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@GottaLaff

I think the article is misleading.

Thomas's own writings describe how the situation changed over time, how appeals to deference have grown bolder than expected, so given that new evidence, he's been clear that he thinks the new environment is off-course.

In a way it's not that he changed his mind on an issue, but that the legal system changed, leaving him feeling the need to address the new ways that the federal government is functioning.

There's nothing scandalous about that.

@RememberUsAlways

If the funding sources were agreed upon in 2022 then we wouldn't be at this place, as the spending would be covered.

But sure, show me where in the budget bill it lists the source of funding to cover the deficit spending.

@RememberUsAlways

No, you're incorrect.

The debt ceiling is just the term for the constitutional assignment of borrowing authority to Congress. The name might be recent, but the idea goes back to the very beginning.

"The Congress shall have Power [..] To borrow Money on the credit of the United States;" <--- there's your debt ceiling right there

So Congress authorized deficit spending, but failed to authorize the borrowing needed to actually make it possible.

Since Congress failed to provide a funding source to cover that gap, they left us in this mess, having authorized something impossible.

Again, authorize infrastructure or don't, but if they do, then they need to provide funding for their program.

They didn't, and they need to be called out for that.

@hirad

Yeah, there are some sadly intolerant corners of this place, that folks want to describe as so friendly and happy.

@voxel@ohai.social

@CarolineMalaCorbin

Maybe you address them in the paper, but it sounds like you might run into issues of action vs inaction and minimal imposition needed to support a government interest.

As I recall a lot of the religious liberty protection comes down to, Does government *really* need to impose ___ to reach its goal, or is there a less intrusive option?

Unfortunately when it comes to abortion, if we accept that restricting it promotes a legit goal (or else this is all moot), then there isn't much room for more or less intrusion.

(I'm not looking to start a debate, but if you feel like a summary response to this, I'd be happy to read it!)

@jlindborg

In this case it's not that the dems should have *blocked* reps, but that they shouldn't have actively created this situation and handed it to the GOP.

Democrats chose to pass appropriations bills without funding sources, putting us in this situation. That was their decision, their active effort.

Basically, they created a mess that we're now all dealing with. They shouldn't have created that mess.

@murshedz

George Santos, International man of mystery 

@z_everson

"H.Res.114 - In the matter of George Santos."

I suppose people don't tend to receive these historic sounding shout-outs in Congress for *good* reasons :)

@mnutty

So I'd say the signature should be context dependent.

For example, if a reporter is quoting an expert or public figure verbatim, I'd like to see their signature attached to see that they agree that they were properly quoted.

Or if the piece is a technical explainer, the reporter might get a few subject matter experts to attach signatures, publicly attesting that they reviewed the material and it's solid.

Just a run-of-the-mill report or newsbrief though? Sure, the reporter's own signature might be fine; track down others might be overkill. Well, we might want editors' signatures too, just for fun.

But the main thing that comes to my mind with this is the quotation signature. It doesn't happen every day, but far too often over the years I've seen reporters literally leave out a word like "not" and end up reversing the meaning of the quote.

The signing process would have had the speaker catch the misquotation, hopefully.

@gimulnautti

@RememberUsAlways

I'm happy to criticize Trump and, I was certainly opposed to those spending bills. But there's a major difference between then and now:

Funding was provided for those programs. The issue of this moment is that funding for these programs doesn't exist.

I believe the worst thing is Congress having promised to spend money that doesn't exist. That breaks the government all around.

Sort out infrastructure spending however, but do it reasonably, providing a funding source for the programs.

@pierreb

Thanks for sharing.

Yeah, when I first looked at the design of ActivityPub I worried that it sounded resource intensive to scale, and then when the Twitter exodus happened I heard a ton of people on here complaining about that exact concern.

So it's something I keep an eye on, though I haven't run it myself to have first-hand experience.

@jeff

@mnutty

The concern I've heard expressed is that if a reporter is asking, say, a politician to sign a report, to certify it as authentic, then the reporter will feel pressure to play nice with the politician to "earn" that signature.

I understand the concern, but I think the pros outweigh the navigation of that task.

It can even stand as a form of review that's both annoying and fruitful at the end of the day, if it leads to the hassles of revisions that end in a better report.
@gimulnautti

@mnutty

In my experience, when I hear someone expressing criticism or even frustration with journalists it's due to the reporter's product standing or failing on its own, not due to bashing from any third party groups.

I know a lot of people who've become especially disenchanted with the way is conducted these days after hearing reporters confidently saying things that go against the listener's own professional expertise.

That's not to say there aren't people out there who *are* swayed by political bashing, just that I tend to converse with professionals who have this other, pretty eye-opening experience.

Once that skepticism sets in, they start to notice other flaws, and now we really don't know any particular source for great journalism.
@madelainetaylor@mastodon.scot

The labor force participation rate remains well below its 2020 level.

You're still excluding people from the count which spends the statistics.

fred.stlouisfed.org/graph/fred

@joe

I think that illustrates my point.

100 bills loosening regulations on firearms does highlight that there are so many regulations on them to loosen.

If guns were so unregulated, then they wouldn't have anything to pass bills against. That they are passing legislation against the regulations goes to show that the regulations are considered constitutionally allowable.

Otherwise instead of passing legislation they would just challenge the regulations against guns as unconstitutional and leave it at that.

So right. There are a lot of regulations against firearms in the US. The 2nd Amendment is not seen as all that powerful, and we can see evidence of that in what you brought up, the Texas legislature's decision that they need to augment the 2nd Amendment with further legislation.

@joe

I think you are overestimating the places where people can carry guns.

Governments have had quite a lot of ability to rope off places as sensitive areas where guns are not allowed, and certainly private property owners are able to set rules against carrying on their premises.

Gun free zones are definitely a thing, meanwhile even disruptive protests are often tolerated even against clear rules about it.

@DemDifference

Those statistics are out of context until you correct for the numbers of people who left the workforce and aren't included in the headline unemployment number.

@JasonPerseus

Not to mention, deplatforming just plays into Trump's hands, offering credence to his claims of being so attacked, proving him in the eyes of voters who are considering him.

The guy runs on a message of being under attack. We shouldn't be helping him prove that claim.

@barney@mas.to

@lauren

Which comment are you disagreeing with? I think we're all on that same page, unless there's a comment I'm not seeing here.

@glitch @mawhrin

@JasonPerseus

Sounds like it's the sort of thing where half the country is aware of things the other half of the country isn't, just part of the big divide we have these days based on where people get their news.

@bespacific

Well it is a bit different because these efforts threaten judicial independence, which is a concern that didn't come up when it concerned Trump.

It's one thing to look at whether the executive branch is properly applying the laws passed by Congress, but it's another for Congress to delve into the personal lives of the justices that are meant to serve as independent arbiters even of congressional action.

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