Firefighters have nothing to worry about. Illegal immigrant firefighters should be worried. The government is on the hunt. Leave voluntarily and preserve a future option to immigrate legally. Or get deported and be locked out for at least 20 years. Too bad, so sad. NOT.
Children are not regularly vaccinated for TB in the US. Nice scare tactic though.
God bless the SCOTUS constitutional majority. The founders wanted a Unitary Executive. The court is protecting their wishes.
No duh Florida isn't interested in Gun Control. They are a state that respects the Constitution and the Constitution guarantees the right to keep and bear arms.
Glad to hear we are back to mining American resources here in America. We aren't going to neuter ourselves and be beholden to foreign resources any longer.
Chicagoans are going to greatly appreciate the Trump Surge. The poorest citizens of Chicago are at greatest risk of violence. I guess that makes Trump a social justice warrior now. Nice, Mr. President.
Neither Bari Weiss nor The Free Press are right wing. Centrist maybe.
Bari weiss is one of the worst writers and dimmest bulbs in the entire mainstream media, so uniquely terrible at her job she somehow turned it into an empire for people who are gullible enough to think an urban millennial lesbian couldnât possibly be far-right. She is the living embodiment of the question, âyou get paid for this???â
@1 My god, you're dumb. Or willfully uninformed, which may be worse. The Founders explicitly did not want a unitary executive. They didn't want a king, having just, you know, staged a revolution to get out from under one. They wanted checks and balances between the branches of government.
The rest of your claptrap doesn't get any better from there.
Worst writer, dimmest bulb, but got hired by the venerated New York Times? Nah, that doesn't make sense. More likely you are bitter that she's struck out on her own and made a huge success for herself. Or, maybe you just hate Israel.
@3 - I think you are dumb. The founders clearly did want a Unitary Executive or they would have split the executive function across multiple positions (by Department perhaps.) A Unitary Executive does not eliminate the checks and balances created by having three branches of Government. Re-read the Constitution. It ain't hard bro.
@4, Lol youâre exactly the kind of moron her schtick is made for, of course you think this. The nyt may be venerated for its reporting but it has the hackiest opinion page in the entire media.
Might as well argue with a member of the Manson family if you're gonna try to have an actual conversation with WereBackBaby. Truly brainwashed and worships a child molester. But at least Manson could play guitar.
"... ten federal judges . . . told NBC
that SCOTUS is undermining
trust in the judiciary... "
'our' USSC
long ago'd Already
'undermined Trust' in
our Judiciary when Dread
'Justice' Roberts SAT ON HIS
HANDS WHILE MkMitch fucking
KkKonnell STACKED HIS formerly-
Supreme (Kangaroo) fucking Court
cadet bonespurs
now OWNS 'our'
'Judiciary' and'll Do
With It as HE sees 'fit.'
" ... and making judges less safe in the process."
Bari Weiss is a good illustration of the inevitable result of the progressive "Small Tent" approach to politics -- force out the moderates, then act shocked when they no longer offer wholehearted support for your political project.
I'm sure progressives will learn their lesson by... primarying candidates who give interviews to CBS news.
@5 Dear Lord, he's doubling down. Try reading a little. The First Congress (aka made up of the Founders) delegated a significant amount of executive power to people that the President can't fire. The Founders didn't want a unitary executive. The Supreme Court didn't rule until 1926 (hint: long after the Founder's time) that the President had the power to remove officials in the executive branch without Senate consent. It wasn't until Scalia (hint: not a Founder) that any Supreme Court justice argued that the President could remove any executive branch official.
If you were half as smart as you think you are, you'd be ten times as smart as you are.
If the reactionaries progressives at the NYTimes hadn't of hounded Bari out of there, she would probably still be there and not be about to cash in. She wouldn't have built The Free Press otherwise. I liked the idea of Bari at first, but then I went meh and moved on.
Bari weiss has never been a moderate. People just think this because her identity is left-coded but she was a central figure in the anti-anti-Trump wave of his first term and is singularly responsible for elevating a bunch of far-right hacks, conspiracy cranks, and peter thiel acolytes to a national profile with her ridiculous âintellectual dark webâ column.
