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What does a TRUMP presidency look like?

Started by FunkMonk, November 08, 2016, 11:02:57 PM

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Sheilbh

Just occurred to me that Trump will be in office during the 250th anniversary.

(I could be wrong but I almost suspect he will spend a lot of his time on the event planning for that :lol: :ph34r:)
Let's bomb Russia!

crazy canuck

Quote from: Sheilbh on Today at 08:09:49 AMJust occurred to me that Trump will be in office during the 250th anniversary.

(I could be wrong but I almost suspect he will spend a lot of his time on the event planning for that :lol: :ph34r:)

I hope he devotes all his time to that

Tamas

IDK why you guys think an absentee Trump is any better than an active Trump. He is an amoral lazy conman but that also means he doesn't actually believe most of the shit he ran on. But his government will be full of lunatic right-wingers and reckless chancers like Musk. If he goes to play golf and lets his toadies run the government, how is that better than the crap he'd do himself?

frunk

Quote from: Tamas on Today at 08:30:07 AMIDK why you guys think an absentee Trump is any better than an active Trump. He is an amoral lazy conman but that also means he doesn't actually believe most of the shit he ran on. But his government will be full of lunatic right-wingers and reckless chancers like Musk. If he goes to play golf and lets his toadies run the government, how is that better than the crap he'd do himself?
I don't think it really makes a difference if he's there or not, apart from Putin getting better cell reception.

HVC

Quote from: frunk on Today at 08:40:03 AM
Quote from: Tamas on Today at 08:30:07 AMIDK why you guys think an absentee Trump is any better than an active Trump. He is an amoral lazy conman but that also means he doesn't actually believe most of the shit he ran on. But his government will be full of lunatic right-wingers and reckless chancers like Musk. If he goes to play golf and lets his toadies run the government, how is that better than the crap he'd do himself?
I don't think it really makes a difference if he's there or not, apart from Putin getting better cell reception.

Funny, after America won the Cold War I'd never imagine that the US would be the get the puppet government put in place by Russia.


Also, Trumps been ozempic-afied, right? He's face looks weird.
Being lazy is bad; unless you still get what you want, then it's called "patience".
Hubris must be punished. Severely.

Savonarola

#33966
Quote from: Tamas on November 06, 2024, 06:55:25 PMIt is very easy to interpret Trump the way his voters interpret him: what the individual voter liked to hear, is true and what Trump will do. The rest is just showmanship and acceptable lies to gain power.

A number of Trump's promises are contradictory; he can't eliminate the professional bureaucracy and simultaneously hire enough ICE agents to deport all the ilegales.  Others are impossible, Efficiency Czar Elon Musk cannot reduce the Federal Budget by 2 trillion dollars; an amount greater than the discretionary spending in the federal budget.  So I'm trying not to do the opposite; and interpret the showmanship and lies as his true intentions.  I do think he will pursue a more isolationist foreign policy; he will actually give RFK Jr. (a man who thinks that Covid was genetically engineered to spare Ashkenazi Jews) a leadership position in Health and Human Services; I think he will try to significantly change the federal bureaucracy; and he will use the Justice Department to go after the people who have "Wronged" him.  He's made other promises, which he could carry out and which have the potential to be equally catastrophic, but these are the consequential ones that I think are most likely to keep, (and if he doesn't, or they don't work out as badly as I expect, then he wasn't as bad a president as I expected.)
In Italy, for thirty years under the Borgias, they had warfare, terror, murder and bloodshed, but they produced Michelangelo, Leonardo da Vinci and the Renaissance. In Switzerland, they had brotherly love, they had five hundred years of democracy and peace—and what did that produce? The cuckoo clock

Tamas


crazy canuck

Quote from: Tamas on Today at 08:30:07 AMIDK why you guys think an absentee Trump is any better than an active Trump. He is an amoral lazy conman but that also means he doesn't actually believe most of the shit he ran on. But his government will be full of lunatic right-wingers and reckless chancers like Musk. If he goes to play golf and lets his toadies run the government, how is that better than the crap he'd do himself?

