she black tho. alexandria ocasio-cortez should be happy.Damn 8-1. Kentanji Jackson already falling in line![]()
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
she black tho. alexandria ocasio-cortez should be happy.Damn 8-1. Kentanji Jackson already falling in line![]()
at this point it's sport. barbershop conspiracy talk gone mainstream. everybody wanna be in the conversation but don't actually give a fuck about what they saying.I now understand what Joe Madison is talking about when it comes to misinformation and disinformation.
She’s not even on the Supreme Court yet. Please do not spread misinformation.
Imagine how many people have ran to twitter posting justice brown falling in line.
lmao
see.why are you showing Trump like this is his fault. This was passed under a democratic administration with a majority controlled congress. But hey both sides are so different. Democrats love people of color.
why are you showing Trump like this is his fault. This was passed under a democratic administration with a majority controlled congress. But hey both sides are so different. Democrats love people of color.
why are you showing Trump like this is his fault. This was passed under a democratic administration with a majority controlled congress. But hey both sides are so different. Democrats love people of color.
Lmbaooo how stupid is this cac?why are you showing Trump like this is his fault. This was passed under a democratic administration with a majority controlled congress. But hey both sides are so different. Democrats love people of color.
Damn.... Puerto Rico is just all kinds of fucked up and catching hell from all sides.
Some pretty bitches though....
Supreme Court rules Puerto Ricans don't have constitutional right to some federal benefits
Congress can exclude residents of Puerto Rico from some federal disability benefits available to those who live in the 50 states, the Supreme Court ruled Thursday.
The 8-1 opinion was written by Justice Brett Kavanaugh, with Justice Sonia Sotomayor dissenting.
The case concerned Supplemental Security Income that is available to those living in the 50 states who are older than 65, blind or disabled. But residents of Puerto Rico and other US territories are excluded from receiving the funds.
"In devising tax and benefits programs, it is reasonable for Congress to take account of the general balance of benefits to and burdens on the residents of Puerto Rico," Kavanaugh wrote. "In doing so, Congress need not conduct a dollar-to-dollar comparison of how its tax and benefits programs apply in the States as compared to the Territories, either at the individual or collective level."
Sotomayor, whose parents were born in Puerto Rico, penned the sole dissenting opinion. "Equal treatment of citizens should not be left to the vagaries of the political process," she said.
"Because residents of Puerto Rico do not have voting representation in Congress, they cannot rely on their elected representatives to remedy the punishing disparities suffered by citizen residents of Puerto Rico under Congress' unequal treatment," Sotomayor wrote.
Steve Vladeck, CNN Supreme Court analyst and a professor at the University of Texas School of Law, called the case "a big deal both for what it holds and for what it opens the door to."
"The core holding is that Congress is allowed to withhold certain federal benefits from Americans who live in territories like Puerto Rico so long as it has any rational basis for doing so, and that no special justification is required," Vladeck said. "That makes it far easier for Congress, a body in which the territories are not represented, to treat residents of those territories differently with those who live in the states -- not just for Supplemental Security Income, but for all federal benefit programs, like Social Security, Medicare and other entitlements funded at least in part by taxes paid by those living in those territories."
The case involved Jose Luis Vaello-Madero, who was born in Puerto Rico in 1954 but lived in New York from 1985 to 2013. In 2012, he was found eligible after a stroke to receive the disability payments, which were deposited directly into his checking account.
After moving back to Puerto Rico in 2013, Vaello-Madero continued to accept the payments until the government was made aware that he was now living outside the 50 states. He was told that his benefits would be discontinued and that he owed the government $28,081 in back pay. His lawyers later sued, arguing that the exclusion of Puerto Rican residents violated the Equal Protection Clause of the Constitution's 14th Amendment.
Hermann Ferré, a lawyer for Vaello-Madero, said the program was meant to replace "an uneven patchwork of programs" for the disabled with a "uniform standard of national support" so that poor and disabled Americans could live with dignity.
"But that guarantee is not enjoyed by all Americans," he said, arguing the court should look at the elimination suspiciously because it excludes Puerto Ricans based on their race.