@12 - there was no language in the Treasury Act explicitly preventing or allowing the President to remove the Comptroller of the Currency. Absent said language, one defaults to the Constitution and the vesting of all executive authority in the President. Got another example bro?
@9 "the candidate I supported was also supported by the majority of the voters"
Donald Trump was not supported by the majority of voters. Trump won 49.8%, which means 50.2%, i.e. the majority, voted for somebody else. He won a plurality, not a majority.
@6: âThe nyt may be venerated for its reporting but it has the hackiest opinion page in the entire media.â
The Wall St. Journalâs editorial page says hello. (And by âsays hello,â I mean, âruns down the street, hair aflame like an out-of-control methâ lab, shrieking how RFK Jr. was right about everything, until he succumbed to Hilaryâs mind control.â)
We need to establish proof-of-vaccination requirements for out-of-staters entering Washington. They can do whatever idiotic, death-cult shenanigans they want in their home states, but if they want to come here, they should be prepared to demonstrate they're not going to be a potential carrier of easily preventable contagions while visiting. If we can require their pets to have certificates of vaccination, I don't think it's unreasonable to require their owners to provide the same.
@8 actually you should be really excited. The consent degree was one of the barriers the city ran up against when they wanted to defund the police in 2020 because any changes had to be approved by the federal monitor. Now that the monitor is no longer part of the equation the city is free to do whatever they want once Katie has been sworn in.
@16 Alas, you're misinformed again. No shock, it's your stock in trade. Sure, there wasn't anything in the Treasury Act about removing the Comptroller. Unfortunately for your argument, the Comptroller is currently governed by the National Currency Act of 1863. You don't have to read very far in that (only to Line 10-15!) to find
"He [the Comptroller of the Currency] shall be appointed by the President, on the nomination of the Secretary of the Treasury, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate, and shall hold his office for the term of five years unless sooner removed by the President, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate."
Oops. The act of Congress establishing the current off of the Comptroller of the Currency does require the President to get Senate approval for firing the Comptroller. Alas for your argument. Wrong again.
@24 Given Washington State's notoriously open borders during the Biden years, we'd also need to have unidentified agents with police powers stopping individuals with unvaccinated markers (out of state plates, certain accents, red hats, etc.) and authorized to jab those not carrying recognized documentation of status. After all, only those here illegally would need to worry.
@11 Trump is a good illustration of the Democrat "small tent" approach to politics--force out the mOdErAtEs, then act shocked when they no longer offer wholehearted support for your political project.
@29 that's my point, the consent decree turned out to be more of an impediment to change than anything positive despite the high hopes when it was announced
@33: âmOdErAtEsâ here meaning, âprotestors who wonât stop insisting a stretch of Mediterranean beachfront property is Teh Most Important Place in Entire History of Ever, and could not be made to understand how Trump was worse on every other issue, too.â
Seems to me there was significant change and progress.
John T. Williams was killed in 2010. In the last 15 years SPD has not been involved in a similar incident and has implemented clear use of force policies.
Unfortunately Article II does give the President a ridiculous amount of power. Power that has only increased over the last 50 years as Congress has ceded much of its authority, including the power to declare war, to the President.
Hereâs a mind boggling riddle for you.
When the Democrats next hold both houses of Congress and the White House which will be more important:
1) Using the powers of the Presidency to try to reverse the damage done by Trump.
or
2) Using the legislature to reassume their authority and amending Article II so no future president has similar powers. I
You mean the guy who jumped over the fence into the closed parking lot.
Who repeatedly ignored officers orders to just walk out of the lot.
Who then paused at a gate, and instead of exiting, turned and brandished a knife at the officers.
Who repeatedly refused to put the knife down, as officers backed up and attempted multiple times to deescalate.
Who was not phased by an attempt to subdue him with less than lethal force.
Who then ran towards the officers lunging at them with the knife.
That guy? Are you comparing him to John T. Williams, who was simply walking away from the officers, apparently unaware of their presence since he was hard of hearing.
Isn't that insulting to the legacy of John T. Williams?
