kalm wrote: ↑Tue Sep 09, 2025 8:43 am
GannonFan wrote: ↑Tue Sep 09, 2025 8:27 am
Pretty sure he never had a lot of fans in that segment of the twitter world anyway. Surprised he (or you) didn't try to work in Citizen's United as well. As with all things historical, his legacy will be decided well down the line. When his court holds the line and bars Trump from serving a third term that will be looked on well by historians, even though the MAGA folks will take their turn lambasting him.
Citizens United is self evident. As is presidential immunity. Do you really think 100 years from now historians are gonna say: you know what? Buying elections and making the president above the law were good decisions?
He may have opportunities to redeem himself but as of now he’s an utter failure when it comes to the constitution.
Well, to take the second one first, the presidential immunity thing hasn't even been decided. The major thrust of that decision was go back to the lower courts and work it through before coming to the SCOTUS in the first place. It only went straight to the SCOTUS because Jack Smith was desperately trying to swing an election and needed to speed it up since Dems had slow walked it too much into the election year. What SCOTUS did rule on, as opposed to returning to the lower courts, was the easy stuff that wasn't even controversial, i.e. you can't sue the President him/herself for the waging of a war or other Constitutional powers. I highly advise, if you're really interested, to actually read the decision in full rather than relying on the reader's digest version that's spun out there by various media of either political side.
And yes, Citizens United is self-evident, but not the way you hope it is. People have the right to say whatever they want to in this country, barring the obligatory fire in a crowded theater examples. If they want to say they want Trump for President or they want Biden for President, they can and should be allowed to say that. If they happen to want to say that on the internet or over the airwaves, they're free to say that as well. If groups of people want to get together and do the same thing, they can. Efforts to squash the ability to say those things is the anti-constitutional thing. If we really want to take money out of political elections, then an amendment specifically doing that would work very nicely. Other than that, you're just restricting speech, which again, would be the anti-constitutional thing. And strangely, ever since that decision, the side in the election with the most money has only won 2 out of the 4 elections, so not exactly a ringing endorsement that money trumps (no pun intended) all.