drugs.

But as it stands, that is the law on the books, and it's tough to say that judges should not be enforcing those laws, that presidents should be able to just ignore them.

@MugsysRapSheet

I think the key there is the word "budget".

A budget is a plan. Sometimes plans don't work out. Often in the US government plans don't work out.

Just because they budget for something doesn't mean it will work out, and when you review the treasury reports it never ever does.

The Treasury never actually spends what is budgeted.

So no, when Congress budgets more spending than revenue, it's not only true that Treasury must raise money to cover that deficit, constitutionally the Treasury cannot raise money to cover that deficit without additional legal action.

It's not that the executive branch can't simply decide to spend less; constitutionally it has no choice but to spend less.

@StOnSoftware @LFpete @rbreich

That is not at all what is going on here in US politics.

The government bondholders are going to be paid, one way or another, since the president has the money to pay them.

The president is threatening not to pay them, but that is not his option. Joe Biden cannot legally refuse to pay bondholders when he has the money in the treasury to pay them, but he is bluffing about that very thing.

This is all ridiculous rhetoric, and Biden needs to be called out, and he needs to knock it off.

@stevengoldfarb

So if you read the ruling they cite FDA officials showing that the FDA did not follow their own procedures that are legally mandated.

If the drug has proven itself over decades, great! The administration should simply move forward to approve the drug under the legally mandated procedures. That would solve this whole mess.

Really, I have no idea why the administration is not doing that. It makes me think it is political, that the administration would rather fight this out in court rather than just have the FDA sign the paperwork It is legally required to sign.

@MugsysRapSheet

Of course the Treasury can pick and choose what it spends money on, because that is how the separations of power of the US government is designed.

If Congress authorizes the Treasury to spend money that it does not have, then it is implicitly all about letting the executive branch pick which things it wants to spend money on.

If I tell you that you can spend $10,000 but you only have $1,000 to spend then mathematically there is no choice but for you to pick and choose what to spend money on.

That is what we are facing now.

@stevengoldfarb

You have that exactly wrong! This whole case is about people questioning the FDA procedures for two decades!

The issue of timing is a core part of this entire dispute!

@StOnSoftware @LFpete @rbreich

Representatives decide how much the executive branch may borrow, and that amount is the debt ceiling.

To say the debt ceiling does not exist is just flat out ignoring how the federal government works.

@Nonilex

This case is not based on past injury.

So that doesn't apply.

SCOTUS overturns ban on abortion drug 

@maeve

Not quite.

The Court stayed an order that would have had the the drug available through regulations up through 2016, putting that order on hold while the rest of the case goes through the courts.

It didn't overturn a ban (that was already done), and nationwide access was also not in question at this stage.

supremecourt.gov/opinions/22pd

@jackhutton

Bitter? No. More like disappointed.

He calls out the court for playing games and accepting false premises instead of simply applying the law and pursuing a consistent legal environment.

@AkaSci

I think this is one of those cases where people who were surprised might reconsider their ideas about the Court, that left them missing the prediction.

I thought it was a pretty predictable outcome, despite what a lot of speakers were saying.

@mimarek1

No, the court case has not reached the merits stage, so this doesn't settle the original lawsuit.

@lauren

What specifically do you disagree with from Alito's dissent?

@wiseguyeddie

That kind of dovetails with my point.

If those speakers aren't even constrained to honesty, and they can say whatever they want, then their emphasis of the importance of child exploitation is even more likely reflective of their beliefs.

I mean, they absolutely get so much wrong. However, they're expressing strong opposition to child exploitation even if that exploitation only exists in their fever dreams.

Just to highlight another case of how we live in completely different worlds when we don't stop to figure out matters of basic fact, compare this week's breathless reporting on mifepristone against the Supreme Court's release:

"As narrowed by the Court of Appeals, the stay that would apply if we failed to broaden it would not remove mifepristone from the market. It would simply restore the circumstances that existed (and that the Government defended) from 2000 to 2016 under three Presidential administrations."

Press outlet after outlet said the opposite. So, would have been nice if we could all get on the same page about this kind of thing.

supremecourt.gov/opinions/22pd

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