We are so fucked.. Anthony Kennedy will retire from Supreme Court

xxxbishopxxx

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
Dude Remember This Is the Party That Said Publicly They Were Gonna be the Party of No to Any and All Things Obama Tried to Do and I Was About to Type That They Did This For 8 Years Let Alone 4 But In Reality Its Longer Than That Because Even Now They Are Undoing Every Piece Of Legislation That Obama Was Lucky Enough to Get Eeked By

Boyce Watkins did a video calling Obama a punk because of the things Obama didn't do "for black people". Meanwhile, giving some respect to Trump for following his beliefs and getting things done that appeases his white base. I thought about all the things you mentioned and was wondering why would Boyce say some dumb shit like that considering the fact Congress was constantly working against Obama at the time. Meanwhile, the same Congress is essential in helping Trump achieve his goals.

I still don't understand why the "voting" doesn't matter and the they are all same crowd" can't grasp this concept.
 

sharkbait28

Unionize & Prepare For Automation
International Member
There is one thing about Trump and his SCOTUS pick that nobody is talking about.

Trump is a media whore and a Star Fucker.

He is a Celibrity and loves the attention it brings. Whether it’s popular or negative.

Whoever Trump picks to replace Justice Kennedy, there is a good chance it ain’t gonna be “Mr. Boring”.

His pick is gonna most likely be somebody everybody knows, who is a semi-Celibrity, who is loud and flamboyant and who has no clue about the US Constitution.

His pick will be a nutjob like him.

Then Sen. McConnel and the rest of the GOP Senate have to scratch their heads and make the decision if they gonna put whatever idiot he picks on the bench.

This is gonna be interesting.

SCOTUS Judge Jeanine Pirro :lol:

Yo America is done b :itsawrap:
 

xxxbishopxxx

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
https://www.yahoo.com/news/democrat...trumps-next-supreme-court-pick-214353853.html

Democrats have a risky long shot at blocking Trump's next Supreme Court pick

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Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, center, on Capitol Hill. (Photo: J. Scott Applewhite/AP)
When centrist Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy announced Wednesday that he would be retiring at the end of July, bestowing upon Donald Trump the opportunity to appoint his successor and shift the court decisively to the right, reaction among liberals was apocalyptic — to put it mildly.

“NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO,” tweeted one.

“Just screaming ‘F***’ as loud as i can into the void,” added another.

Talk on social media quickly turned to all the laws that would likely be overturned — Roe v. Wade, affirmative action, LGBTQ protections, restrictions on capital punishment, and so on — if and when Trump tips the balance of a court that has long been evenly divided among conservatives and liberals, with Kennedy often serving as the deciding vote, and installs a solid 5-4 conservative majority instead.

Then Democrats started to wonder. Under Sen. Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, Republicans infamously refused to even consider Merrick Garland, President Barack Obama’s final nominee, to fill the seat vacated by the unexpected death of conservative Justice Antonin Scalia 269 days before the 2016 election. Kennedy has announced his retirement 132 days before the 2018 election.

Could Dems therefore take a page from the GOP playbook and block whomever Trump appoints, claiming, as McConnell did at the time, that “the American people” deserve to have “a voice in this vacancy” when they cast their ballots in November?

Technically, the answer is yes. But because of a momentous GOP rule change, the process would be much more difficult than it was as recently as 2016 — so difficult, in fact, that Democrats may conclude it isn’t worth the political cost.

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President Trump with Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell. (Photo: J. Scott Applewhite/AP)
In 1917, the Senate replaced its long-standing tradition of “talking filibusters” with a two-thirds supermajority requirement: as long as 67 senators supported a particular measure or nomination, they could cut off debate and proceed to a vote — meaning that 34 senators could block it. In 1975, the Senate lowered its supermajority threshold to 60; now 41 senators were required for a filibuster.

That rule still stands for most legislation, but in 2013, Democrats — who were frustrated by Republican efforts to stonewall Obama’s nominees to executive branch positions and lower court judgeships — eliminated the need for 60 votes on such nominations, saying that a simple, 51-vote majority would suffice. Significantly, they left the 60-vote requirement in place for Supreme Court nominations.