The Biden administration had defended the exclusion, noting that most Puerto Ricans are exempt from federal taxes, so Congress could take into consideration that reduced contribution when excluding them from some disability benefits. A government lawyer stressed that it would be up to Congress to extend the benefits, and President Joe Biden has already called on Congress to do so.
"It is always appropriate for Congress to take account of the general balance of benefits and burdens associated with a particular federal program," deputy Solicitor General Curtis Gannon told the justices at oral arguments.
Bruh you're literally on the internet where information can EASILY be found and you still decided to type that and tap "post reply"Damn 8-1. Kentanji Jackson already falling in line![]()
Man you ain't even lying... Already know that's what's coming next... I'll give it a test before PR is deemed a travel warning by crackasI hate to say this, but if a group of knuckleheads made PR a no fly zone for U.S. whites, I'd understand.
Yo I was like is he serious lol.The fact that you have to explain this says it all. Too many don't know the difference between a bill being passed by congress and signed into law by the president vs a ruling being handed down by the Supreme Court and made into law (or affirms law).
I fill youI'm moving to Gwam
And there is a whole lot of this......and ppl swear they are in the right and are completely off.![]()
see this is what's wrong right here
Always had a thing for Puerto Rican women. Since watching Rosie Perez in do the right thing.
I fill you
That’s those Mesicans u thinking ofAren’t Puerto Ricans white? That’s what most of them claim from wh
Aren’t Puerto Ricans white? That’s what most of them claim from what I’ve researched?
WHERE THE FUCK is GWAM???I'm moving to Gwam
100% of Puerto Ricans I’ve ever come across have always claimed Black or Taino blood.All the Puerto Ricans I have know haven't thought of themselves as white. Not by a long shot... I know there are some, but it ain't like Cubans or some Dominicans.
100% of Puerto Ricans I’ve ever come across have always claimed Black or Taino blood.
I’ve never heard any Boricuas, including the fair skinned ones, classify as white.
What you mean?? It affects all if them. Nobody gets anything. The other territories play their role, PR trying to move up to wife status when they know they are just a side piece with limited benefits.This sends a message to other US territories. Guam and USVI are probably thinking really hard about what this means for them.
![]()
Bingo. Don't get it twisted black people."More than three-quarters of Puerto Ricans identified as white on the last census, even though much of the population on the island has roots in Africa.![]()
Why Some Black Puerto Ricans Choose ‘White’ on the Census (Published 2020)
The island has a long history of encouraging residents to identify as white, but there are growing efforts to raise awareness about racism.www.nytimes.com
![]()
Why Some Black Puerto Ricans Choose ‘White’ on the Census (Published 2020)
The island has a long history of encouraging residents to identify as white, but there are growing efforts to raise awareness about racism.www.nytimes.com
2020
"More than three-quarters of Puerto Ricans identified as white on the last census, even though much of the population on the island has roots in Africa. That number is down from 80 percent 20 years ago, but activists and demographers say it is still inaccurate and they are working to get more Puerto Ricans of African descent to identify as black on the next census in an effort to draw attention to the island’s racial disparities.
All residents of Puerto Rico can select “Yes, Puerto Rican” on the census to indicate their Hispanic origin. But when it comes to race, residents must choose among “white,” “black,” “American Indian,” multiple options for Asian heritage, or they can write something in. Most Puerto Ricans choose “white.
But the Trump administration’s slow response after Hurricane Maria and other natural disasters has made many Puerto Ricans reconsider their decision to identify as white Americans, said Kimberly Figueroa Calderón, a member of Colectivo Ilé, a coalition of Puerto Rican educators and organizers who are campaigning for more Puerto Ricans to identify as black on the 2020 census. “We are not the ‘citizens’ that we think we are,” she said.
After Hurricane Maria, Maricruz Rivera-Clemente, the founder of Corporación Piñones se Integra, said it took longer for electricity to be restored in Loíza than in the capital, San Juan, and other parts of the island. “We have the same electrical connection, the same electrical source as Isla Verde,” Ms. Rivera-Clemente said, referring to a popular tourist area near San Juan. “We had no electricity until two months later.”