@41 I'm extremely confident that, at the time, you blamed Williams for not obeying the order to drop the knife, and believed it was open because the cop said so
Werebackbaby dear, I'm not comfortable with having 'muricans fighting wildfires. Or programming computers. Or working as physicians. Or a million other things. As a group, we're a pretty stupid nation. Just look at who we elected.
@10, kristofarian, @15 LHS, @24 COMTE and @43 Catalina Vel-DuRay: +4 For the WIN!!!
@34 & @35: Yaaaaaaaawwwwwwwwn. You two lamebrains should just get
a room already, and before your mom's account expires.
& @43 Catalina Vel-DuRay: Agreed. We really are stupid as a nation.
My only comfort right now is that I am among those who wisely had
voted for Kamala Harris and Tim Walz last November, not this global
nightmare of a shitshow run amok.
The usual trolling gang of idiots will feel the consequences of their
ignorance when it's too late to repair what will be many decades of
preventable damage.
@43. Really!? With all due respect, Ms. Vel-DuRay, you would be on much firmer ground with a claim such as "our nation is replete with intelligent and industrious souls, who, through mysterious alchemical alteration, become mentally addled the moment they don the political mantle."
Not only is this safer ground, it has the added benefit of agency - indulge in ideological affirming care at your own peril.
Firefighters have nothing to worry about. Illegal immigrant firefighters should be worried. The government is on the hunt. Leave voluntarily and preserve a future option to immigrate legally. Or get deported and be locked out for at least 20 years. Too bad, so sad. NOT.
Children are not regularly vaccinated for TB in the US. Nice scare tactic though.
God bless the SCOTUS constitutional majority. The founders wanted a Unitary Executive. The court is protecting their wishes.
No duh Florida isn't interested in Gun Control. They are a state that respects the Constitution and the Constitution guarantees the right to keep and bear arms.
Glad to hear we are back to mining American resources here in America. We aren't going to neuter ourselves and be beholden to foreign resources any longer.
Chicagoans are going to greatly appreciate the Trump Surge. The poorest citizens of Chicago are at greatest risk of violence. I guess that makes Trump a social justice warrior now. Nice, Mr. President.
Neither Bari Weiss nor The Free Press are right wing. Centrist maybe.
Bari weiss is one of the worst writers and dimmest bulbs in the entire mainstream media, so uniquely terrible at her job she somehow turned it into an empire for people who are gullible enough to think an urban millennial lesbian couldnât possibly be far-right. She is the living embodiment of the question, âyou get paid for this???â
@1 My god, you're dumb. Or willfully uninformed, which may be worse. The Founders explicitly did not want a unitary executive. They didn't want a king, having just, you know, staged a revolution to get out from under one. They wanted checks and balances between the branches of government.
The rest of your claptrap doesn't get any better from there.
Worst writer, dimmest bulb, but got hired by the venerated New York Times? Nah, that doesn't make sense. More likely you are bitter that she's struck out on her own and made a huge success for herself. Or, maybe you just hate Israel.
@3 - I think you are dumb. The founders clearly did want a Unitary Executive or they would have split the executive function across multiple positions (by Department perhaps.) A Unitary Executive does not eliminate the checks and balances created by having three branches of Government. Re-read the Constitution. It ain't hard bro.
@4, Lol youâre exactly the kind of moron her schtick is made for, of course you think this. The nyt may be venerated for its reporting but it has the hackiest opinion page in the entire media.
Might as well argue with a member of the Manson family if you're gonna try to have an actual conversation with WereBackBaby. Truly brainwashed and worships a child molester. But at least Manson could play guitar.
Remember when we all thought the consent decree and federal oversight was going to mean real, significant change to SPD? Such an innocent time.
I'm actually quite reasonable in my takes (as evidenced by the fact the candidate I supported was also supported by the majority of the voters.)
"... ten federal judges . . . told NBC
that SCOTUS is undermining
trust in the judiciary... "
'our' USSC
long ago'd Already
'undermined Trust' in
our Judiciary when Dread
'Justice' Roberts SAT ON HIS
HANDS WHILE MkMitch fucking
KkKonnell STACKED HIS formerly-
Supreme (Kangaroo) fucking Court
cadet bonespurs
now OWNS 'our'
'Judiciary' and'll Do
With It as HE sees 'fit.'