Then, in 2014, the GOP won control of the Senate; in 2016, they won the White House. Ten days after taking office, President Trump nominated Neil Gorsuch to fill Scalia’s still vacant seat, and when Democrats tried to filibuster in April 2017, McConnell invoked the so-called nuclear option, abolishing the 60-vote requirement for Supreme Court nominations as well. Gorsuch was confirmed three days later, 54-45.

Currently, Democrats control 49 Senate seats — two short of the simple majority they would need to filibuster a Trump nominee. So how could they “technically” block the president’s pick? And even with all the outrage on the left, why are they still unlikely to do it?

Earlier this month, University of Miami political scientist Gregory Koger, a specialist in filibustering and legislative obstructionism, explained on Vox.com that, according to Article 1, Section 5 of the U.S. Constitution, “a majority … shall constitute a quorum to do business” in the Senate — meaning that Democrats can basically shut the place down by refusing to vote on anything.

With only the barest 51-vote majority — and one of their own, Arizona Sen. John McCain, on extended leave in Arizona as he grapples with what is likely to be terminal brain cancer — Republicans would have difficultly mustering a quorum without at least some Democratic help. “In the month of June, there have been an average of 1.8 Republican absences across 18 roll call votes,” Koger wrote, “so even if McCain returned to the Senate, the majority would struggle to consistently provide a floor majority.” If McCain doesn’t return, and all 49 Democrats refuse to participate, the 50 Republican senators left in Washington would fall one short of a quorum. (The Senate precedents on quorums do not mention whether Vice President Mike Pence could contribute a 51st vote.)

In that case, “the Senate can do nothing,” Koger concluded. “No bill can pass, no amendment can be decided on, no nominations can get approved.” The Senate would screech to a halt for lack of a quorum — and Democrats could conceivably delay a confirmation vote until a new Senate, perhaps with a narrow Democratic majority, is seated next January.

Asked to confirm that Democrats could use the quorum rule to block Trump’s Supreme Court nominee indefinitely, Koger tells Yahoo News the answer is “technically yes,” assuming that the word “majority” in the Constitution means “51 votes, not 50” and that the vice president can’t “vote to make a majority.”

The fact that Democrats can shut down the Senate, however, doesn’t mean they will. “This would be a confrontational tactic,” Koger explained. “Confrontational” is probably too gentle a word for it. Obstructing a president’s Supreme Court pick by completely shutting down the Senate would require political winds that were blowing strongly in Senate Democrats’ favor. It’s not clear they are.

For one thing, 10 Democratic senators are running for reelection in states that Trump won in 2016, and Heidi Heitkamp of North Dakota, Joe Manchin of West Virginia, and Joe Donnelly of Indiana all voted to confirm Gorsuch. Would every one of these at-risk senators be willing to imperil their reelection chances by striking over Trump’s next nominee? Democrats can’t afford a single defection.

Then there’s the fact that the argument McConnell made in 2016 is different than the argument Democrats would have to make now. Back then, McConnell was employing the existing filibuster rules to block a nomination made in a presidential election year; his rationale was that the president is the person with the power to put forward such a nomination, and a new one would be elected soon, so the Senate might as well wait. Today, Democrats would have to circumvent the existing filibuster rules to block a nomination made in a midterm election year. They might argue that midterms determine control of the Senate, and that the Senate is the body with the power to confirm such a nomination. But voters will likely find that argument even less compelling than McConnell’s — especially because Obama himself nominated Elena Kagan in a midterm year (2010) and Republicans chose not filibuster her then.

Instead, Trump will nominate Kennedy’s replacement as soon as possible; on Wednesday, the president told reporters the process would “begin immediately.”

McConnell will push for a confirmation vote before Election Day. “We will vote to confirm Justice Kennedy’s successor this fall,” he vowed Wednesday.

