calbear93 said:
concordtom said:
calbear93 said:
concordtom said:
calbear93 said:
concordtom said:
calbear93 said:
blungld said:
calbear93 said:
certain decisions by SCOTUS so that means it's Christian Nationalism?
The fact that you don't know how these cases came to be, who funded them, and their part in a widely known and documented strategy of Christian Nationalism reveals that I am discussing these things with a person who does not have the wider context.
So now Don McGahn is a Christian nationalist? More conspiracy. I would fall for your stupidity but I actually know a few folks who were involved in vetting the Supreme Court justices. But you go ahead and pretend your conspiracy theories are not whacked. We have morons on both sides drowning in conspiracy theories about puppet masters working in the shadow. They have figured all this out from their basements.
Clowns to the left of me, Jokers to the right.
Please tell your friends they are *******s who did a terrible job of vetting.
The case also marked the first time the Supreme Court relied on the "major questions doctrine" in a majority opinion to hold that a federal agency lacked authority to issue a regulation. The court's approval of the doctrine signals a willingness to realign separation of powers in ways that restrict the administrative state.
Why, because you think only liberals should be appointed?
And major questions doctrine has existed for decades and was even assumed in the broadening of the agency authority in the Chevron case. Do you think it is more Constitutionally defensible for unelected individuals to act as dictators to not only enforce but legislate and adjudicate laws that have major impact on the country without express authority of the elected Congress? What about the major question doctrine do you disagree with? If a Trump appointed agency commissioner decides to write his own laws that go beyond the express authority of the agency when it has great impact on the country, should courts just show deference?
Because the ruling leads to an ongoing degradation of the environment.
Look, you can sit there are spout about the wonderfulness of individual FREEDOMS, rip on LIBERALS and make accusations that liberals are reducing people's freedoms as if they were DICTATORS, but let's go back to why we have laws.
Human nature unrestrained is a mess.
Hmmm. I wrote a nice phrase about it a couple weeks ago. I'll have to find that.
In this case, we need to protect the environment. But apparently, individual freedom is more important to you.
I don't want to debate this morning. Moving on.
Respect for the constitution is important. Railroading someone for murder who is a bad actor and has abused his family may be utilitarian but we are a nation of laws and not of expediency. You may want EPA to do more, in which case Congress should expressly delegate. Trumpians agency commissioners may want authority to take extreme actions that Trumpians want but I assume you wouldn't want them to have that power without delegation by Congress with the checks and balances.
Americans continue to voice supports for the environment, and for all sorts of things that don't get passed into law, or adjudicated by courts.
Why?
Gerrymandering in the house.
Unequal per capita representation in the senate.
Electoral college not equating to popular vote in the executive branch.
Unethical manipulation of the supreme court.
Dark money by select few unknown special interest bigwig$.
Media outlets who are more interested in fanning flames of discontent as a pathway to eyeball revenue than responsibly informing - aka misinformation and propaganda: fear sells.
More to your point, checks and balances don't work in the current arena because of the things I mentioned above.
People don't want Trump either. But we may end up with him.
The founders would be appalled.
Sorry but you are rambling a bit.
Let's stay on point.
You object to the SCOTUS actually applying the major question doctrine that has been around for decades.
Are you objecting to the application of the "major question doctrine" under administrative law and you believe that agencies should have unfettered authority to make and enforce laws that has major impact on our country without express authority from elected Congress?
Are you objecting to checks and balances but instead would prefer your views be exempted from the constitution and would prefer a dictator apply all the laws you view as good?
Because protecting the environment is not a black and white issue. There are cost / benefit analysis with great impact on our society. On one extreme is eliminating the human race to provide best protection for the environment but the cost is too high. On the other extreme is burning coal and polluting the rivers all day long without restriction but the cost is also too high. Finding the right area in the spectrum is up for debate that should be decided by those who we elect. Because it should not be an unelected official who decides unilaterally where to place (even in an extreme end of the spectrum), whether it's a republican or democratic. Because Democrats will not always have the White House, and any dictatorship you allow in agencies can apply when it's the other party in the white house. And that's why intelligent thinkers are not whining about checks and balances like some here, because the pendulum can swing quickly.
I'm for protecting the environment.
If there is a cost to pay for doing so and we have to reduce GDP growth in order to do so, I am for that.
Markets and economics will adjust. The environment alterations, in too many instances and in general overall, we are told, will not. That is quite different that yahoos who say "mother earth is undefeated". Certainly, mother earth will continue, I agree. But it has taken millions and millions of years for the evolution of species to evolve and balance out to where it's at now. And the ANTHROPOCENE is killing off species at a fast pace that has not been seen since....
You can sit there and argue about various temporary political logic of the day.
Somebody has to do something to stop this train wreck.
Hmmmm. Is that Machiavellian, which I have ripped on in the past?
Sounds like it.
If it makes you feel better, I don't know what "major question doctrine" is.
Re the bolded part above... as if elected officials do a better job at deciding.
I'd rather have a content specific expert who has worked his/her way up in a field/agency to make decisions that most of the elected officials I can think of right now.
Okay, seethe and sink your teeth into all that. Served up nice and juicy for you.