@tylerbroker.bsky.social
250 followers 450 following 730 posts
Me? I’m from the west. Out there, beyond the horizon. The farrrrr west.
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tylerbroker.bsky.social
Deploying the military as police in states with broad police power and against the will of the states is an all time tyrannical breach. And it should be viewed as such.
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andycraig.bsky.social
The federal government as ordained and established by the Constitution has ceased to function, and what has replaced it isn't our government under our Constitution. That's not flippant rhetorical hyperbole, I don't say it insensitive to what the consequences are. But it's the grim reality we face.
tylerbroker.bsky.social
Of course people can disagree when either is occurring, but you seem, and again I can be wrong, to be saying that calling this court a partisan and not a fair arbiter is never okay.
tylerbroker.bsky.social
And in effect that conflation prevents any criticism the court is partisan, because it becomes de facto too dangerous to say. Respectfully, I dissent from that approach and feel the best way to defend the court is to call out partisanship where it exists and praise objectivity where it exists.
tylerbroker.bsky.social
With respect, I disagree. People can lose respect or faith or trust, whatever it can be called for this court as being a legitimate arbiter, or nonpartisan, without arguing the institution itself is illegitimate. I could be wrong and I apologize if I am but you seem to be conflating the two.
tylerbroker.bsky.social
I also think it reflects what I saw in the NYT’s exchange between Baude and Vladeck, where the latter raised legitimate points of significant criticism and the response is not to address that criticism but as @prchovanec.bsky.social pulls this motte and bailey.
tylerbroker.bsky.social
I get really tired of this nut-picking framing. There are a lot of very serious people raising legitimate and very serious concerns this court is partisan. Framing that criticism as equivalent to claiming the body itself is “illegitimate” is not a meaningful response.
prchovanec.bsky.social
I think people seriously underestimate what it means to say that the Supreme Court is “illegitimate”, and what the consequences of saying it (and meaning it) are.
tylerbroker.bsky.social
Jeeeeeesus Christ.
elienyc.bsky.social
Ubisoft: "Okay, so in this game you fight the Klan"
Marketers: "You can't sell that in America"
Ubisoft: "Why?"
Marketers: "Umm [gestures broadly]. The Klan fucking won?"
Ubisoft: "Merde."
Marketers: "Yeah, we've asked for the Statue back but they're being dicks about that too."
stephentotilo.bsky.social
SCOOP: Last year, Ubisoft cancelled an Assassin's Creed game set during Reconstruction. Was to feature a Black Assassin who, among other things, fought the rise of the Klan

Sources: Leadership nixed it over concerns re: U.S. political climate, backlash to Yasuke

www.gamefile.news/p/scoop-ubis...
tylerbroker.bsky.social
This was all briefed and discussed. But this hack completely ignores it and draws the dumbest line imaginable to settle this case, which, this “court” might end up doing, but that’s a reflection of hackery, not law.
tylerbroker.bsky.social
A doctor can commit malpractice with words. He can tell a patient who comes in and asks him to treat his high cholesterol and obesity and the doctor could say “eat ice cream six times a day and the state licensing board and tort law can punish that speech without any FA concerns.
tylerbroker.bsky.social
This is not a simple case and this hack bullshit piece ignores basic issues raised at oral argument and in the briefing. You only get to “this is super easy” if you’re a hack and simply ignore your opposition, which this clown of a person is and does here.
volokhc.bsky.social
[Josh Blackman] The Line Between Conduct and Speech, Between Treatment and Non-Treatment
On Tuesday, the Court heard oral argument in Chiles v. Salazar. This case considers the constitutionality of Colorado's ban on conversion therapy. As a general rule, the First Amendment protects speech, but not conduct. It is true that some conduct, like flag-burning, has speech-like properties, so is protected by the First Amendment. It is also true that some speech incidental to conduct is not fully protected by the First Amendment. The doctrine here is complex. During argument, several Justices asked how to draw the line between "treatment" and "non-treatment." This questions seemed to presume that treatment would not be protected by the First Amendment, while non-treatment (that is speech) was protected by the First Amendment. Colorado argues that therapy that consists entirely of speaking is still a form of medical treatment, and is therefore considered conduct, rather than protected speech. Chiles, by contrast, argued that her therapy that consists entirely of speaking is not a form of medical treatment, and should be considered speech rather than conduct. I'm not sure the line between treatment and non-treatment really matters. James Campbell, counsel for Chiles, explained that the line doesn't matter "because the First Amendment depends on the difference between speech and conduct, not on the difference between treatment and non-treatment." And I agree with Hashim Mooppan, the Deputy Solicitor General, that treatment and non-treatment are just "labels" that don't make a conceptual difference. Still, I think there might be a way to draw this line based on how the care is received. First, care that consists entirely of talk, which implicates only the senses of hearing and sight, is not medical treatment. Second, care that is not limited to talk, which implicates the senses of touch, taste, or smell, would be medical treatment. The First Amendment protects the former category of care, but not the latter category of care. So-called "aversive" therapy, which might include electro-shock therapy, is not limited to talk, but implicates the sense of touch, so would be medical treatment. I don't think any would argue that shock therapy is protected speech. Providing a patient with medicine that they have to ingest would implicate the sense of taste, so would be medical treatment. Any type of surgery that requires a scalpel would clearly be medical treatment. The treatment at issue in Chiles does not involve any physical touching. And Chiles is not licensed to prescribe medicine or perform any sorts of medical treatment. Her all-talk care, which can only be heard, is not treatment, and is not conduct, but is speech. I don't think this issue is conceptually difficult under the First Amendment. The post The Line Between Conduct and Speech, Between Treatment and Non-Treatment appeared first on Reason.com.
dlvr.it
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annabower.bsky.social
You’ve gotta be kidding me.