Most Democrats will decry this maneuvering as “the absolute height of hypocrisy,” as Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer put it shortly after Kennedy announced his retirement. “People are just months away from determining the senators who should vote to confirm or reject the president’s nominee,” Schumer said on the floor of the Senate, “and their voices deserve to be heard now as Senator McConnell thought that they deserved to be heard then.”

Others will try to pressure imperiled GOP senators such as Nevada’s Dean Heller and pro-choice Republicans like Susan Collins of Maine and Lisa Murkowski of Alaska to break with their party and torpedo Trump’s nominee. The Democratic Party will make the midterms all about Kennedy’s replacement.

But despite these efforts, Trump’s nominee will probably be confirmed on a party-line voteand the composition of the highest court in the land will shift rightward for a generation or more.

_____

More Yahoo News stories on Anthony Kenney’s retirement
 

shaddyvillethug

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
You too young for that luxury brother. And you have a children.

Absolutely. And with You on the ticket as VP he cant lose.
I’m blessed.

And if I was VP I would be a bulldog

Call me Aaron Burr

I’m shooting niggas and getting the 12 amendment being basically based off me.

U would be that George Clinton ass nigga
 

BlackGoku

Rising Star
Platinum Member
There is one thing about Trump and his SCOTUS pick that nobody is talking about.

Trump is a media whore and a Star Fucker.

He is a Celibrity and loves the attention it brings. Whether it’s popular or negative.

Whoever Trump picks to replace Justice Kennedy, there is a good chance it ain’t gonna be “Mr. Boring”.

His pick is gonna most likely be somebody everybody knows, who is a semi-Celibrity, who is loud and flamboyant and who has no clue about the US Constitution.

His pick will be a nutjob like him.

Then Sen. McConnel and the rest of the GOP Senate have to scratch their heads and make the decision if they gonna put whatever idiot he picks on the bench.

This is gonna be interesting.


Yes it will..He may nominate Cohen at this rate..:smh:
 

sharkbait28

Unionize & Prepare For Automation
International Member
Famo u be dancing like a muthafucka

It's no dancing here. Just self respect bruh, you might not know about some shit like this. Are you still being spoonfed by your moms? The shit you're looking for is literally a search away. Fuck would I look like posting some shit for u 'cause you're on your Napoleon complex? Nigga I would beat the dogshit out of u on sight off GP :lol:

The foh with that dumb shit
 
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Day_Carver

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
Why Justice Kennedy’s Retirement Is Even Worse Than You Think



The Last Jedi's John Boyega Goes Undercover on Reddit, Twitter & Wikipedia



One day after offering the most feckless of rejoinders to a racist Muslim ban that he then voted to uphold, Justice Anthony Kennedy announced his retirement from the United States Supreme Court, effective July 31 of this year. Despite his conservative inclinations, Kennedy has spent a generation acting as the proverbial "swing vote" on issues of profound national importance, serving as a bulwark against incursions on affirmative action, same-sex marriage, and a woman's right to choose, among many other things. Replacing him with another far-right extremist would tilt the Court's balance for decades to come. It would instantly become the single most impactful event of Donald Trump's entire presidency.

In the immediate aftermath of the most recent Supreme Court vacancy, Senate majority leader Mitch McConnell unveiled what might be termed the "McConnell Standard": When associate justice positions become available in an election year, the Senate should wait to confirm a successor until the American people have had the opportunity to weigh in by voting in the national election. (Back then, McConnell had presidential elections in mind, but since his standard had no legal support at the time he fabricated it, and since the president about to make his second high court nomination didn't win the popular vote, it seems at least as reasonable to extend it in this context, too.) The late Justice Scalia died on February 13, 2016, a date that fell 269 days before that fall's contest. Since only 132 days remain until the 2018 midterms, under the McConnell Standard, good-faith adherence to sacrosanct institutional norms would require the president and the Senate to put the process on hold until January.

In today's least surprising development, Mitch McConnell has absolutely no memory of any of this.

