• @[email protected]
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    2635 months ago

    Once they legalized coups, they lost all legitimacy in my opinion.

    The SCOTUS situation is scarier than the POTUS situation which was already frightening enough.

        • @[email protected]
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          85 months ago

          Correct. I think that’s the part many keep missing. SCOTUS just gave themselves the authority to determine if a Presidential act is immune from oversight. Which will no doubt be abused to help Republicans do whatever they want. But hamstring anything a Dem would attempt to accomplish.

    • @[email protected]
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      285 months ago

      The silver lining here is they have no power of enforcement themselves, and their decisions can be reversed if a sane court is built around them by leaders with enough spine to do so.

      Democrats just need to get Biden out of the race so Trump can be kept out of office. And the house majority is very slim, so that can potentially be flipped too if the base can actually be energized instead of suppressed the way they have been. Democrats win when there is high turn out, so the name of the game needs to be showing people that Democrats are capable of listening.

      • @[email protected]
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        415 months ago

        …if a sane court is built around them by leaders with enough spine

        Lack of spine isn’t the issue. It’s lack of political power.

        And even then what would the new court do? If they go back to operating the way they did before this judicial coup, that wouldn’t actually fix any of the damage done. Or remove the traitor sitting on the SCOTUS.

        • @[email protected]
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          5 months ago

          A court with more judges would water down the influence of any extremists.

          But yes, packing the court alone doesn’t guaruntee the court can’t be captured again. What Elie Mystal suggested way back when the court majority had flipped was basically two things that should happen:

          1. expand the court by alot, maybe somewhere within 20-30, similar to the 9th circuit that’s just below the Supreme Court. This helps dilute the power of individual crazies like Alito and then

          2. Rotate judges out routinely to other federal positions. This allows for their life-time appointment still, but ensures also that, due to the high number of justices, every administration is getting an opportunity to appoint a few judges every time. That revolving door means it wpuld require multiple far-right administrations to pin the court down like it is now.

          There’s no reason the court needs to be nine justices, we’ve had more and less throughout our history as a nation, and there’s no reason that the courts power needs to be concentrated into the hands of so few individuals, since the purpose of the court is suppose to be a moderating force of legal scholars, not an explicitly partisan body.

          • @[email protected]
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            105 months ago

            None of this addresses my point. There isn’t the political power to do it.

            And even if there was, the court has already essentially overturned precedent as a concept. That can’t just be rolled back without completely reworking the court, which…see my first point…

            • Buelldozer
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              175 months ago

              There isn’t the political power to do it.

              That’s the entire problem, full stop. This wouldn’t even have gotten to SCOTUS if Congress would have held POTUS accountable via impeachment. The reason Congress didn’t is partially due to political pressure from voters but mostly because the HoR is far too small to adequately represent 300,000,000 people.

            • @[email protected]
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              15 months ago

              Yes, it depends up getting people out to vote, especially in mid-terms.

              Precedent is literally just a tradition that’s agreed upon, there’s nothing binding judges to adhere to it, which is why the supreme court was so easily able to ignore it.

              So in that sense it’s a double-edged sword, it’s just as easy for judges to rule by precedent as it is for them to not, it’s always been this way.

        • @[email protected]
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          55 months ago

          Lack of spine isn’t the issue. It’s lack of political power.

          The court literally just gave Biden the power.

      • @[email protected]
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        215 months ago

        they have no power of enforcement themselves

        …which is why they’re working in tandem with the corrupt GOP, which does have the power. There isn’t a separation of powers in practice, just Democrats and Republicans.

        • @[email protected]
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          35 months ago

          Yes, what I’m saying is if you can keep the GOP out of power you hobble the supreme court. Like I said, it’s a source of hope and a goal to aim your political effort towards, not a permanent solution.

          People downvoting this seem confused. I made the assumption people were able to understand I was talking longer term fight.

    • @[email protected]
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      175 months ago

      Don’t forget they legalized bribery long before making coups legal. That’s when they were testing the waters. Now they know they can be blatent with their rulings and noone will hold them accountable.

    • @[email protected]
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      165 months ago

      Frankly, the writing has been on the wall since they overturned the election in 2000; it’s just gotten a lot more blatant.

    • @[email protected]
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      115 months ago

      Hmmm, I wonder if the left or any democracy loving peoples can create a temporary armed anti-coup force, just in case?

      • @[email protected]
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        105 months ago

        If we can organize to that level, why not take it one step farther? We could have actual democracy. It’d be a lot more stable, and more people would be willing to fight (and die) for it than preserving a broken status quo that pretty much everyone hates.

        • @[email protected]
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          45 months ago

          Ehh, because revolution is insanely hard, while something more directed with a single goal is possibly more feasible. That’s what I’m thinking.