121 points

This person, masquerading as a judge, serves as a clear illustration of a tainted justice system.

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60 points

It’s important to remember that not a single justice said the SC needs oversight for this stuff…

There’s clearly an issue, but none of them will admit because to them the optics of the court being corrupt is worse than the court being corrupt.

The whole system needs redone.

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12 points

In light of Citizens United, they are just being the change they want to see.

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8 points
-8 points
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I don’t know what you thought that means…

But it’s not her admitting the court has been corrupt for a long time

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-12 points

Well, he’s not doing something illegal… unethical, yes. This is corruption plain and simple.

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43 points

It’s illegal for anyone subject to laws. An apellate judge would be in prison for each and every one of these bribes, no option to resign.

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7 points

And Thomas is not subject to laws. That’s the explanation.

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16 points

He admitted wrongdoing when he feigned ignorance that he was supposed to disclose his lavish gifts for the last few decades.

This is just more info coming out about what he always hid from the American people regarding the huge under-the-table gifts he’s been receiving from billionaires all these years.

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55 points

It is impossible to believe statements from our government that they take bribery and corruption seriously while this man remains a member of the Supreme Court.

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18 points

Hypocrisy is the main tool of a conservative. We’re never going to shame these savages who don’t believe in law and order in the first place. The only thing they understand is the lash of inevitable consequences.

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2 points

They only focus on corruption overseas. I’m guessing the Walton’s didn’t wine & dine the politicians.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-walmart-fcpa-idUSKCN1TL27J

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43 points

Does it even matter at this point? Nothing will be done. He’ll be there until he croaks, being as corrupt as he feels like.

On the other hand, Alabama showed that you don’t have to do what SCOTUS says if you don’t want to anyway, so even that may not matter.

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12 points

A lot of things can be done if awareness of this corruption convinces voters that something should be done. A lot of Democratic leadership has come around to the possibility of packing the court given a suitable majority to do so. Given that the GOP’s lead candidate is losing to a guy with one foot in federal prison, 2024 could be a real blowout for their party if their trajectory doesn’t change.

Consider what happens if the GOP splits in half because the party can’t unite behind Trump or DeSantis- it would present a golden opportunity for a supermajority to pass constitutional amendments regulating the supreme court, guaranteeing equal civil and voting rights, ensuring healthcare, housing, and education for all, and more.

Stop blackpilling when the enemy is withering.

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3 points

Republicans will vote for Trump. Let’s not get caught up in fantasy here, that party is focused and united (albeit not disciplined or frugal).

It’s gonna be a turnout game for democrats for the foreseeable future, Republicans are not splitting, they are a cult.

(I would love to be wrong).

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3 points

They’ll vote for R regardless of the name next to it

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2 points

It’s possible that Trump will get a guilty verdict in one of his felony trials between Super Tuesday in March and the national convention in July. It’s likely that Trump will have the election sewn up by Super Tuesday. The trial news will be a shitshow in any case.

They made the Leopards Ate My Face final boss when they refused to go after Trump for his multiple criminal conspiracies. They were so afraid of losing in 2020 that they went all in to support him, because they ceded the voters to him, because at the end of the day they have no policies to sell. It’s just the fear, and Trump does that better than all of them put together.

So honestly, I don’t think they can win with Trump. There are states (and seats) where a shift of 5% of Rs and something similar in Is will flip the state, and Dems have been on a gotv speed run with the abortion laws on the table. I don’t think the poll models are going to take into account just how weird this election will be.

On the other hand, they have fucking DeSantis. DeSantis couldn’t defeat anyone. Still, some of those DeSantis voters are never going to support Trump, so even if DeSantis drops out, he won’t get 100% of the DeSantis (or other) supporters.

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3 points

Consider what happens if the GOP splits in half because the party can’t unite behind Trump or DeSantis

Based on polling, that split will be something like 95-5.

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1 point

There’s an awful lot of “if” in your statements. We need to be concerned with reality as it exists right now, not how it may exist at some unknown point in the future if a specific set of events play out as we hope.

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2 points

My point is that you’re not truly understanding reality as it is right now. My argument is that the blackpill perspective is an unnecessarily pessimistic outlook without a real theory for change, which is effectively nihilistic and helps fascism.

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4 points

More like CynicalSquid. But you’ve got a point.

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12 points

How can you not be cynical about SCOTUS at this point?

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3 points

I wouldn’t know. But I guess 38 vacations paid by billionnaires wouldn’t hurt, right?

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37 points

What a fucking piece of shit. How bad does it have to get before someone finds a way to remove him from the court and put him in jail?

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6 points

He is a House Justice for FedSoc, as long as he keeps shuffling and stirring the lemonade he ain’t going anywhere.

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36 points
*

It was honestly incredibly stupid of the American founders to assume making these guys practically untouchable would make them above corruption rather than the perfect targets for it. Childishly naive.

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30 points
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Deleted by creator
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6 points

Washington was wrong about this. Unipartisan “Democracies” are not democracies at all.

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3 points

At best he was naive to think that you could ever actually prevent factions from forming. You can’t block them, only guide them

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3 points

Specifically why he referred to them as ‘factions’, I’d assume.

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13 points

People used to be able to storm the courthouse and physically remove judges who were corrupt. The government militarizing the police and separating the elected officials from the people is the problem.

The corrupt should fear us (First amendment).

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6 points

First plus one?

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5 points

Yeah I totally meant the second amendment. I’m a retired federal official. I’m embarrassed with myself. Lol. I’m getting old, though, so I forgive my mistakes.

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2 points

That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed. — That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its foundation on such principles, and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness… it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such Government, and to provide new Guards for their future security.

–Thomas Jefferson

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9 points

It was honestly incredibly stupid of the American founders to assume making these guys practically untouchable would make them above corruption rather than the perfect targets for it. Childishly naive.

I disagree.

The way they looked at it: If judges were elected or could otherwise be replaced or removed easily, their decisions would much more likely be based not on a correct interpretation of the law, but what would keep the lobbyist money flowing in, what they think would get them re-elected, or they would simply parrot the rulings of whoever could have them removed from the bench. Having them be lifetime appointments (in theory) would remove all of that, and they still gave Congress a way to remove a corrupt judge anyway if one of them did get out of line.

They expected (perhaps naively) that corruption would be rare and would never engulf more than one branch of government. They never expected a situation where two branches of government became equally corrupt at the same time. That’s where the real problem lies; the fail-safe that they put into place in case of corruption became corrupt itself.

Had our government worked the way the founding fathers intended, Clarence Thomas would have been heaved off the bench at warp speed by Congress about four seconds after his first bribery scandal broke. The problem isn’t the system. The system that the founding fathers gave us in the late 1700s was fine. The problem is that there’s no way they could have possibly foreseen the levels of corruption that exist 250 years later.

250 years from now, there are going to be a ton of policies we’re coming up with today that are going to seem just as stupid and naive.

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9 points

The problem is that there’s no way they could have possibly foreseen the levels of corruption that exist 250 years later.

Corruption in government isn’t an American invention.

See also: Rome.

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8 points

I don’t think the founders really thought that much about it. Article III was pretty much phoned in- so much so that the basic function of SCOTUS–constitutional review of the rest of the government–was created out of thin air by the Court itself. Literally all the constitution says about it is that the judicial power shall be vested in a supreme court and lower courts to be created by federal statute.

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3 points

The founders envisioned a weak government that could be torn down and rebuilt by the people as needed. Perhaps we have been neglecting our duty.

That to secure these rights, Governments are ilnstituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed. — That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its foundation on such principles, and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness… it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such Government, and to provide new Guards for their future security.

–Thomas Jefferson

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