All that is a given.  Things only get worse if Trump adds to it.

Tamas

Quote from: crazy canuck on Today at 09:57:32 AM
Quote from: Tamas on Today at 08:30:07 AMIDK why you guys think an absentee Trump is any better than an active Trump. He is an amoral lazy conman but that also means he doesn't actually believe most of the shit he ran on. But his government will be full of lunatic right-wingers and reckless chancers like Musk. If he goes to play golf and lets his toadies run the government, how is that better than the crap he'd do himself?

All the is a given.  Things only get worse if Trump adds to it.

Fair.

Crazy_Ivan80

Quote from: HVC on Today at 08:49:44 AM
Quote from: frunk on Today at 08:40:03 AM
Quote from: Tamas on Today at 08:30:07 AMIDK why you guys think an absentee Trump is any better than an active Trump. He is an amoral lazy conman but that also means he doesn't actually believe most of the shit he ran on. But his government will be full of lunatic right-wingers and reckless chancers like Musk. If he goes to play golf and lets his toadies run the government, how is that better than the crap he'd do himself?
I don't think it really makes a difference if he's there or not, apart from Putin getting better cell reception.

Funny, after America won the Cold War I'd never imagine that the US would be the get the puppet government put in place by Russia.


Also, Trumps been ozempic-afied, right? He's face looks weird.
That's because China won the cold war. The west didn't in hindsight

Barrister

Quote from: Admiral Yi on November 06, 2024, 06:31:55 PMWouldn't that depend on the court's ruling?  I think your logic is that if the court upheld the executive order they would have to overturn the 14th Amendment and apply it retroactively, regardless of Trump's stated preference to deny it only to future, as yet unborn people.  I'm trying to come up with a relevant example of some law being changed and applied retroactively but I can't.  But maybe citizenship is unique in that it's a status and not an act.

OK so I wanted to chime in on this whole debate.

For starters, of course, the USSC can't "overturn the 14th Amendment".  What's being discussed is the notion that the 14th Amendment, as written, does not grant citizenship to children born in the US to people without legal status.

Forgive me, but I'm going to dive into first year law school stuff.

Broadly speaking there are two kinds of laws - common law and statutes.  Statutes are fairly straight-forward - Congress passes a law, the President signs it, and the law comes into effect on the date it says.  A statute does not have retrospective authority - it can't change the legal status of things that have already happened.

Common law though - that's when justices look back over past cases and past precedent.  They then don't make new law, but rather they proclaim what the law always has been (when properly understood).  When the USSC overturns Roe v Wade in Dodds they don't say "we just don't like Roe v Wade", instead it's "Roe v Wade didn't understand the law, and it always should have been the other way".

Now there can be exceptions to both.  I'll give you a fun little example - The Manitoba Language reference (bet you didn't see that coming).  Under the Manitoba Act, which is how Manitoba joined Confederation as a province, it was supposed to be a bilingual province.  That included that all laws in Manitoba needed to be passed in both French and English.  At some point though Manitoba just stopped doing that, passing laws only in English.

So there was a court case that said every single Manitoba law for the prior 50 years or so was invalid.  But they also held that would lead to chaos, so they gave Manitoba several years grace period to re-pass any and all laws in both French and English.

But notice that's the exception.  The SCC didn't say 'from this day forward, all laws must be passed in both languages' - because that's not how court rulings and the common law works.  Because court rulings do apply retrospectively.


So - if the USSC decides that the 14th Amendment does not grant citizenship to people without status in the US, the most plan understanding of that ruling would be that works retrospectively, and that anyone who gained citizenship that way was granted it incorrectly.

Could the USSC wave it's hands and say "but just in this case only the ruling doesn't apply retrospectively"?  I mean sure.  That's bad precedent and bad law, but they're supreme court justices and I'm not.  But it would be the exception to the general way court rulings work.
Posts here are my own private opinions.  I do not speak for my employer.