Word. Let me add to the pile-on. Our fiends on the right have been very good at ignoring federal injunctions, especially those of the structural variety. In 1954, the Supreme Court ordered the desegregation of our nation's public school systems. In 2024, they remain almost as segregated as ever. Generation upon generation of prison injunctions has had little effect on the conditions of incarceration.
And particularly delicious is a case called Printz v. US, where a conservative majority of the Supreme Court held that the federal government could not commandeer state enforcement resources. The context was (of course) gun-related, but the language was absolute. On the other hand, the Sinister Six don't care much about their own precedent.
Word. Let me add to the pile-on. Our fiends on the right have been very good at ignoring federal injunctions, especially those of the structural variety. In 1954, the Supreme Court ordered the desegregation of our nation's public school systems. In 2024, they remain almost as segregated as ever. Generation upon generation of prison injunctions has had little effect on the conditions of incarceration.
And particularly delicious is a case called Printz v. US, where a conservative majority of the Supreme Court held that the federal government could not commandeer state enforcement resources. The context was (of course) gun-related, but the language was absolute. On the other hand, the Sinister Six don't care much about their own precedent.