Congress couldn't even enumerate or prove any national security concerns for the court to consider. It was passed on vibes.
But more importantly, it shouldn't be the court's job to second-guess Congress. It's their job to impartially uphold the constitution. If Congress passes an unconstitutional law, the court should strike it down. Period.
Finally, the idea that the court would ignore our constitution to kill a company just because it's foreign-owned would be a *far* worse precedent to set, as even a layperson could clearly see.
@lawfare This is also ridiculous.
Congress couldn't even enumerate or prove any national security concerns for the court to consider. It was passed on vibes.
But more importantly, it shouldn't be the court's job to second-guess Congress. It's their job to impartially uphold the constitution. If Congress passes an unconstitutional law, the court should strike it down. Period.
Finally, the idea that the court would ignore our constitution to kill a company just because it's foreign-owned would be a *far* worse precedent to set, as even a layperson could clearly see.
Just a completely absurd take overall.