The startling claim came amid a lawsuit from the American Academy of Pediatrics.
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Sure but what are they going to do about it? Are they going to fine and issue arrest warrants for the leaders of the DOJ or DOH if they don't follow any judicial ruling? I mean that's what would happen for us lowly plebs but something tells me in these cases it will continue to be limited to sternly worded letters and maybe a furrowed brow.With all that said.. most of the judiciary is getting pretty sick of this administrations antics and claims... so it doesn't bode well for the administration here.
Couldn't tell you why you're getting downvoted. The article does state "... the vaccine policy changes—which were not carried out with typical processes and lack supporting scientific evidence—were done improperly and without reasoned decision-making." which implies there is a process, but the nature of that process will be the key.So what does the law say?
Does the law say that policies must be based on science? Based on consultation with experts? Subject to public comment? It may very well be that the the law that created the position allows total discretion, no matter how misguided. He's a cabinet official, there must be some law or other means (executive order?) that created the originally created the position that may offer some clarity. Surely that was brought up in the discussion before the judge.
So, legally speaking "un-reviewability" is actually a valid argument (but maybe not a good one in this case).
Whether they're correct about that is a different matter, and is for the judge to decide... but it's not a wildly unreasonable argument to make as matter of whether the courts have the authority to intervene in the executive or legislative branches. It's a very particular line of argument that may just not hold up.
You have to understand this within the context of the legal strategy being used here rather than some common meaning of the apparent arrogance of the statement. Sure it sounds bad or "startling" when you phrase it in a headline... but what they're really asserting is that the court has no constitutional right to intervene in this particular executive determination, specifically. That's a much more specific and important question to settle and it's not as sensational as it sounds on its face.
With all that said.. most of the judiciary is getting pretty sick of this administrations antics and claims... so it doesn't bode well for the administration here.
The problem is the judiciary just decides the cases.. they don't enforce. That is left, in part, to the executive. Hurray.Sure but what are they going to do about it? Are they going to fine and issue arrest warrants for the leaders of the DOJ or DOH if they don't follow any judicial ruling? I mean that's what would happen for us lowly plebs but something tells me in these cases it will continue to be limited to sternly worded letters and maybe a furrowed brow.
If the judiciary wants to be taken seriously there needs to be consequences and so far I've seen none.
I think that's a perfectly valid question. Best we have is the lawyer saying...So what does the law say?
Does the law say that policies must be based on science? Based on consultation with experts? Subject to public comment? It may very well be that the the law that created the position allows total discretion, no matter how misguided. He's a cabinet official, there must be some law or other means (executive order?) that created the originally created the position that may offer some clarity. Surely that was brought up in the discussion before the judge.
I honestly think that is one of the more unlikely constitutional crises that Trump could actually happen, and turn out to be catastrophic in the coming years. In that scenario, Trump will apply to be on the ballot is all states, and the majority of them will reject him, those that accept him will be challenged legally and those that reject him will be challenged legally, SCOTUS will likely rule in a way that precludes Trumps election. As much as it looks like SCOTUS just rubber stamps everything Trump does, that is not an accurate perception of reality, the most notable rejection is the tariffs. And all that's assuming he even gets through the primary process.I really, really REALLY dread the upcoming shitshow in 2028 when he says he is going to run for a 3rd term and everyone else can get over it.
Because we all know it is coming.
You know how you can ditch your layer? Them using the words "Kennedy", "Freedom" et cetera.His unfettered powers even allow Kennedy the freedom to recommend, if he chose to do so, that people ditch vaccines and actively expose themselves to infectious diseases, the lawyer argued
The judge issuing a ruling that the government should do something different is also not even remotely certain.From what I have read, courts take a very dim view of both civil servants and politicians who claim that their authority makes their policy above review. So I would hazard a guess that this is a very poor starting position for the DoJ officials.
Of course, the judge issuing a ruling and the government actually complying are two vastly different things.
For some reason "the algorithm" was shoving down Star Trek The Next Generation related info around the episode "The Drumhead" yesterday. And yet, the final bit of that episode when Worf and Picard are chatting rings fairly true today. Yikes.
View: https://youtu.be/CbQvCzWkATA?t=44&si=LYEt-09opkWeTLVz
Captain Jean-Luc Picard said:...she or someone like her will always be with us, waiting for the right climate in which to flourish, spreading fear in the name of righteousness.
Vigilance Mr. Worf, that is the price we have to continually pay.
Don't give them ideas. Have you ever heard of chickenpox parties?
Nothing like making sure your children will get shingles later in life. Yeah I know there are shingles vaccines, and yes I have had them. But I had already had two bouts of it before they became available. But if the parents infect their kids with their anti-vax nonsense they won't get those vaccines either.Don't give them ideas. Have you ever heard of chickenpox parties?
The way you say that with such confidence, I expected a GoFundMe link or something. <Grin>He's not going to live that long.
