Or if you prefer...
Let it go.

Stalking and misrepresenting again. You have stop. Since when are you a mod? When did I say these alleged descriptions?Hermit wrote: ↑Sat Aug 15, 2020 8:39 amWell, the mods ought to ping Scot before they rein me in. After all, he has called you "trailer boy" or "trailerboy" in 26 separate posts over the past five weeks. Also, words to the effect of "dole bludger", "unemployable" and similar. It's almost as though he has intentionally launched on a sustained harassment campaign.pErvinalia wrote: ↑Sat Aug 15, 2020 7:50 amCareful, he'll report you. He's like 42 was. Reported people for insults, while freely insulting everyone else knowing no one will report him because we aren't whiney bitches like him and Scot Dutchy.
As his political support withers away along with his prospects for re-election, Donald Trump is declaring his intention to try governing as a dictator.
Trump, who bashed Obama for relying on executive orders and boasted that he’d get legislative deals done, long ago gave up on getting bills through Congress. Now, relying on advice from the lawyer who told George W. Bush that torture is legal, the president contends that he’s free to govern by issuing plainly illegal executive orders.
That helps explain why Trump—who is denying the United States Postal Service the resources required to deliver many mail-in ballots —bizarrely claimed last week that he has the ability to issue an executive order to outright bar states from accepting mail-in ballots at all. While such a gambit would almost surely fail, Trump’s threat is part-and-parcel of a last ditch power grab by a desperate president.
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Enter Berkeley Law School professor John Yoo, who came to prominence during the Bush administration for authoring the notorious Department of Justice Office of Legal Counsel memoranda opining that the CIA could legally torture al Qaeda prisoners. The memos became an ethical blot on the department, and were later withdrawn. Yoo is also the author of a new book contending that Trump is restoring the constitutional scheme contemplated by the Framers.
Recently Yoo authored an article advocating a strikingly Nixonian idea: that presidents have plenary authority to act illegally. Yoo’s claim is grounded on an eccentric, and entirely disingenuous, interpretation of a recent Supreme Court decision rejecting Trump’s effort to nullify the DACA program. Trump lost the case because of the sloppy means by which his administration set out to nullify the Obama era program, a move the court rejected because the administration relied on an insufficiently explicated, and improperly shifted, rationale.
But according to Yoo, who’s reportedly been boasting about meeting Trump in the Oval Office, the court decision stands for the proposition that a president is free to implement patently overreaching executive orders, falling outside the scope of his legal power and authority, and then simply dare the courts, Congress, or his successor in office to void them. By way of example, Yoo suggested that a president could simply declare that anyone can openly carry a gun throughout the United States.
Unsurprisingly, Yoo’s “theory” was catnip to Trump and his coterie, who repeatedly called upon him to expand upon it. Then, a few weeks ago, Trump began to make references to his intention to bypass Congress entirely, and do things like create an entirely new federal “health care plan” to replace the Affordable Care Act via executive order.
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