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Lawfare: US v. Trump, Trump wins!

No form of contraception is 100% effective. Not all pregnancies can be carried to term. Not all pregnancies are 100% safe for the mother. Not all pregnancies are the result of consensual sex.

One can easily be responsible yet have the need for a safe abortion.

And a woman's reproductive choices should be between her and her doctor. No need for the government to be involved.
 
Abortion is an important issue that should be left to the states. It should not be decided by unelected Judges. The citizens in California are different than those in West Virginia or Texas. There is no reason to force one rule for the entire nation. Let the people in each state decide.
 
Abortion is an important issue that should be left to the states. It should not be decided by unelected Judges. The citizens in California are different than those in West Virginia or Texas. There is no reason to force one rule for the entire nation. Let the people in each state decide.
"Let the old evangelical Christian white men in each state decide." Fixed that for you.

We would still live in an apartheid nation if decisions on slavery, civil rights and voting rights had been left up to the states. Some rights must be Federally guaranteed because some states simply won't do it.

A woman in Alabama has just as much right to make her own reproductive decisions as a woman in California. Except Alabama won't let her.
 
Unless I'm missing something, Trump puppet Judge Cannon just gave Hunter Biden a get out of jail free card. David Weiss, the US attorney handpicked by Trump and Barr to prosecute the alleged crimes of Hunter Biden, requested and received a Special Counsel designation by AG Garland. Under Judge Cannon's ruling, Weiss is not authorized to conduct the prosecution and I doubt that Congress has authorized the appropriation of money for the expenses Weiss incurred as Special Counsel in his prosecution.

Neither Trump nor Hunter Biden should get off on this ruling, if either or both committed crimes they should be prosecuted and not get off on a technicality. Hopefully this ruling will be overruled on appeal.

And I guess under Gally's law, Weiss would have to pay back money he spent as Special Counsel to the federal government.
Here is the rejoinder to your comment.

"The special counsels appointed in recent years, from John Durham and David C. Weiss to Patrick Fitzgerald and Robert Hur, didn’t have Mr. Smith’s problem because they were U.S. attorneys who had already gone through the nomination and confirmation process. As for Robert Mueller, who also wasn’t a U.S. attorney when he was named special counsel to investigate Russian interference into the 2016 election, a three-judge panel of the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia basically passed on delving into a challenge to his status....

Recently Judge Cannon received some powerful support. In his concurrence in the Supreme Court’s decision on presidential immunity, Justice Clarence Thomas weighed in on Mr. Smith appointment: “If this unprecedented prosecution is to proceed, it must be conducted by someone duly authorized to do so by the American people.”

 
Democrats overstepped their bounds. They wrecked their case by picking the wrong guy, in the wrong way. Follow the constitution, not your whims.

"You could say Mr. Smith embodies the overreach that has come to characterize Democratic politics in recent years. The Electoral College elects George W. Bush even though Al Gore won the popular vote? Abolish the Electoral College. The Senate filibuster is inhibiting Barack Obama’s judicial appointments? Get rid of it—and then watch Mitch McConnell use the new system to fill the bench with Trump nominees. Now an overly aggressive special counsel not only has had his case dismissed but has brought his own appointment into question.

Certainly having the charges in the strongest criminal case against Donald Trump dismissed is a stunning win for the former president. But if Judge Cannon and Justice Thomas are right—and we’ll know they are by the amount of abuse heaped on them—it’s a bigger victory for the Constitution, the American people and all future presidents.

 
No form of contraception is 100% effective. Not all pregnancies can be carried to term. Not all pregnancies are 100% safe for the mother. Not all pregnancies are the result of consensual sex.

One can easily be responsible yet have the need for a safe abortion.

And a woman's reproductive choices should be between her and her doctor. No need for the government to be involved.
Agree with much of what you say. Chose words carefully in my post to which you appear to be responding:

"Focusing on reproductive responsibility rather than reproductive rights would largely disappear this issue."

You point out some exceptions with which I agree.

Problem on the issue is the "absolutes" on both ends of the spectrum - Never permissible bc it is a human life from conception to it is a woman's absolute right to abort a baby up to being delivered in the birth canal.

Under Roe, USA was an outlier in the World. Most countries allow abortion, if at all, up to on average 15 weeks. We were waaay outside the norm based on a made up right never addressed by our Constitution.

Fifteen weeks recognizes the fetus is not viable outside the womb. Gives the woman an opportunity to avoid an unwanted pregnancy regardless of cause. If development is allowed to the point where the fetus is viable outside the womb, and there are no fetal abnormalities or threat to the woman's life, we are bordering on murder.

