Comments by "" (@charlesvan13) on "The Majority Report w/ Sam Seder"
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@portmantologist
Equity and critical race theory, for example, are concepts or doctrines of the left.
You're probably thinking free benefits, eg health insurance, from the government. They barely got any of that in communist countries. China has zero social security.
They keep stepping in it, because elements of the Democratic party keep pushing this leftist doctrine, which are unpopular, critical race theory, equity, defund the police.
What's strange and awkward, is that they're always promoting them, and also distancing themselves from it at the same time.
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It's true, though.
This is the most common lie I've been hearing his week over the Trump raid.
Here's Politico fact checking it, from a previous incident when people were hyperventilating because Trump told an ambassador something classified.
"Does the president have 'the ability to declassify anything at any time'?
The blockbuster article in The Washington Post saying President Donald Trump had "revealed highly classified information to the Russian foreign minister and ambassador in a White House meeting" didn’t just put the White House on the defensive. It also put Republican lawmakers in a tight spot.
One of the members of Congress who commented after the newspaper’s revelations was Sen. James Risch, R-Idaho. According to CNN, he told reporters, "The minute the president speaks about it to someone, he has the ability to declassify anything at any time without any process."
Is that accurate? Independent experts said Risch is on target concerning the legal powers of the president. Some experts added, however, that the senator’s formulation left out some context that is relevant for assessing Trump’s alleged actions.
The president’s classification and declassification powers are broad
Experts agreed that the president, as commander in chief, is ultimately responsible for classification and declassification. When people lower in the chain of command handle classification and declassification duties — which is usually how it’s done — it’s because they have been delegated to do so by the president directly, or by an appointee chosen by the president.
The majority ruling in the 1988 Supreme Court case Department of Navy vs. Egan — which addressed the legal recourse of a Navy employee who had been denied a security clearance — addresses this line of authority.
"The President, after all, is the ‘Commander in Chief of the Army and Navy of the United States’" according to Article II of the Constitution, the court’s majority wrote. "His authority to classify and control access to information bearing on national security ... flows primarily from this constitutional investment of power in the President, and exists quite apart from any explicit congressional grant."
Steven Aftergood, director of the Federation of American Scientists Project on Government Secrecy, said that such authority gives the president the authority to "classify and declassify at will."
In fact, Robert F. Turner, associate director of the University of Virginia's Center for National Security Law, said that "if Congress were to enact a statute seeking to limit the president’s authority to classify or declassify national security information, or to prohibit him from sharing certain kinds of information with Russia, it would raise serious separation of powers constitutional issues."
The official documents governing classification and declassification stem from executive orders. But even these executive orders aren’t necessarily binding on the president. The president is not "obliged to follow any procedures other than those that he himself has prescribed," Aftergood said. "And he can change those."
Indeed, the controlling executive order has been rewritten by multiple presidents. The current version of the order was issued by President Barack Obama in 2009.
The national-security experts at the blog Lawfare wrote in the wake of the Post’s revelation that the "infamous comment" by President Richard Nixon — that "when the president does it, that means that it is not illegal" — "is actually true about some things. Classified information is one of them. The nature of the system is that the president gets to disclose what he wants.""
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In TN a 17 year old can get married with parental consent or a judge's ruling.
That's the exact same law they have in Democrat states, while for example, MA doesn't even have the 17 year old minimum.
This is as stupid as arguing that because the age at which a minor can consent to sex is lower than 18 (in every state) when the age difference isn't too great, 13 in Hawaii, Connecticut, Minnesota, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, North Carolina, Ohio, Tennessee, "The Tennessee GOP supports child rape Reeeeeeeeeee". 7/9 of those are Democrat controlled states.
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Before getting on your high horse, you should consider what Lincoln and politicians in the North thought about race.
""While I was at the hotel to-day, an elderly gentleman called upon me to know whether I was really in favor of producing a perfect equality between the negroes and white people. While I had not proposed to myself on this occasion to say much on that subject, yet as the question was asked me I thought I would occupy perhaps five minutes in saying something in regard to it. I will say then that I am not, nor ever have been, in favor of bringing about in any way the social and political equality of the black and white races -- that I am not nor ever have been in favor of making VOTERS or jurors of negroes, NOR OF QUALIFYING THEM HOLD OFFICE, nor to intermarry with white people; and I will say in addition to this that there is a physical difference between the white and black races which I believe will forever forbid the two races living together on terms of social and political equality. And inasmuch as they cannot so live, while they do remain together there must be the position of superior and inferior, and I as much as any of her man am in favor of having the superior position assigned to the white race."
Lincoln in 1858, running for Illinois state house.
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