The plaintiffs’ arguments in Moore v. United States have little basis in law — unless you think that a list of long-ago-discarded laissez-faire decisions from the early 20th century remain good law. And a decision favoring these plaintiffs could blow a huge hole in the federal budget. While no Warren-style wealth tax is on the books, the Moore plaintiffs do challenge an existing tax that is expected to raise $340 billion over the course of a decade.
But Republicans also hold six seats on the nation’s highest Court, so there is some risk that a majority of the justices will accept the plaintiffs’ dubious legal arguments. And if they do so, they could do considerable damage to the government’s ability to fund itself.
The very first one describes the steps they took in the fifties to regain power by collapsing our government. This is the culmination of their plan. Did you think they had no end game?
I think your entire belief system is beyond just not making sense, and is likely representative of larger.menyal illness
That you conflate evangelicals, Grover Norquist, and tech billionaires is beyond nonsensical
This guy’s a troll move on.
I mean I’m genuinely concerned he has mental health issues. That wasn’t some cheap insult
I think commenting on Lemmy all day is a mental health issue and I’m worried for you.
That’s weird.
You read like a chat gpt bot told to be slightly antagonistic to every comment you read.
That’s weird /s
That’s weird. //s
Cool. Have a good life.
Oh ok way ahead of ya there