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@BeAware@social.beaware.live

Right, and the standard is basically broadcasting for anyone listening, and that's my point.

@Jerry

@IAmDannyBoling Well that's not true.

They have not decided to act. They have not acted, as is the normal course of their operation.

That's just how the US judiciary system works. Go through their democratic process, the other branches, if you demand action.

@GNUmatic keep in mind that propublica is itself corrupt, with a long record of promoting conspiracy theories that get debunked long after publication, so you can't really trust them to speak about corruption.

@BeAware@social.beaware.live

You say If it's like a normal activitypub instance, but firstly there's the big if there, and secondly that assumes there is such a thing as a normal instance.

I'd say the whole point of a distributed system like this is to allow different instances to operate differently, not to be all under the same umbrella like the centralized social media platforms.

So basically, it's considered a feature that what you're talking about doesn't really exist.

Everybody needs to realize that anything they post on this platform is effectively public to anyone who wants to access it, including

@Jerry

@JeremyMallin I mean, not all of us fall for the conspiracy theories...

@BohemianPeasant again, as an appeals court they would not hear a challenge to an executive order because that's not how that works.

The courts hear challenges to impacts, not orders.

@flyoverproj

Resignation? No. You have to know your audience so you can address them and see what you're working with, so you can move forward.

It's the opposite of resignation.

@ThomHartmann

@BohemianPeasant firstly, that's not how the Court works.

Generally the Supreme Court is a court of appeals addressing questions related to lower courts' actions.

They do not decide whether an executive order stands. That's just now how the US legal system is designed.

But to the point: an EO banning abortion nation wide would not be a Comstock Act executive order since the Comstock Act does not ban abortion nation wide.

It's just fantasy nonsense to tie the two together.

@flyoverproj sadly, misinformation about the functioning of the SCOTUS, and the US Government in general, is absolutely rampant these days.

It's pretty safe to assume any audience is misinformed.

@ThomHartmann

@BohemianPeasant no, the Comstock Act doesn't allow a president to ban abortion nation wide.

@PattyHanson that's not what happened, though.

SCOTUS did not grant Texas the authority of the US government. They cannot do that, and they did not do that.

Media outlets spreading that claim don't understand how the US legal system works, at best. Or maybe they do understand but they're more interested in getting clicks than accurate reporting.

@BohemianPeasant why?

The Atlantic is wrong and misleading readers. Quips about the traditional naming of legal documents is a distraction from that important point.

@BohemianPeasant but lots of opinions shopped around by outlets like The Atlantic are simply wrong and misleading.

And they need to be called out because too many in society act on the misinformation.

It's no excuse to hide behind the label "opinion"

@Free_Press never forget, though, that so many Trump supporters want to watch these fights play out, so their fundraising went exactly where they wanted it to go.

They weren't defrauded. They were knowingly buying admission to these wrestling matches.

So often people get distracted by yelling at and miss that the core problem is the people around us who want exactly this outcome, who want Trump to do exactly what he's doing.

Whether or not Trump is on the scene, that problem exists.

@parismarx I don't think that's quite right as I see so many people who aren't Elon Musk highlighting those sci-fi dreams regardless of the business model of SpaceX.

Basically, WE are promoting that myth, regardless of Musk. We're doing it to ourselves.

SpaceX is a real company with real administrators who aren't Musk. Let's not be distracted by the myth of Musk.

@GossiTheDog the difference is that it's so much easier to monetize a centralized platform. It offers so much more value to investors because of that.

Fediverse is worth less as a revenue generator specifically because it rejected the model that enables that revenue generation.

@BohemianPeasant The Atlantic is wrong. The author here simply doesn't understand the legal procedure or the ruling that came out of the Supreme Court.

Or, perhaps the author does understand it but decided to put out a sensational article instead.

Either way, promoting this sort of misinformation is not healthy for our society.

The Atlantic always seems to be putting out this stuff, and the outlet needs to be called out as untrustworthy.

@peltast Again, the question is absolutely NOT about whether is safe. That's not the question before the .

They emphatically do not have the expertise or interest in answering that question.

The question here is a matter of law and legal procedure, whether the administration did or did not obey the law, *regardless of whether mifepriston is safe*.

That's exactly what so many miss.

@petersuber no, it's not that delay is victory. It's that the case against the democratic process wasn't solid.

@m

We're taught that the mixing of water and salt was to replicate seawater with the idea that when international researchers wanted to calibrate their instruments by freezing water, seawater was more available than pure water.

@freemo

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