I think technically it’s rendition. Which is illegal. So I don’t know what the fuck SCOTUS is thinking here.
It’s incredibly frustrating, because if someone goes to the Supreme Court and says, “Hey, this is unconstitutional!” the SCOTUS fascist majority responds, “But Congress didn’t make it a law, so we can’t enforce it until they do.” I think that’s what happened during Shrub’s term when they were renditioning people, so Congress did make a law against it. But when Congress makes a law and someone goes to court and says “Hey, this is illegal!” the SCOTUS fascist majority responds, “Oh, but the Founders didn’t intend for that, so it’s not.”
Basically, this is just further evidence that what Originalism means is “We’re making this shit up in favor of whoever pays us the most.”
Matthew 26:11 promises there will always be poor people. And hey, if you kill the ones there are now, then the next group up automatically become the new poor.
Hungry for truth but you got screwed and drank the Kool-Aid, there’s a line
It end directly at the edge of a mass grave, that’s their design
Funny fact about a cage, they’re never built for just one group
So when that cage is done with them and you’re still poor, it come for you
The newest lowest on the totem, well golly gee, you have been used
You helped to fuel the death machine that down the line will kill you too (oops)
SCOTUS rules against nationwide injunctions against Trump executive order on birthright citizenship. Apparently everyone needs to challenge revocation of citizenship individually.
The main upshot of today’s birthright citizenship ruling (that I’m still making way through) seems to be that each person victimized by an unconstitutional Trump order has to pretty much sue individually.
Trump is free to act unconstitutionally to everybody individually.
I guess that means that nationwide injunctions against Biden-era EOs can be revisited now, right? So the 8th Circuit block to forgiveness of student loans by the Biden Administration back in February are back on the table, right?