It’s a sad situation. It’s also hardly unique in American history.This piece feels like the plot of a dystopian Netflix series.https://t.co/a5MzfjSg6b
— Charlie Sykes (@SykesCharlie) April 23, 2023
There’s no doubt he could do it (or seriously try). There’s also no doubt this not how you win supporters and positively influence voters. Pretty much giving people a reason to be sure you don’t win, in fact. The Biden campaign won’t have to run any negative ads. They’ll just have to publicize Trump’s promises. Pretty much the way LBJ did it to Goldwater (LBJ didn’t win in a landslide on the strength of the “Daisy” ad).Just because Trump can’t manage a Big Mac doesn’t mean his coteries of villains don’t have a plan. https://t.co/8G5BXc6mZh
— Reed Galen (@reedgalen) April 23, 2023
A pretty good description of a Trump supporter. While I have known people who fit this description, I also know they are not the majority of the country.You’ll never convince any MAGA that they are not both the victim and hero in everything. In fact the core nature of many Trumpers is an absolute absence of self-awareness married to an absolute abundance of self-centeredness—a boundless overconfident belligerent expression of id. https://t.co/fGVSPkU1m5
— Luke Zaleski (@ZaleskiLuke) April 23, 2023
I propose more public officials follow the example of Rep. Pelosi."Pelosi repeatedly emasculated Trump not by imitating him, but by treating him like a petulant child.
— John Harwood (@JohnJHarwood) April 23, 2023
"Most of Trump’s would-be Republican rivals treat him like an unstable father, fantasizing about supplanting him even as they cower in fear of his wrath" https://t.co/SHmnIQCrzL
Meanwhile, bravely ignoring the political hurricane 🌀 of the abortion battle.Has there ever been a presidential run where your own party hates you this much and you just pretend you don’t notice?
— Schooley ♟️ (@Rschooley) April 23, 2023
Chris Sununu made much the same argument on MTP. Except Sununu argued for states rights but then don’t mention abortion because “loser!” (The issue that dare not speak its name.)States’ rights!*
— MeidasTouch (@MeidasTouch) April 23, 2023
(*Does not apply not when the states disagree with my complete and total control over their lives) https://t.co/wmxcDkYI5v
Mike Pence defends Ralph Yarl and Kaylin Gillis shootings as response to 'crime wave'
— Raw Story (@RawStory) April 23, 2023
Remarkably tone-deafhttps://t.co/2dhtONdjPW
"I can't imagine the circumstances that I read about in the press in either of those cases," he remarked. "But at the end of the day, I just wonder, I wonder if it is some reflection of the fear the American people feel about the crime wave that's impacting our country, literally from coast to coast."
What was that Orwell said about seeing what is right in front of your nose?This is true. But shows you how whacked public conversation abt violence and guns is. The barest familiarity with history and data you know that virtually all red states lead in murder and guns & in most cases have for centuries. https://t.co/HROToZ91qy
— Josh Marshall (@joshtpm) April 23, 2023
It's amazing to me how few articles about current gun violence mention that the last few years have been just a festival of the strapped. pic.twitter.com/hNdSpnJMDQ
— Schooley ♟️ (@Rschooley) April 23, 2023
The elites gave security to make sure that doesn’t happen.Maybe if seething randos strutted around the Sun Valley conference or Met Gala with AR-15s strapped to their backs like at a Texas Walmart the elites would see the problem.
— Schooley ♟️ (@Rschooley) April 23, 2023
I know tout le internet has talked about this, but Professor Vladeck does it like a lawyer. Appellate courts are supposed to confine themselves to the record (that is, facts) of the trial court. But Alito didn’t do that in the case of the praying football coach (who didn’t lose his job for praying after games; he was a contract employee who wasn’t offered a new contract), and he’s not doing it here. In essence, he’s proving the criticism of AOC and others: that the Court is acting as a super-legislature. The Congress is supposed to base its law making on facts (what hearings are for), but it’s not a strict rule that can invalidate a law by the breach. Courts, OTOH, are bounded by rules of evidence and procedure. Alito is blithely ignoring those, the better to establish his preferences. He’s acting like a member of a 9 person legislature. One that doesn’t answer to Congress, even though the Constitution explicitly allows Congress to set the number of Justices on the court, establish their tenure and qualifications, even set most of their jurisdiction.I keep coming back to this passage in Justice Alito’s dissent—which invokes “legitimate doubts” that the government would comply with a court order; doesn’t cite any authority for that claim; and suggests the burden is on the government to overcome the doubts he doesn’t document. pic.twitter.com/uhBvSr1P4i
— Steve Vladeck (@steve_vladeck) April 22, 2023
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