" ... and making judges less safe in the process."
so many Guns
so Few, well-Regulated.
only in America,
baby. only in
America
Bari Weiss is a good illustration of the inevitable result of the progressive "Small Tent" approach to politics -- force out the moderates, then act shocked when they no longer offer wholehearted support for your political project.
I'm sure progressives will learn their lesson by... primarying candidates who give interviews to CBS news.
@5 Dear Lord, he's doubling down. Try reading a little. The First Congress (aka made up of the Founders) delegated a significant amount of executive power to people that the President can't fire. The Founders didn't want a unitary executive. The Supreme Court didn't rule until 1926 (hint: long after the Founder's time) that the President had the power to remove officials in the executive branch without Senate consent. It wasn't until Scalia (hint: not a Founder) that any Supreme Court justice argued that the President could remove any executive branch official.
If you were half as smart as you think you are, you'd be ten times as smart as you are.
If the reactionaries progressives at the NYTimes hadn't of hounded Bari out of there, she would probably still be there and not be about to cash in. She wouldn't have built The Free Press otherwise. I liked the idea of Bari at first, but then I went meh and moved on.
Bari weiss has never been a moderate. People just think this because her identity is left-coded but she was a central figure in the anti-anti-Trump wave of his first term and is singularly responsible for elevating a bunch of far-right hacks, conspiracy cranks, and peter thiel acolytes to a national profile with her ridiculous âintellectual dark webâ column.
â Florida, land of fools and orangesâŚâ and an orange fool
It was right there and you missed it. Câmon youâre better than this
@12 - there was no language in the Treasury Act explicitly preventing or allowing the President to remove the Comptroller of the Currency. Absent said language, one defaults to the Constitution and the vesting of all executive authority in the President. Got another example bro?
14: Wow, moderate cracks in your beloved woke and progressive echo chamber really has you rattled!
@9 "the candidate I supported was also supported by the majority of the voters"
Donald Trump was not supported by the majority of voters. Trump won 49.8%, which means 50.2%, i.e. the majority, voted for somebody else. He won a plurality, not a majority.
@18 - good catch, thank you for correcting me. I got a little overzealous there.
@17 another 10 watt bulb who thinks conspiracy cranks and incel idols are moderate has entered the chat
Cult member insists that cult leader isn't actually crazy. News at 11.
@17 Shouldn't you be online somewhere else complaining that a black person got cast in a random movie you never planned to see in the first place?
@6: âThe nyt may be venerated for its reporting but it has the hackiest opinion page in the entire media.â
The Wall St. Journalâs editorial page says hello. (And by âsays hello,â I mean, âruns down the street, hair aflame like an out-of-control methâ lab, shrieking how RFK Jr. was right about everything, until he succumbed to Hilaryâs mind control.â)
We need to establish proof-of-vaccination requirements for out-of-staters entering Washington. They can do whatever idiotic, death-cult shenanigans they want in their home states, but if they want to come here, they should be prepared to demonstrate they're not going to be a potential carrier of easily preventable contagions while visiting. If we can require their pets to have certificates of vaccination, I don't think it's unreasonable to require their owners to provide the same.
22: I have nothing against Dan Ackroyd's performance in Trading Places.
Nathelie's "Pawtism" pun is beautiful. Nicely played!
Nathalie's...Sorry
@8 actually you should be really excited. The consent degree was one of the barriers the city ran up against when they wanted to defund the police in 2020 because any changes had to be approved by the federal monitor. Now that the monitor is no longer part of the equation the city is free to do whatever they want once Katie has been sworn in.
@16 Alas, you're misinformed again. No shock, it's your stock in trade. Sure, there wasn't anything in the Treasury Act about removing the Comptroller. Unfortunately for your argument, the Comptroller is currently governed by the National Currency Act of 1863. You don't have to read very far in that (only to Line 10-15!) to find
"He [the Comptroller of the Currency] shall be appointed by the President, on the nomination of the Secretary of the Treasury, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate, and shall hold his office for the term of five years unless sooner removed by the President, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate."