Sensible ground and good policy lie between the absolutes.
 
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Definitely the only time a president has ever tried to add justices that had a biased view on things...
 
No last time was DJT, he campaigned he would appoint Justices to over turn Roe v Wade, he appointed people vetted by Heritage Foundation as opposed to Roe, and they over turn Roe at 1st chance.
Every President does that. But FDR was the last time a President tried to pack the court. Now Biden wants to place term limits on the Court, along with executive oversight.

 
Its greatest impact lately has been in how effectively certain justices can be bought by special interests and continually "forget" to report a ton of free gifts and trips. Quite impressive, really. I'm sure it was just an oversight. Or 10. But yes, what bad could ever come of having specific people in very powerful roles forever? If Trump is elected again, he will try to turn the presidency into a dictatorship for the same reasons. Of course, he would be lucky to live long enough to serve another term anyway.
 
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The Supreme Court's greatest impact is its dismantling of the administrative state, not Roe v. Wade.
You may be right, but I would rather have experts setting guidelines not Judges. We know Congress will never be able to pass detailed guidelines on technical issues, legislation will always leave questions. I believe the Courts will find themselves overwhelmed. All they had to do was instead of deferring to agency, Court will give strong consideration the agency finding.
 
No last time was DJT, he campaigned he would appoint Justices to over turn Roe v Wade, he appointed people vetted by Heritage Foundation as opposed to Roe, and they over turn Roe at 1st chance.
FDR is the famous one. It wasn’t about who you appoint. Packing the court usually means trying to add to the nine enough new seats to get a majority. For instance if the current administration was trying to raise the number from 9 to 13…

So instead of 6-3 it was 7-6…
 
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FDR is the famous one. It wasn’t about who you appoint. Packing the court usually means trying to add to the nine enough new seats to get a majority. For instance if the current administration was trying to raise the number from 9 to 13…

So instead of 6-3 it was 7-6…
If I recall, most of the Supreme Court members were not FDRs. Because the Court's membership was threatened by FDR, they switched their positions on almost every issue. The famous quote by one of the justices was "A switch in time, saves nine, " which alluded to the almost complete support of FDR's intrusive invasion into every aspect of American life.
 
The issues before the courts in the lawfare cases against President-elect Trump have been answered by the election. Donald Trump won. Should these cases continue to be prosecuted?

Donald Trump just won the greatest jury verdict in American history​


Now that the verdict is in, the question is whether prosecutors will continue their unrelenting campaign against the president-elect and his companies. The answer is that it may not matter. ...

The 2024 election will come to be viewed as one of the biggest political and cultural shifts in our history. It was the mainstream-media-versus-new media election; the Rogan-versus-Oprah election; the establishment-versus-a-disassociated-electorate election.

It was also a thorough rejection of lawfare. One of the things most frustrating for Trump’s opponents was that every trial or hearing seemed to give Trump a boost in the polls. As cases piled up in Washington, New York, Florida and Georgia, the effort seemed to move more toward political acclamation than isolation.

 
Alvin Bragg of New York retreats and asks for a stay in sentencing until 2029, after Trump leaves office. Trump wants the whole thing dismissed. Expect Marchan to grant the stay until 2029, then Trump will appeal to have the whole case thrown out.

 
Expect Trump to investigate Alvin Bragg.
The death threats against Bragg and the other prosecutors of Trump, along with the threats to their families, just weren't enough, right? He will instruct his AG, probably Gaetz, to go after all of his prosecutors and perceived enemies to try to make their lives miserable. Our justice system will be a joke, but what's to be expected when there's a sicko who is President and a sicko who is the AG, both of whom are most likely guilty of sexual assault.
 
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The conviction in NY of Trump by Juan Merchan is about over. The Judge has ordered briefs on whether the whole thing should be completely dismissed. He completely adjourned the sentencing hearing scheduled for Nov. 26.

 
The real death threats were against the President-elect of the United States. He survived two assassination attempts from domestic sources and a very real threat from the Iranians.

MTG for Education Secretary!!
Tell that to the poll workers, the judges, the law clerks, and the prosecutors, who along with their families, had to endure harassment, nut cases showing up at their homes, and vile phone calls, emails and texts, as a direct result of the language Trump used against them. Trump had the secret service and FBI protecting him, these people had little, if any, protection. Keep on defending your cult leader and your hero Trump.
 
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