Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They will probably rule they the congress cannot make a law that prevents the President from firing people
It does seem that all three branches are compromised. I fear that eventually violence will be the only answer.
Absolutely not. Violence is NOT the answer. I agree we seem to be losing our country, but if we resort to violence then we are the ones damaging it. If our country is to remain free, we cannot be a people that employ violence, in doing do we sacrifice the very principles we’d be fighting for and lose all moral authority. Not to mention, from a purely practical side, our government controls the most powerful military the world has ever seen, and Republicans are the party that likes guns.
If our freedom is lost, then personal sacrifice may be required. Think of the impact that Gandhi had with his nonviolent methods, or the civil rights marches of the ‘60s. Even the lone, anonymous, “Tank Man” from Tiananmen Square left an indelible mark on the world in a single moment that China, one of the world’s superpowers remains afraid of more than 30 years later. Hurting others to get your way is cowardly and evil. Are you prepared to put yourself on the line for your beliefs?
Anonymous wrote:Who thinks the Roberts Court won't stop Trump from doing much of anything, let alone firing an ethics watchdog?
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/02/16/us/trump-supreme-court-special-counsel.html
First Test of Trump’s Power to Fire Officials Reaches Supreme Court
The court’s conservative majority may be receptive to the argument that presidents have unlimited power to remove leaders of independent agencies.
In the first case to reach the Supreme Court arising from the blitz of actions taken in the early weeks of the new administration, lawyers for President Trump asked the justices on Sunday to let him fire a government lawyer who leads a watchdog agency.
The administration’s emergency application asked the court to vacate a federal trial judge’s order temporarily reinstating Hampton Dellinger, the head of the Office of Special Counsel. Mr. Dellinger leads an independent agency charged with safeguarding government whistle-blowers and enforcing certain ethics laws. The position is unrelated to special counsels appointed by the Justice Department.
“This court should not allow lower courts to seize executive power by dictating to the president how long he must continue employing an agency head against his will,” the administration’s filing said.
The statute that created the job now filled by Mr. Dellinger, who was confirmed by the Senate in 2024, provides for a five-year term and says the special counsel “may be removed by the president only for inefficiency, neglect of duty or malfeasance in office.” But a one-sentence email to Mr. Dellinger on Feb. 7 gave no reasons for terminating him, effective immediately.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They will probably rule they the congress cannot make a law that prevents the President from firing people
It does seem that all three branches are compromised. I fear that eventually violence will be the only answer.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They will probably rule they the congress cannot make a law that prevents the President from firing people
It does seem that all three branches are compromised. I fear that eventually violence will be the only answer.
Anonymous wrote:They will probably rule they the congress cannot make a law that prevents the President from firing people
Anonymous wrote:They will probably rule they the congress cannot make a law that prevents the President from firing people