Do Not Let Them Pretend that They are “Shocked, SHOCKED” at Biden’s Mental Deficiency

I’ve said this before and I’ll try to find it.  Ricochet currently does not allow old posts to be viewed, which is odd, so I cannot find it.  But I may be able to get a copy via friends.

I specifically said years ago that the Democrats knew full well in 2020 that Joe was already senile.  All part of the plan.  Receipts inbound.  Do NOT let Democrats off the hook.  They did this to us pn purpose.  They intentionally installed this empty senile husk of a man so that the Intel-community-centered shadow government can have its way with the government, and thereby the country and the people.

Don’t buy the sob stories.  Every single Democrat knew but lied, even if they’ve convinced themselves by now that they … Continue reading

SCOTUS Rulings

Fischer is the big case most directly concerning deep-state lawfare against Republicans, so far against the person of Trump.  It hasn’t dropped yet, but others have.  Good signs from the court.

I’m split on the goodness of the recent red-flag ruling, which affirmed limits on 2A for “credible threat” domestic abusers.  Big picture, I will still stand up and say that the Constitution forbids it.  Yet, I’m also happy that there is a tool to protect women from predictable violence.  How many times do we read a news story and lament that the system failed to protect a woman who was literally warning that she would be killed and by whom?  Obviously, this WILL be abused by the deep state to simply call every conservative man a “credible … Continue reading

Common Jurisprudence

Not one court has any power whatsoever to *change* the Constitution.  The Supreme Court may rule on particular cases regarding interpretation or expression of the Constitution in law or in practice, but they never change it.  This is why a judicial ruling, even from SCOTUS can never settle “once and for all” a Constitutional question.

It is a lawyerly construct, and a wise one, which assigns weight to precedent.  This stabilizes and renders predictable the working of justice, but it does not create new law.  Legislatures alone create law.

There is a way to change the Constitution, and it is exclusively a function of Congress to initiate, without the executive or the judicial branch having a single word to say about it.  “Initiate” is even more narrow than … Continue reading