Historically, Senate rules required a filibuster-proof coalition of 60 votes in order to confirm a Supreme Court hopeful. But when minority leader Chuck Schumer announced his intention to filibuster Neil Gorsuch's nomination in 2016—the seat that McConnell stole from President Obama's nominee, remember—McConnell responded by invoking the "nuclear option," trashing Senate rules and lowering the magical threshold from a 60-senator supermajority to a 51-senator simple majority. Right now, the Republican Party controls 51 seats in the upper chamber and holds the tiebreaker in Vice President Mike Pence. If John McCain's health allows him to participate, even if a GOP lawmaker were to defect, Trump could still watch his nominee sail through Capitol Hill without securing a single vote from the minority party. Democrats are furious and terrified right now, and with good reason: No procedural mechanism allows them to stop this.

Kennedy's announcement also plunges the electoral map into chaos. Democrats, one would hope, would prefer to stay united in their opposition to the president's nominee. But now, red-state Democrats waging tough re-election battles will have to spend all of August and September and October on the campaign trail answering hard questions about their complicity in Schumer's obstructionism. Send me to Washington, their challengers will say to their Republican voters, and I'll help put an end to this blind partisan warfare and allow Donald Trump to do his job of filling the Kennedy seat. It won't matter that McConnell doesn't actually need their votes to proceed, and it won't matter when Democrats (correctly) point out that McConnell started it. As 2016 demonstrated, the Supreme Court has a funny way of becoming a wedge issue in a hurry, and the GOP will use it to punish Democrats in contests that Democrats cannot afford to lose.

The political stakes, somehow, should be the least of progressives' worries right now. Justice Kennedy's vote is the only thing preventing the reversal of Roe v. Wade, a decision that the Court's four-justice conservative bloc has worked diligently to erode. Trump, prompted by his enablers in conservative think tanks and legal circles, has repeatedly pledged to nominate justices who would pledge to vote for that result. Nominees typically don't make promises to presidents or senators, at least not in public, and justices have often ruled differently from the bench than their White House benefactors expected. (Kennedy was a Reagan nominee, for example, but never became the hoped-for reliable conservative vote.) Even so, if a staunchly anti-abortion justice takes his place, Roe's 45-year history of protecting a woman's right to make choices about her own body will be very much in jeopardy.

The party of civility and decorum will have to show some backbone here. What Mitch McConnell understands better than anyone is that there are no rules in his Washington, and if Democrats offer to abide by them anyway out of their respect for long-since-crumbled institutions, they will play right into his hands. Schumer, to his credit, came out strong on this point on Wednesday afternoon. "Our Republican colleagues in the Senate should follow the rule they set in 2016 not to consider a Supreme Court justice in an election year," he said. "Millions of people are just months away from determining the senators who should vote to confirm or reject the president’s nominee. Their voices deserve to be heard now, as Leader McConnell thought they should deserve to be heard then."

This should be the beginning of the fight, not the end of it. Even if they can't stop the disaster unfolding just beyond their reach, Democrats who want to win in November must first prove to voters that they give a shit about it. They should be doing everything in their power between now and then to delay, obstruct, and otherwise raise holy hell about the pending evisceration of civil rights and individual freedoms that all Americans enjoy. Fuck collegiality. They should call out Mitch McConnell as a liar, and President Trump as a hypocrite, and every Republican senator who contracts Merrick Garland–related amnesia as an unprincipled supplicant. These will not be partisan statements. They are factual ones. If Democrats don't stand for this, they deserve the coming fall.
 

sharkbait28

Unionize & Prepare For Automation
International Member
Oh, I get it. This is a sore subject today.

Thus, the wack ass name calling.

I'll let you cry in peace.

