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@Nonilex critical remarks?

If you're talking about what I think you're talking about, what's been in the news, they weren't critical remarks but potential physical threats.

Pretty big difference there.

@muiren What in the world?

If you don't understand why the public voted for Republicans, and it's not because of that conspiracy theory that you seem to be promoting, then you're not going to be able to oppose them and counter their argument.

If you don't understand the enemy then you can't fight them.

@RememberUsAlways again, in its ruling SCOTUS made the point that the wealthy were already able to buy influence outside of these organizations.

These orgs help level the playingfield against those who don't need them to buy influence.
@Doreen32128

@AnonomousWolf on this platform it's all about hashtags, so the functionality is already there, AFAIK.

Users can add the common hashtags to their filters.

@HarriettMB

Well, it's really that the US Executive Branch--not the US or even the entire US government, just that one branch--has a Supreme Leader... which it constitutionally does as the Constitution provides that "The executive Power shall be vested in a President of the United States of America."

This is a key part of checks and balances.

@wdhughes.bsky.social members of congress serve states, not the federal government, so the recall process varies from state to state.

It's not really a SCOTUS thing but a state thing.

@Nonilex that's not what SCOTUS ruled, though.

It didn't grant immunity to presidents. It restrained presidents for prosecuting over specific categories of action.

You're getting the ruling backwards on multiple dimensions.

@SonofaGeorge no, that's not how the Senate works, despite what so many politicians would have you believe.

ANY senator can move to consider such a nomination, and if the Senate wants to do it then it doesn't matter on iota what McConnell thought. He would be overruled and the nomination would proceed.

The story wasn't constitutional... and it didn't happen. It couldn't have happened under the rules of the Senate.

Garland simply didn't have support of the senators, but they were all happy to let McConnell be the fall guy instead of having to go on the record about it.
@GaryRLundberg

@cruiser what?

SCOTUS doesn't have a pardon power.

Wrong branch of government.
@petealexharris @Lana

@RememberUsAlways no, that's the opposite of what happened.

In their ruling SCOTUS pointed out that that money was already able to flow, and wasn't on the table for the question before them, so they were leveling the playingfield, allowing us to organize AGAINST that money.
@Doreen32128

@ronsparks.bsky.social@bsky.brid.gy I think you overestimate the amount of power that a single federal senator sitting in DC has over a state.

@sj_zero

Yes, exactly. We have so many promoting the norm that a voter HAS to vote, and if they don't then they're actually voting for the other guy.

If only we could push back against that common rhetoric we have a good chance of getting better candidates and better government in the end.

When the norm is that the parties have to actually run people worth voting for, or else voters will stay home, then they'll be motivated to stop running such trash candidates.

You can see how we ended up with vs as the two parties relied on opposition to the other rather than actually putting forward quality candidates.

@GetMisch remember: last year the Dems were voting with Republican extremists in the House.

It's not just that Dems are rolling over. They're actively encouraging all of this.

But... we elected them. We should stop reelecting them.

@realcaseyrollins

What in the world? That position is pretty out there, and expert after expert on the matter said the exact opposite, and with Russia's size, population, and industrial base they have the more likely position.

Ukraine had the upper hand? It was projected that Russia would run out of resources? Both of those claims are really pretty nutty considering what open source information tells us all with our own eyes.

@takeda

@HappySkullsplitter Trump didn't say Ukraine started the war.

A whole lot of people are spreading misinformation on social media about that, but that's not what he said.

@realcaseyrollins

What people might want to take away from interview of and is that, firstly, yes Trump is president and deserves all blame. Please stop saying he gave the presidency to someone else. That's not helpful for the sake of holding him accountable.

But more importantly, it's Hannity, not Musk, that represents the idiocy that Trump is Jacquelyn in his administration.

Musk is just messing around, you can see him stroking Trump's ego to keep playing in the sandbox, but it's Hannity that is promoting the utterly ignorant positions that Trump ends up listening to and acting on.

The buck stops with the president in the US system, but if you want to understand what Trump is doing in office, follow Hannity because he represents the mainstream conservative perspective that Trump is acting on.

And you really can't strategize against it if you misunderstand what's going on between those three people.

@zombywoof if you look up the list of SpaceX launch customers, there are PLENTY who aren't governmental.

@Itchy

SCOTUS will demand that the government clear this up through the normal legal process of judicial procedure.

@burnoutqueen I'm not forgetting that at all.

If you want to ignore the law as a mere social construct without teeth, ok, but in so far as we talk about the law, whether applied or not, we should be clear about what it actually says.

It may be purely academic, but no sense getting the facts wrong.

@ricardoharvin

@burnoutqueen I'm not forgetting that at all.

If you want to ignore the law as a mere social construct without teeth, ok, but in so far as we talk about the law, whether applied or not, we should be clear about what it actually says.

It may be purely academic, but no sense getting the facts wrong.

@ricardoharvin

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