"Who doesn't like NASCAR?" I don't. Tom Geohagan, who filed that suit, is pretty smart. He went to a friendly court in the hopes that, as the first case filed, he wouldn't have an adverse ruling in the lower courts, restraining the President from using the 14th Amendment, while the case wound its way to the Supreme Court.
According to John Kerry, you do. More power to the union. If the Bidennaires cut a deal with the shrieking horde, though, couldn't the suit be dismissed because it isn't relevant anymore?
Yes but Geohagan is anticipating Biden being forced to use the 14th because the Republican demands are simply unacceptable to the Democrats and a deal is not to be assumed.
I'm late to everything, but that's because I resist everything. Today I discovered that the droning, rebarbative, braying music of Swans makes me feel the same way I feel when reading Cormac McCarthy's "The Passenger," which I have also resisted. Is everything I resist interesting? Of course not. I can't make myself get interested in why there is an "argument" about the Debt Ceiling. (Is the ceiling the most frightening part of a dwelling, or is it the corners, or the alcoves? Views differ.)
"Who doesn't like NASCAR?" I don't. Tom Geohagan, who filed that suit, is pretty smart. He went to a friendly court in the hopes that, as the first case filed, he wouldn't have an adverse ruling in the lower courts, restraining the President from using the 14th Amendment, while the case wound its way to the Supreme Court.
According to John Kerry, you do. More power to the union. If the Bidennaires cut a deal with the shrieking horde, though, couldn't the suit be dismissed because it isn't relevant anymore?
Yes but Geohagan is anticipating Biden being forced to use the 14th because the Republican demands are simply unacceptable to the Democrats and a deal is not to be assumed.
I'm late to everything, but that's because I resist everything. Today I discovered that the droning, rebarbative, braying music of Swans makes me feel the same way I feel when reading Cormac McCarthy's "The Passenger," which I have also resisted. Is everything I resist interesting? Of course not. I can't make myself get interested in why there is an "argument" about the Debt Ceiling. (Is the ceiling the most frightening part of a dwelling, or is it the corners, or the alcoves? Views differ.)