This WaPo editorial presents a misleading revisionist history of Special Counsel Jack Smith’s criminal cases against Trump.

Then it has the gall to compare that to Trump’s overt targeting of his perceived enemies.

Really embarrassing stuff.
But the mere fact that a legal tool might be available does not mean it should be used. The
current rage over Grassley's revelation shows why. Smith showed little restraint in his pursuit of a former president. He charged Trump for official acts he took as president. He sought a gag order to limit Trump's ability to criticize the prosecution. He tried to accelerate the case to try a leading presidential candidate before the 2024 election.
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andycraig.bsky.social
Posobiec isn't a nazi in some generic rhetorical sense of having fascistic impulses or simply being far-right. He is a full-blown Hitler-loving Jew-hating mask-off literal capital-N Nazi, with a longstanding public record to match.
paleofuture.bsky.social
"Antifa has been around in various iterations for almost 100 years in some instances, going back to the Weimar Republic in Germany."

- Jack Posobiec at Trump's roundtable on antifa
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kevinmkruse.bsky.social
As a reminder, when Jack Posobiec was in the US Navy, they assessed his full capabilities and concluded that he was best suited to collecting samples for urinalysis
justinbaragona.bsky.social
Incredible.

Jack Posobiec references the earliest version of antifa -- the anti-fascists in the Weimar Republic who were opposed to the Nazi Party -- as the bad guys.
tylerbroker.bsky.social
It is my pleasure to inform you the vibes have begun to work.
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prchovanec.bsky.social
The Speaker of the House has firm views that Bad Bunny is a terrible pick for singing at the Super Bowl, but hasn't had time to watch the President's speech to our military leadership or form an opinion whether furloughed federal workers should be paid or Illinois' governor should be thrown in jail.
tylerbroker.bsky.social
We have every right to remember this action was led by evangelical pro-“life” Christians who will constantly quote a John Adams speech made in the same year he signed the sedition acts as proof that this country is only suitable for people of their moral caliber.
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radiofreetom.bsky.social
Even in the darkest article, I have to allow myself a chuckle now and then
vivian-m-lumbard.bsky.social
I loved this paragraph intro...

"Trump and his valet at the Defense Department, Secretary of Physical Training Pete Hegseth..."

Seriously, though, read this.
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andycraig.bsky.social
They believe they will never be out of power and relatedly, even if they eventually are, there will be no accountability.

Refusal to openly, credible, emphatically threaten them with it isn't just a failure on the principle of the matter for what should happen then. It worsens the situation now.
strandjunker.com
You can joke about Pam Bondi’s ridiculous unprofessionalism all you want, but I’m deeply shocked by it: She acts as if she fears absolutely no consequences, convinced that there will be no more political power transfers. — This should shake everyone to their core.
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mmasnick.bsky.social
Tomorrow Sean Davis of the Federalist is going to testify before Congress claiming Biden targeted him and I'm guessing he's going to claim the targeting involved Google "demonetizing" the Federalist. There are many problems with this (read along).
Sean Davis tweet: I’m very much looking forward to testifying before the Senate Commerce Committee hearing on this tomorrow, along with 
@AlexBerenson
.

The Biden administration’s censorship-industrial complex, which targeted both Alex and me for destruction, was an illegal and unconstitutional abomination.
tylerbroker.bsky.social
But if you read @reason.com editorial leading up to this election it was “Dems are bad, BAD. Yes r’s are bad too but Dems do the same thing everything you accuse Donald of doing. I’m no Dem but that was always bullshit.
tylerbroker.bsky.social
I thought Kamala’s rent control bullshit was always bullshit. But again it doesn’t come close to any number of insane shit from Donald’s first few months, including federalizing red state troops to send into blue states against the will of the blue states to create conflict. Fucking madness.
tylerbroker.bsky.social
I still like, even admire a lot of people who post there. But it’s just an objective fact that neither Biden’s presidency, or Kamala’s proposed one came or even proposed to come close to Donald’s assault on liberty of every kind, from basic due process to plain constitutional text.
tylerbroker.bsky.social
I will always remember that a lot of folks @reason.com viewed Covid occupancy restrictions as a graver threat to individual liberty than this administration. We have every right never to take that publications editorial staff seriously until it admits a grievous error in judgment.
prchovanec.bsky.social
Shot a priest in the head with a pepper ball, just for fun.
There was absolutely no threat here.
flglchicago.bsky.social
Here’s video of the incident