IHeartBadCode

joined 9 months ago
[–] IHeartBadCode@fedia.io 1 points 1 month ago

You're mostly right in that the person you're replying is missing that we are providing money for those people's detention. But El Salvador doesn't HAVE TO give the person back, there's nothing outside of us stopping payments that compels them.

It's a semantic difference indeed but goes to point out the difference between legal means and diplomatic means. Legally, there's nothing the US can do, once the person is in El Salvador they are under that country's legal system. Diplomatically, yes, absolutely we can ask El Salvador to hand the person back or there will be diplomatic and potentially economic consequences for not doing so.

Now as others have pointed out, the Executive branch has a wide latitude for diplomatic powers. Judge indicated that the President work diplomatically to bring the person home, but outside of that, the "or else" part. There's not much the Judge can do past that.

Additionally, El Salvador could press charges on the person and then there would be nothing that can be done to bring the person home in any legal means and likely less so diplomatically. This is the issue with sending people there. President Bukele of El Salvador could wish for better diplomatic relationships with the United States and Trump and just invent charges to keep the person there forever. There's literally nothing we can do is El Salvador indicates that they are keeping the person and there's nothing in the court system that can compel anyone to make those reasons clear.

That's the biggest thing about the difference between diplomatic and legal. In legal means, the Court system can ensure that people are following through on requirements. In a diplomatic means, it's just depends on who can butter who's biscuit the best. The Judge can tell the President to bring him back, but that means next to nothing when it comes to diplomatic matters.

[–] IHeartBadCode@fedia.io 7 points 1 month ago

For those wondering. Chapter III, Article 65 of the Constitution of the Republic of Korea clause 2 indicates that the Nation Assembly must have a simple majority to bring about impeachment charges and, for the President, a two-thirds vote to be convicted.

That a motion for the impeachment of the President shall be proposed by a majority of the total members of the National Assembly and approved by two thirds or more of the total members of the National Assembly

Clause 3 then indicates that once someone is impeached the impeachment is adjudicated.

Any person against whom a motion for impeachment has been passed shall be suspended from exercising his power until the impeachment has been adjudicated

Chapter VI, Article 111 Clause 1(2) indicates that the Constitutional Court will have original jurisdiction over adjudicating impeachments.

The Constitutional Court shall have jurisdiction over the following matters: 2. Impeachment

The National Assembly impeached Yoon Suk Yeol on December 14th, 2024. Prime Minister Han Duck-soo took over as acting President until his impeachment on December 27th, 2024. First Deputy Prime Minister Choi Sang-mok then took over as acting President until the Constitutional Court acquitted Han Duck-soo who then resumed as acting President.

Yoon Suk Yeol's impeachment was upheld by the Constitutional Court by a vote of 8-0. It is this ruling that the story linked is indicating.

Chapter IV, Article 68 Clause 2 indicates that when a permanent vacancy occurs in the office of the President, a new election must be held within 60 days.

In case a vacancy occurs in the office of the President or the President-elect dies, or is disqualified by a court ruling or for any other reason, a successor shall be elected within sixty days

So a new election will be held no later than June 3rd of this year. This will be to elect a new President to a single term of five years.

[–] IHeartBadCode@fedia.io 7 points 1 month ago

If it passes the House, it doesn't matter, Trump can veto it.

Immigration and Naturalization Service v. Chadha in 1983 declared Legislative Veto unconstitutional. It should have been then when all the emergency powers were rewritten.

So as it stands. All those emergency powers that were written with the understanding that a simple majority was all that was needed to end an emergency, now need a veto proof majority.

[–] IHeartBadCode@fedia.io 60 points 1 month ago (6 children)

Just to be clear. Trump just declared a 10% tariff on the planet Earth not including the United States. Think of a country, any country really, that isn't the United States. Got one? Good, that nation has 10% tariffs on whatever.

There's exceptions for very specific things. But overall, yeah the price of everything is now going up 10%.

Trump just started Trade War II. Like there's no need to guess what the rest of the fucking planet feels about this or what they'll do. It's literally the United States versus every other fucking person on this planet.

We ain't cooked, we're ash. This is literally the end of the world that was built out of the ashes of World War II. There is no coming back from this ever, this is the Rubicon.

[–] IHeartBadCode@fedia.io 13 points 1 month ago (1 children)

President Trump will impose a 10% tariff on all countries

It's just whatever at this point. Clearly he's gunning for recession, fuck it. Nobody in Congress stopping him.

At this point all those emergency powers Congress has given the President since the 1920s needs to be pulled back because clearly we can no long assure that the President won't declare everything an emergency.

[–] IHeartBadCode@fedia.io 15 points 1 month ago

Schedule F classification. Trump tried it once towards the end of his first term, promised that he would do it again when he came back into office but Trump lost that election.