Measles parties have already become a thing:Don't give them ideas. Have you ever heard of chickenpox parties?
Don't worry, they are buying up warehouses by the dozen, in order to, intentionally or otherwise, perform natural immunity experiments.Yeah. That's what "natural immunity" is code for.
Fundamentally, the flaw isn't with the system.The reason anti-Anus protesters have adopted the weak slogan "No Kings" is that they lack the courage to demand no Gods. That would start a whole new ball game that few have the guts to play. No one outside of academia is much willing to discuss the systems of power as such. We prefer to scapegoat individuals who, however awful, are only symptoms of the underlying disease.
Power is sexy. We adore being pleasured by it, we love crying about being pained by it, and we behave as though dying of it is some flavor of nobly ecstatic obliviation rather than the self indulgent narcissism martyrdom always is.. In the midst of all our moans and screams, we fail to acknowledge that it's we who both create the power to which we're subject and sustain it. Consequently, when we dream of removing the boot from our necks, we do so entirely to imagine wearing it, not of throwing it on the trash heap of history and finding better ways to manage our resources and affairs.
The crypto-fascist regime that currently holds the U.S. in willing thrall and thrill is proof that its core systems are flawed. Its checks and balances against abuse of power are entirely insufficient. The fact that a single madman is damaging the public health in a way that will ultimately kill thousands, perhaps millions, is just one of many examples.
Morons.The entire Trump administration thinks they are "above the law". And they will be until people hold them accountable.
Trying to create a system of government is like writing an entire operating system and app suite... that runs on humans. It's fucking hard. The only remotely palatable alternative to democracy I've seen is lottocracy, it's a component of how juries are selected, and it's been tried in policy making situations, including notably to craft climate policy in France, the resulting policy was aggressive and progressive to the point that the will of the body that came up with it was undermined and overridden.Fundamentally, the flaw isn't with the system.
The system is working as intended.
The flaw is with those who conceived of the system. The system requires that all participants in that system be reasonable, knowledgeable and reasonably informed, since it is the voters who decide who our leaders will be.
And clearly, the human race lacks a majority who are up to the task of reliably making that decision.
Just think of all the folks who are appalled at what's going on, and remember that more people who wanted what's going on voted for it. The WHY'S are simple. On average, humans are fucking stupid.
When you ask the stupid who should lead us, this shit is what you get.
He's just announced that Iran was 2 weeks away from a nuclear bomb after illegally ordering the sinking of a noncombatant ship in international waters.I really, really REALLY dread the upcoming shitshow in 2028 when he says he is going to run for a 3rd term and everyone else can get over it.
Because we all know it is coming.
With that attitude, it becomes an inevitable reality. I for one recommend against preemptive surrender.America the fascist dictatorship
All of this anti-vaccine nonsense seems pretty arbitrary and capricious to me.So what does the law say?
Does the law say that policies must be based on science? Based on consultation with experts? Subject to public comment? It may very well be that the the law that created the position allows total discretion, no matter how misguided. He's a cabinet official, there must be some law or other means (executive order?) that created the originally created the position that may offer some clarity. Surely that was brought up in the discussion before the judge.
I think an AI generated hologram of his father’s ghost telling him “Obama was a better president than you” would probably give him the final push we need.Watching his physical and cognitive decline accelerate over the last year I'm finding it hard to worry about this. Can we really see him lasting to 2028? He really isn't well.
There's only so far you can carry a man that's falling apart. At this rate they will need Jim Henson's Creature Shop to animate him by 2027.
Watching his physical and cognitive decline accelerate over the last year I'm finding it hard to worry about this. Can we really see him lasting to 2028? He really isn't well.
There's only so far you can carry a man that's falling apart. At this rate they will need Jim Henson's Creature Shop to animate him by 2027.
Lucky for most of us, Trump has already set the stage for this. Kennedy will probably feel the heat. The runaround regarding the supreme court tariff's ruling and trump trying to work around it will definitely matter here, and I bet the judge is aware of that nonsense.So, legally speaking "un-reviewability" is actually a valid argument (but maybe not a good one in this case).
Whether they're correct about that is a different matter, and is for the judge to decide... but it's not a wildly unreasonable argument to make as matter of whether the courts have the authority to intervene in the executive or legislative branches. It's a very particular line of argument that may just not hold up.
You have to understand this within the context of the legal strategy being used here rather than some common meaning of the apparent arrogance of the statement. Sure it sounds bad or "startling" when you phrase it in a headline... but what they're really asserting is that the court has no constitutional right to intervene in this particular executive determination, specifically. That's a much more specific and important question to settle and it's not as sensational as it sounds on its face.
With all that said.. most of the judiciary is getting pretty sick of this administrations antics and claims... so it doesn't bode well for the administration here.
"Help us, cholesterol. You're our only hope"I really, really REALLY dread the upcoming shitshow in 2028 when he says he is going to run for a 3rd term and everyone else can get over it.