Oops. The act of Congress establishing the current off of the Comptroller of the Currency does require the President to get Senate approval for firing the Comptroller. Alas for your argument. Wrong again.
Most of the right wing trash haven't commented yet because they're too busy trying to google what both a funicular and consent are.
@24 Given Washington State's notoriously open borders during the Biden years, we'd also need to have unidentified agents with police powers stopping individuals with unvaccinated markers (out of state plates, certain accents, red hats, etc.) and authorized to jab those not carrying recognized documentation of status. After all, only those here illegally would need to worry.
@11 Trump is a good illustration of the Democrat "small tent" approach to politics--force out the mOdErAtEs, then act shocked when they no longer offer wholehearted support for your political project.
@29 that's my point, the consent decree turned out to be more of an impediment to change than anything positive despite the high hopes when it was announced
24 and 32 remind me of Stephen Miller and Tom Homan.
@31 They also have to wait to get their talking points on why the funicular failure is Biden's fault.
@33: âmOdErAtEsâ here meaning, âprotestors who wonât stop insisting a stretch of Mediterranean beachfront property is Teh Most Important Place in Entire History of Ever, and could not be made to understand how Trump was worse on every other issue, too.â
@8
Seems to me there was significant change and progress.
John T. Williams was killed in 2010. In the last 15 years SPD has not been involved in a similar incident and has implemented clear use of force policies.
@3
Unfortunately Article II does give the President a ridiculous amount of power. Power that has only increased over the last 50 years as Congress has ceded much of its authority, including the power to declare war, to the President.
Hereâs a mind boggling riddle for you.
When the Democrats next hold both houses of Congress and the White House which will be more important:
1) Using the powers of the Presidency to try to reverse the damage done by Trump.
or
2) Using the legislature to reassume their authority and amending Article II so no future president has similar powers. I
@38 what? SPD just killed a man "armed with a knife" in the Southwest Precinct parking lot in March, and it's still under investigation. Also:
https://www.seattletimes.com/seattle-news/times-watchdog/seattle-police-killings-rose-under-federal-oversight-according-to-data-analysis/
@40
You mean the guy who jumped over the fence into the closed parking lot.
Who repeatedly ignored officers orders to just walk out of the lot.
Who then paused at a gate, and instead of exiting, turned and brandished a knife at the officers.
Who repeatedly refused to put the knife down, as officers backed up and attempted multiple times to deescalate.
Who was not phased by an attempt to subdue him with less than lethal force.
Who then ran towards the officers lunging at them with the knife.
That guy? Are you comparing him to John T. Williams, who was simply walking away from the officers, apparently unaware of their presence since he was hard of hearing.
Isn't that insulting to the legacy of John T. Williams?
@41 I'm extremely confident that, at the time, you blamed Williams for not obeying the order to drop the knife, and believed it was open because the cop said so
Werebackbaby dear, I'm not comfortable with having 'muricans fighting wildfires. Or programming computers. Or working as physicians. Or a million other things. As a group, we're a pretty stupid nation. Just look at who we elected.
@15 LHS: Excellent catch! BINGO, and well done!
@10, kristofarian, @15 LHS, @24 COMTE and @43 Catalina Vel-DuRay: +4 For the WIN!!!
@34 & @35: Yaaaaaaaawwwwwwwwn. You two lamebrains should just get
a room already, and before your mom's account expires.
& @43 Catalina Vel-DuRay: Agreed. We really are stupid as a nation.
My only comfort right now is that I am among those who wisely had
voted for Kamala Harris and Tim Walz last November, not this global
nightmare of a shitshow run amok.
The usual trolling gang of idiots will feel the consequences of their
ignorance when it's too late to repair what will be many decades of
preventable damage.
Jeezus! Just when I thought the Sunshine State couldn't possibly get any Flori-dumber....
@43. Really!? With all due respect, Ms. Vel-DuRay, you would be on much firmer ground with a claim such as "our nation is replete with intelligent and industrious souls, who, through mysterious alchemical alteration, become mentally addled the moment they don the political mantle."
Not only is this safer ground, it has the added benefit of agency - indulge in ideological affirming care at your own peril.