While they manipulate and undermine the checks and balances in the country to slowly change the definitions of what is legally acceptable.Fascists depend on people like you to seize power: we can rely on them being within the law.
While they manipulate and undermine the checks and balances in the country to slowly change the definitions of what is legally acceptable.Fascists depend on people like you to seize power: we can rely on them being within the law.
I'm pretty sure every liberal looks at it like that...we all know what he just did...and within reason...if really does believe there's lack of effort from his neighbors to secure the border...Mecixo already asked him to reconsider...let's see if Trudeau will follow through and work with Drumph...LOL
No.
That's been obvious from the first term as well.
They do try to come up with various bullshit interpretations to justify some things, but "scrutinized carefully" wouldn't really be the right way to describe it.
"I want to do that, find a legal loophole to let me do it, " is what he expects from his lawyers.
Fascism got defeated Nov last year...Fascists depend on people like you to seize power: we can rely on them being within the law.
Sadly, I don't think we all know at all.I'm pretty sure every liberal looks at it like that...we all know what he just did..
He doesn't, though.if really does believe there's lack of effort from his neighbors to secure the border...
That's the problem.Mecixo already asked him to reconsider...
Trump may simply not let him.let's see if Trudeau will follow through and work with Drumph...
Just like his attempt to overturn the 14th Amendment last week, huh?Trump has a lot of lawyers in his staffers...I'm pretty sure every step he makes are being looked at and scrutinized carefully... but hey the team of lawyers that Trump hires may not be as good as The Mandrill....I mean...he has studied Admin Law 101 after all...they got nothing on The Mandrill...
I get that, I'm just not sure that the case law supports that, even if it would be reasonable.
There is a long history of "it doesn't matter what his reasons are, only if he can do it" in the American system.
So whether or not the emergency is made up is something for Congress to decide.
If there is an emergency declared, he has the right to declare tariffs.
It's entirely possible that the approach I am thinking of isn't in effect here.
From the document you linked in the beginning.
View attachment 403032
I think the last is more likely from a quick scan of Yoshida.
Here's the link for the case,
I didn't read it carefully. It related to Nixon putting a block on Japanese imports to redress balance of trade issues and the depletion of American monetary reserves. It's a court of appeal level case.
This is pretty clearly where Trump got his idea for the current tariff wars and why he thinks he might get away with it.
If the alleged reason for the crisis is frivolous or clearly bullshit or fake, I don't think the courts will refrain from striking the EO down. Nixon was competent and experienced, even if sketchy and odd in his personal life. It's one thing for a president to read conflicting opinions of whether international balance of trade has reached emergency levels and decide that it indeed has. I don't think any court is going to re read all the same conflicting opinions and then second guess the president's decision
It's another for a president to declare an emergency where none was previously thought to exist and then raise tariffs out of the blue for reasons which appear related only to his own demented ego.
And quite another for the president to allege that a small amount of fentanyl trafficked across the border should be dealt with by massive trade sanctions, unrelated to any law enforcement measures.
So I maintain my earlier opinion, although I note the case you drew to my attention.
Courts could skate around Yoshida pretty easily by simply saying that Trump's methods were disproportionate and not logically related to the emergency that he proclaimed.
Plus putting in judges who will do their duty to the party, not the law.LOL
No.
That's been obvious from the first term as well.
They do try to come up with various bullshit interpretations to justify some things, but "scrutinized carefully" wouldn't really be the right way to describe it.
"I want to do that, find a legal loophole to let me do it, " is what he expects from his lawyers.
Not all of it but some of it. Any of it contributes to the overall problem.and all of it is because of Canada?
But the courts will clearly shut down an EO if the "emergency" is preposterous. "The US is completely closing the border with Canada because a 5 year old girl from Cleveland lost her teddybear in Ontario and Trudeau wouldn't personally go find it for her" won't get you a positive court ruling that an emergency has occurred.I think the last is more likely from a quick scan of Yoshida.
That the president can make up whatever emergency he wants and the court won't question it seems to be in there.
But the court here does seem to reserve the right to say the final methods chosen to deal with it are fucked.
There's a lot in there about keeping the moves within the scope of things Congress has already decided.
So I think that's the angle people might take.
Not that the emergency is inherently bullshit, but that making up random tariff numbers on random things isn't part of the power.
(Thanks for finding the full case.)
He wants the border fixed. Tariffs are the threat. It's that simple.I'm saying that it didn't originate in Canada.
And that tariffing Canada is not a logic response, even if the problem did come from here.
And that even if tariffing Canada were a logical response, it would still be such an over reaction that a judge would strike the EO down as illegal and unreasonable.
Read my posts, skooby.He wants the border fixed. Tariffs are the threat. It's that simple.
No one really knows how much fentanyl originates from Canada because they can't always trace the origin. So you need to secure all points of entry.
Looks like his threats are working based on the investment Canada is making.