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@cdonat what money? I don't see what you're responding to.

The financing of US weapons to Ukraine is something a whole lot of people don't understand.

@KimPerales

@DrALJONES

The problem is, Trump is surrounded by people who won't tell him that he's losing. It's not clear that he knows.

I suspect he thought he already won, and he wants to win again, he's just frustrated that it's taking so long for the troops to get there or for Iran to cave to give him that next win.

He's an impatient little brat, but I don't think he's engaged with reality enough to know he's losing, just like in elections and court cases where he lost.

@Su_G

@SecondUniverse

Well to seriously answer your question (because understanding the situation is important to addressing it) the two statements can be seen as true because one context is more quantitative and rules-defined than the other.

Bathroom activities are largely defined by social norms. Olympic activites are defined by rules of games.

@artlog

I'd say a difference is that ActivityPub encompass quite a lot of the stack and centralizes a lot of functionality to instances while SMTP simply (ha) focuses on transport.

That difference is not trivial!

From questions of efficiency through user responsiveness and application flexibility, it pushes towards one-size-fits-all centralization.

Really, it might be the difference between http and the old platforms like AOL.

@MFennVT as is so common, Sotomayor doesn't seem to have read the opinion that she's criticizing so sensationally, as the opinion says the exact opposite of what she lays out.

The opinion leaves officials wide open for prosecution should they use gratuitous force. It only applies qualified immunity to non-gratuitous force.

Heck, that's the "qualified" in "qualified immunity"!

Sotomayor should know better.

@GetMisch

But it's also not how it works to say the Supreme Court gets to make that call. They don't have such authority, constitutionally, regardless.

You're right that Congress can't really make laws to correct such a ruling, that's not how that works, but that's because the entire question is above them all.

@flancia.org such an openminded mindset is sadly lacking offline as well as in online communities.

Really throwing babies out with bathwater.

It's striking how smallminded and myopic it is for mainstream supporters to laud a history of attacking during negotiation as a way to get future negotiation.

Reporting suggests isn't negotiating this time. For SOME reason.

On The Idiots  
#ClayAndBuck:Twice now #Trump has "bamboozled" #Iran by attacking them while they were at the negotiation table.THAT's how we know Iran is negotia...

@tallship

Well, to be fair it's not really about common sense. There are plenty of statutes out there that go against common sense.

Fortunately, at least in this case, the law passed by Congress didn't go so far as to make ISPs liable.

volkris boosted

#BrianKilmeade: The US should just go take the Strait of Hormuz. We'll just own it. It'll be easy. And we should start escorting ships through--it won't be a problem. Just like we did decades ago. #USPolitics

@everton137 I think there's just not much to discuss.

Voters in the US aren't interested in electing a reasonable, responsible government, so what's there to say?

It's like a bad sitcom. There's just not much to say about it.

@jonchevreau.bsky.social

Right, wrong branch of government. It's really up to Congress and the people that we elect to Congress.

We have to stop reelecting the same ineffective people.

@LiamOMaraIV

This is especially timely as Republican-aligned figures join in the debate over and DHS funding by explicitly rejecting due process for those accused of being illegal immigrants.

I cringe every time I hear them assert that, and it seems to be a major stickingpoint in Congress at the moment.

@Quasit

Absolutely there are still three functioning branches! The problem isn't in the functioning but in how we use them.

Congress is really the key, as we elect and reelect representatives to represent us, well, turns out we want gridlock, so it's giving us exactly the gridlock we voted for.

It's like a computer that's operating 100% correctly, but we keep putting garbage in and getting garbage out.

@maeve_bkk

Idiots advising on US policy are at about this level, completely unaware that these terms and determinations have real, significant legal implications.

Kilmeade being so low key about giving up the imminent argument shows he has no idea how important that concept is in the US system of governance.

On The Idiots  
#BrianKilmeade: With all the controversy over whether the attack on #Iran was justified by it posing an imminent threat to the US, why can't we ju...

@Quasit

Meh, presidents still require statutory permission to act, even to engage in enforcement action against actual criminals.

It's part of the US design that it requires cooperation of all three branches for the federal government to act against its citizens.

@maeve_bkk

@stevevladeck.bsky.social

From what I hear, many justices on the SCOTUS have consciously taken the position that it would be improper for them to engage like that.

They don't believe it would amount to politicization of the non-political branch to go on a campaign of persuasion outside of the opinions they hand down.

volkris boosted

#ClayAndBuck: You know things are going well in #Venezuela because there hasn't been any media coverage of it. The media would cover it if things were going badly. (So they say after I was hearing media coverage about how it was going badly) #USPolitics

@darulharb I mean I think most of us just say that the guy is a senile joke who doesn't know how anything in the world works.

That's probably the easiest thing to say.

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