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@WuMargaret

If it was about gerrymandering then we would see substantial if minority motion toward impeachment. Gerrymandering tends to marginalize positions, but what we see there is general absence of the position.

No, my own experience from talking to people all across the country is that people don't pay attention to what their representatives are doing. They empower and re-elect representatives who act against voters' preferences, and sadly the voters are just not aware that it happens.

In this particular case I see a ton of people not realizing that impeachment is the solution at all. They aren't asking for it because they don't realize it is the thing they need to be asking for.

We can't really blame gerrymandering for this situation when the problem is much deeper: people are getting the representatives they want to vote for, but they are sadly misinformed and therefore voting for the wrong representatives.

@chrisgeidner @john_chu

@CptSuperlative

I mean, maybe we shouldn't make it easy for authorities to punish people?

I find it troubling how many seem eager to expand government power to attack and harm us with less oversight and restriction.

Such authoritarianism is exactly what we have checks to protect us from.

@RunRichRun

The order cites statutes and rulings from the 70s that have nothing to do with the affirmative action case.

This is about a law preventing "a contractual regime based on race" not admissions.

aboutblaw.com/baL5

@WuMargaret

The Supreme Court is accountable to the people that we elect to Congress, who have the ability to impeach and remove any justice that's misbehaving.

This needs to be shouted loudly and often as so many seem to be missing that through our democratic processes we have the tools through which to resolve so many disputes in society these days, including this one.

Perhaps one doesn't like that a justice isn't being impeached and removed. Fine! Stop voting for representatives who are failing to impeach, and push others to do the same.

When we keep reelecting bad representatives, well, that's on us, but it doesn't change that we have that mechanism should we choose to use it.

@chrisgeidner @john_chu

@ChemicalEyeGuy

The order from the Court didn't specify a conflict of interest.

@ekes well, not quite:

Fediverse didn't seek to decentralize social media but rather to re-centralize it around instances.

There are major implications of that design decision, on all levels from technological through social organization.

We'll see what comes of Bluesky. Sure, they're moving suspiciously slowly, but that in itself isn't reason to make assumptions about their intentions.

@ChemicalEyeGuy

Yes, that's exactly what happened: the Court announced that they didn't have enough justices among themselves interested in taking the case and that Thomas didn't participate in the discussion where they figured out if they wanted to take it.

That's all, and as usual the Court issued that resolution without providing any additional detail.

A lot of people are speculating and trying to make assumptions, but it's all just speculation past that.

@failedLyndonLaRouchite

@dcdeejay

The Court can't do much as it doesn't have that sort of power.

It would take action of the Executive Branch to impact social media in the way you fear.

@Axomamma

This wasn't about the cars themselves but about whether the drivers could get out of the arbitration agreement that they'd agreed to.

The question about marketing will now be resolved through arbitration, as per the agreement.

@arstechnica

@rmblaber1956

*shrug* I suggest we read Section 3 of the 14th Amendment if we want to know what it says.

If other sources reliably quote it great! If they don't that's a shame. But no matter whether they're reliable or not (and The Atlantic is hardly reliable), the amendment says what it says.

We can read it for ourselves, so let's go right to the source to see what it says.

@dogcanyon

If small minorities are able to conduct such sabotage then we're not talking about democracy in the first place.

The two statements are inconsistent.

@tezoatlipoca

It's an ActivityPub design issue.

AP specifies everything from a bloated signaling protocol through behaviors that suggest exponential processing and traffic as functions of instances involved in a post.

It doesn't matter how well an implementation is written; it will be subject to that design.

w3.org/TR/activitypub/

@jwz

@lauren

Hate speech is an integral part of Twitter?

You're saying the social media platform would just collapse without hate speech?

That's clearly wrong.

Also, I don't care about whatever ridiculous pronouncements the EU makes. They can deal with their own screwy system.

@NMBA

I mean, we all are.

We can all read the opinions ourselves and judge them based on their reasoning, though too few people bother to read opinions before adopting VERY STRONG OPINIONS about what those unread opinions actually say.

@TheConversationUS

This is such an important point that so many, sadly, miss.

volkris boosted

The justices often get pigeon-holed as "conservative" or "liberal", but political scientist John Tures says that's too simplistic.

Typically, over half of decisions each term (which may be the less controversial and publicized ones) are decided unanimously or 8-1.

theconversation.com/supreme-co

#uspolitics #USPol #SCOTUS (2 of 3)

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@TheConversationUS

This take gets the story a bit wrong.

It's not that the legislature had gerrymandered black voters out of a fair map but the opposite: the Court ruled AL *must* gerrymander a map that takes race into account.

And now it's not that the Supreme Court quickly batted down the challenge but that it simply said it wasn't going to get involved.

@argv_minus_one@mstdn.party

Oh, an awful lot of conservatives do think Trump has/had honorable intentions.

@coderipper

Studies of the electorate showed otherwise: Trump managed to bring together a coalition of different groups--many who had huge disagreements with others--in a way that no other candidate could.

It wasn't a case of splitting of the vote. It was more that Trump managed to make himself into a Rorschach exam onto which those different groups could project their own notions of what they wanted.

Republicans voted FOR Trump. They didn't vote against other candidates in this case.

@BlueWaver22

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