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@DemocracyMattersALot

Of course we can tolerate a Supreme Court comprised of grifters because we get to see their rulings, and we get to judge the output of their work regardless of who writes the rulings.

If they are grifters who are writing good rulings, great! Or if they are honest but write bad rulings, then it doesn't matter how honest they are, they are doing a disservice to the country.

All of this focus on personality instead of results is a dramatic distraction from the actual work of government in our democratic system.

It's pretty antisocial, pretty misguided.

@TCatInReality @crooksandliars

I mean, why do you disagree? What is your argument?

I mean each of us can understand civics and understand the functioning of our own government for ourselves. In fact I'd say it's vital to a democratic institution that the people do understand the way their government works.

To just accept claims without reasoning is a problem here.

@JasonPerseus

If a ruling is correct, I really don't care if it was bought.

If a ruling is wrong, I really don't care if it wasn't bought.

That's because we can judge rulings on their own merits without needing to speculate or consider any behind the scenes drama. A ruling is right or wrong regardless of anything related to the personality involved.

To put it another way, if we get correct rulings because they are being bought, then goodness, let's have more buying of correct rulings! If that's what it takes to get good rulings, then great!

But in reality, it just doesn't matter because we can judge rulings on their own merit.

@StOnSoftware @LFpete @rbreich

That there can't be a debt ceiling is going to be news to all of us who are talking about the debt ceiling that exists 🙂

@davidaugust

Right, but the US has enough income to pay the debts it has already incurred, which the president is constitutionally required to pay.

Right, he won't be able to borrow more, but he will be able, and he will be required to, service the debt that has already been entered into.

@JasonPerseus

No. Politicizing the branch that is specifically supposed to be above politics is just a bad idea.

Judge the justices based on their work, not based on any of this personal stuff.

All of their opinions are public. We can read them ourselves. THAT is what they should be held accountable for, not their personal lives, not this TV drama nonsense.

I really don't care what a justice does in his free time. I only care about his rulings.

@sonyasteele

No that gets it backwards.

The Treasury has plenty of money to pay its debts, Biden's own Treasury says so, and yet President Biden is threatening default if he is not given this extra power to borrow.

He's the one who wrote the ransom note.

@DrALJONES

No that's factually false. If you pull up the documents directly from the legislature, they were not punished for peaceful protests.

They were punished for breaking the rules that they themselves had already agreed to, and so the accountability that they also agreed to was triggered.

You can't just stand in the way of the democratic process without facing any consequences.

@Pat That's not how the federal government works.

You can't overturn a constitutional matter with a simple majority of one house of the legislature.

@TCatInReality @crooksandliars

You're missing that it's not a case of one law taking precedent over other.

Congressional appropriation laws are permission to spend what is there. The president still has permission to spend even if he mathematically can't.

It's like, I can write a law giving you permission to flap your arms and fly around the room, and even if that's not possible, it's still the law. You still absolutely do have that permission. That you can't actually use that permission doesn't mean you don't have permission.

So really it's not one law taking precedent over another. It's economic reality, math, taking precedent over legislation, and that's exactly how it is supposed to work.

@TCatInReality @crooksandliars

Why couldn't it possibly be constitutional? Rather, it absolutely IS constitutional!

It's just the democratic process at work.

If we elect people to shut down the government, well, that is the word of the people. We get what we vote for.

@StOnSoftware @LFpete @rbreich

It's not, though, and that's the whole issue here.

The federal government never knows exactly how much tax revenue it will bring in every year. If nothing else, the unpredictability of the economy means it might bring in a lot more this year or a lot less this year.

So deficit spending is linked to unpredictable levels of taxation, so borrowing levels cannot be derived from other decisions Congress makes.

That's why the power to borrow has to be separate from anything else.

@cathyginter@universeodon.com

Most of those are state programs, so it's a bit silly to point to the federal Congress as impacting them.

@kevinjelliott

Well yeah, but given that the Treasury will have the income to pay the debts, they would be horrified that the president is proposing not paying them and threatening the country with default as a rhetorical stunt.

And so many politicians and people are buying into that rhetoric.

@Shachihoko @TonyStark

Right, carrying too much debt should be addressed while making budgets, but the last Congress didn't do it, so what do we do now? That's the big question we are dealing with now.

The last Congress really let us down. This Congress is dealing with the mess left over.

Anyway, we cannot do away with the debt ceiling stuff since the debt ceiling is simply the word we use to describe the permission the legislative branch gives to the executive branch to borrow money. It is just the word for permission being granted.

@davidaugust

The Treasury has plenty of revenue incoming to pay its debts, so defaulting is not on the table unless the president decides to default.

The GOP isn't pursuing default, and doesn't even have the ability to pursue it since Democrats hold the White House.

Whether or not the debt ceiling is raised, the Treasury can pay its debts. The rest is up to the Democrat in charge of the executive branch.

@TCatInReality @crooksandliars

The problem is that the laws the last Congress passed are impossible to execute.

The last Congress ordered the president to spend a bunch of money that doesn't exist. So what is he supposed to do with that? If I give you $20 and order you to spend $50 of it, what do you do?

Well fortunately with a system of coequal branches the president doesn't actually have to execute impossible laws. He just does his best, and is subject to impeachment anyway.

But there is no room for a SCOTUS challenge there.

@obtener

The thing is, the US Treasury will have enough revenue to pay its debts, so defaulting is absolutely not on the table unless the president decides for himself to default.

@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.

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