Well "smart guy"... let's unpack your argument. Is it your contention that a "conservative black woman" would be a win for Black Americans? Candace Owens perhaps? (She's not degreed btw)

Explain your rationale in light of Clarence Thomas. I want you to "show your work" so to speak and explain the rationale behind your retarded ass reasoning. Remember, some of us here know you talk a big conservative game but literally work a gov job :yes:
 

shaddyvillethug

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
It's no dancing here. Just self respect bruh, you might not know about some shit like this. Are you still being spoonfed by your moms? The shit you're looking for is literally a search away. Fuck would I look like posting some shit for u 'cause you're on your Napoleon complex? Nigga I would beat the dogshit out of u on sight off GP :lol:

The foh with that dumb shit
Ill send u a ticket to ORD or MDW

Get it brackin right off the plane lil nigga

I’m not playing with none of u BGol niggas

Period
 

shaddyvillethug

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
It's no dancing here. Just self respect bruh, you might not know about some shit like this. Are you still being spoonfed by your moms? The shit you're looking for is literally a search away. Fuck would I look like posting some shit for u 'cause you're on your Napoleon complex? Nigga I would beat the dogshit out of u on sight off GP :lol:

The foh with that dumb shit
Ill send u a ticket to ORD or MDW

Get it brackin right off the plane lil nigga

I’m not playing with none of u BGol niggas

Period
 

shaddyvillethug

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
It's no dancing here. Just self respect bruh, you might not know about some shit like this. Are you still being spoonfed by your moms? The shit you're looking for is literally a search away. Fuck would I look like posting some shit for u 'cause you're on your Napoleon complex? Nigga I would beat the dogshit out of u on sight off GP :lol:

The foh with that dumb shit
Ill send u a ticket to ORD or MDW

Get it brackin right off the plane lil nigga

I’m not playing with none of u BGol niggas

Period
 

sharkbait28

Unionize & Prepare For Automation
International Member
Ill send u a ticket to ORD or MDW

Get it brackin right off the plane lil nigga

I’m not playing with none of u BGol niggas

Period

My nigga you won't even work your tiny fingers to do a search on BGOL but you'll comp tickets to your tarmacs? Foh man I see you lmao. Please stop playin :roflmao3:
 

Duece

Get your shit together
BGOL Investor
:roflmao: Clown ass ninja. But I digresssssssssssssssssss!
:lol:

Nigga told a shit load of people not to vote, claiming Black people would be more woke with Trump in office. Not taking into account the effects of his administration will be felt for generations.

Then the nigga comes out and tells Jesse Lee Peterson that he's a conservative.

Nigga is probably loving this shit.
 

crossovernegro

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
yeah, they better be shooting her up with tigers blood or some shit. I kinda thought she should have resigned somewhere in Obama's 2 terms, just to make sure she left while it was safe. The repubs wouldn't have put up too much of a fight in 2013 for a replacement for a liberal judge the way they did for the replacement of a staunch conservative in Scalia. She stayed though, so that old chick needs to stay inside on cold days, take vitamins, carry oxygen and a damn defibrillator.


And there is only so much longer that Ginsburg can hold up. She's 85 and looks every one of those years. If Trump gets to replace a liberal with another rightwinger, it's game over.
 

crossovernegro

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
His replacement will be more like Thomas/Scalia... reliably hardcore conservative. Kennedy at least dipped his toes on the other side here and there. True that it's better that it's him and not Breyer or Ginsburg though.

OK I'm trying to understand why this is such an issue. The majority of this judges votes favored republicans so its not like there's going to be any changes. A republican judge will replace a republican judge. We got lucky this time.
 

T_Holmes

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
He's leaving for the same reason they're going to rush to make a replacement, and for the same reason they pushed the tax bill so hard last year, and for the same reason they tried to kill health care so hard last year.

They're dirty and corrupt as fuck, but they still know the handwriting might be on the wall with this next election. If they lose a majority, they might have to face the consequences and at the very least lose the political cover of Trump being a dumbass while they continue to fuck things over. A Dem controlled House might push impeachment, and too many of them might have to go along in the face of blistering truth.

So, yeah. They're like "let's squeeze in a little more dirty before it's over for us..." It even keeps Trump happy, because he gets to preen and get credit for making a big, important decision. The fact that man that will have a hand in shaping what will probably be the rest of my natural life disgusts me. But between hatred, ignorance, and indifference, we did it to ourselves.
 
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