That he's now doing again is literally no surprise. He absolutely promised that this would happen and spoke about how he was going to do it if he won 2024 after losing 2020.

Long story short, this creates what basically amounts to at-will employment at the Federal level. Again, this should come as a shock to no one, like he started detailing the implementation back in 2022, before he even got the nomination, it's literally one of the most consistent things about Trump's policy.

Now if you're wondering, yes, at-will employment styled employment in Federal Office will mean that if Trump doesn't like someone for any reason, they can be let go, zero employment protections.

[–] IHeartBadCode@fedia.io 10 points 1 month ago

Elon Musk is neither President or Vice President, yet yields a massive amount of power for someone who is just "an independent contractor".

This is what I'm getting at. That a JD Vance President and Mike Johnson VP (let's just say for sake of illustration) could indicate they're bringing Trump on as a "consultant" and then leave their jobs largely up to him.

Technically speaking Vance would still hold the title President but Trump would be executing most of the functions.

[–] IHeartBadCode@fedia.io 34 points 1 month ago

Yeah. Then Putin took back the role of President using the argument that Medvedev being President allowed Putin to run again despite term limits.

Medvedev became Prime Minister, then everyone in Parliament resigned all at the exact same time, leaving the President as the only one running the place.

Putin rewrote the Constitution and that was the end of that.

[–] IHeartBadCode@fedia.io 66 points 1 month ago (14 children)

NBC News asked about a possible scenario in which Vice President JD Vance would run for office and then pass the role to Trump. Trump responded that “that’s one” method.

That isn't a method. At in the sense that Trump obtains the title President. But we've seen during this administration that the President can delegate broad authority to others with zero questions.

So we could have a President who is still the President in name but has passed 99.9% of their duties to Trump who is an "independent contractor".

This is quite literally the foundation they're building with Musk.

[–] IHeartBadCode@fedia.io 77 points 1 month ago (17 children)

Kids aren't going to work these stupid ass jobs. And if they are working a hotel, they aren't going to give a fuck if some stick up their ass tourist gets upset, they'll just flip the person off and walk out.

Teenagers aren't going to fucking fill these positions DeSantis is pitching. Migrants work it because they've got a need to do the work. A lot of teenagers work jobs because they'd like a little extra cash, but outside, they give flying fuck. Hell, the biggest fucking reason teens got jobs in the first place to fund their car is falling apart as more teens just skip the whole driving thing or start way later in life driving.

DeSantis is living in some yesteryear daydream.

[–] IHeartBadCode@fedia.io 32 points 1 month ago (1 children)

Apple's AI isn't a letdown. AI is the letdown.

Actually it's the investors that wanted some gimmick to sell a billion brand new iPhones that's the letdown. AI is just a bunch of bytes that can't do anything unless someone's greed gets it to do something.

I hate these kinds of articles because they keep making excuses for the actual problem. I mean right there, it was right there in the story and CNN buried the lead.

The real reason companies are doing this is because Wall Street wants them to. Investors have been salivating for an Apple “super cycle” — a tech upgrade so enticing that consumers will rush to get their hands on the new model.

It's right there and CNN and many other media keep handing out passes on it blaming something else. Investors are greedy ass bastards and will use literally anything from magic beans to snake oil if it means they can make five extra cents. The investors, the Wall Street bastards are the problem. THEY ARE THE FUCKING LETDOWN. Never forget that.

I bet my fucking left kidney, that if there's a "victory" over AI and it goes away. Those bastards will be back with some new flashy thing nobody asked for. I bet both my fucking kidneys, that's how sure I am of it. Nobody solves shit, unless they solve that first.

[–] IHeartBadCode@fedia.io 7 points 1 month ago

cut waste and fraud

If at any point she actually believed Trump was going to do that, then mission accomplished. Her energy to empower Trump was wasted and she is only a fraud to herself.

I have very little in any expectation that she will learn from this. She will absolutely believe the next con man and lose again. That whole

I’m not sure that I would have [voted for Trump], and the way that it’s been done... I’m for balancing the budget, that type of thing, but not, not in this context, it’s just not right

Is just so devoid of any rational thought that I find it difficult to believe this person is real. And if what she says is indeed the fact, she's too blind, lacking a better appreciation of how government works, or some mixture of both that one could likely bank on her falling for this exact same con several more times in her life.

There's just no way anyone could have listened to Trump in the run up and bought so blindly what he was pitching. Just a simple basic understanding of the notion that humans lie is enough to have seen past Trump. Truly if this whole story is true, there's not a stopping this lady from more self flagellation. She is in a position that being a rational thinking person would not get themselves into, so there is no rational means to help her escape her level of desire to cause self harm.

view more: ‹ prev next ›