Because we all know it is coming.
I grew up before the vaccine and I remember that it was believed it was better to get chickenpox as a child than to get it as an adult, so the parties seemed to make some sense at the time, before the vaccine.Sure. Back before the vaccine. If it was spreading amongst kids in a group it was almost a certainty that they would all get it. And spread it to siblings. So many parents would actively do this. I get it.
But now we have a vaccine. So this is stupid. Well at least ignorant. I try and use the two terms correctly. As the saying goes, "You can't fix stupid."
I’m not sure that the courts are accepting that anything not clearly and purely political is unreviewable. With the death of Chevron and the additional of “major questions”, SCOTUS seems to have taken most discretion away from the executive and decided the judiciary can review and apply the discretion themselves, if they choose to. To this point there has been pushback from the districts and circuits, but a lot of rolling over by SCOTOS (I’m sure less so if it was a Democrat). Unclear how they’d feel on this. My guess is that they’d reject the “unreviewable”, but might well not reject the actual decisions.So, legally speaking "un-reviewability" is actually a valid argument (but maybe not a good one in this case).
Whether they're correct about that is a different matter, and is for the judge to decide... but it's not a wildly unreasonable argument to make as matter of whether the courts have the authority to intervene in the executive or legislative branches. It's a very particular line of argument that may just not hold up.
You have to understand this within the context of the legal strategy being used here rather than some common meaning of the apparent arrogance of the statement. Sure it sounds bad or "startling" when you phrase it in a headline... but what they're really asserting is that the court has no constitutional right to intervene in this particular executive determination, specifically. That's a much more specific and important question to settle and it's not as sensational as it sounds on its face.
With all that said.. most of the judiciary is getting pretty sick of this administrations antics and claims... so it doesn't bode well for the administration here.
IMO, though IANAL, that it's likely not a constitutional issue, but a statutory one. There are lots of laws regarding how the executive branch conducts its business, and it could well be that RFK jr's conduct violates at least one.Sure it sounds bad or "startling" when you phrase it in a headline... but what they're really asserting is that the court has no constitutional right to intervene in this particular executive determination, specifically. That's a much more specific and important question to settle and it's not as sensational as it sounds on its face.
No.So, legally speaking "un-reviewability" is actually a valid argument (but maybe not a good one in this case).
Whether they're correct about that is a different matter, and is for the judge to decide... but it's not a wildly unreasonable argument to make as matter of whether the courts have the authority to intervene in the executive or legislative branches. It's a very particular line of argument that may just not hold up.
You have to understand this within the context of the legal strategy being used here rather than some common meaning of the apparent arrogance of the statement. Sure it sounds bad or "startling" when you phrase it in a headline... but what they're really asserting is that the court has no constitutional right to intervene in this particular executive determination, specifically. That's a much more specific and important question to settle and it's not as sensational as it sounds on its face.
With all that said.. most of the judiciary is getting pretty sick of this administrations antics and claims... so it doesn't bode well for the administration here.
I think the most basic assumption they made is that the leadership in the three branches would act in good faith, and that clearly is a bridge too far for the current crew (and arguably has been to a good extent for decades before, certainly since McConnell or Gingrich).Fundamentally, the flaw isn't with the system.
The system is working as intended.
The flaw is with those who conceived of the system. The system requires that all participants in that system be reasonable, knowledgeable and reasonably informed, since it is the voters who decide who our leaders will be.
And clearly, the human race lacks a majority who are up to the task of reliably making that decision.
Just think of all the folks who are appalled at what's going on, and remember that more people who wanted what's going on voted for it. The WHY'S are simple. On average, humans are fucking stupid.
When you ask the stupid who should lead us, this shit is what you get.
Personally, the Trump Administration has already set enough precedents that I'm surprised the State of New York hasn't just blown off the SCOTUS ruling pausing them from using a racially adjusted map around the single GOP holding in Manhattan.From what I have read, courts take a very dim view of both civil servants and politicians who claim that their authority makes their policy above review. So I would hazard a guess that this is a very poor starting position for the DoJ officials.
Of course, the judge issuing a ruling and the government actually complying are two vastly different things.
The 'major questions doctrine' was always a Republican gotcha so at some point there needs to be a formal declaration that doctrine is dead and more specific remedies are needed for the things it covered.typically thats extremely limited in scope to say things like FDA reviews where there's a large lengthy, documented process not these 1-2 meetings where vast amounts of public policy is being overwritten by a committee filled with medically dubious advisors. I'd also mention major questions doctrine but SCOTUS is so selective on that
This one at least is pretty straightforward. If Trump tries this, either he'll be removed promptly or we'll have a military coup on our hands. And the second scenario would be vanishingly unlikely unless something changes drastically in the next couple years.Disregarding an impeachment and conviction of himself or a member of his administration.