Supreme Court Justice Proves She’s Totally Clueless Yet Again - She's Also the Number One Talker

Inflation cooled for the third straight month in April even after some of President Donald Trump’s tariffs took effect, though economists and many business owners expect inflation will climb in the coming months.
Nothings happened, if it’s expected in the coming months
 
Trump is doing more than one thing.
I hope Trump succeeds with the economy, and fails at wiping his ass with the Constitution.
Considering the Constitution is in zero danger of being an asswipe like yourself, you should be happy.
 
She is obviously in love with the sound of her own voice.

She really needs to get into acting full time as she has all the earmarks of that trade, which is mainly narcissism. I pray she does!


Supreme Court Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson talks a lot. That’s not just a qualitative observation. She consistently tallies up the most words spoken per justice. Take care not to confuse quantity with quality. When Jackson does open her mouth, it’s usually to expose her incompetency.
During a Supreme Court hearing, Jackson made the case for rule by nationwide injunction. “I would think we’d want the system to move as quickly as possible to reach the merits of the issue, and maybe have this court decide whether or not the government is entitled to do this under the law,” the justice said. “Wouldn’t having universal injunctions actually facilitate that?” Jackson apparently isn’t much for Article II of the Constitution, which vests executive power in the president. It seems she’d prefer the president permanently subordinated to a clique of appointed judges. Herself included.
supremecourt-2048x1230.png
...
That Jackson would prefer a judiciary-run government is fairly unsurprising. That she would say this outright is proof she has no sense. Even her fellow liberal Supreme Court Justice Elena Kagan has been critical of nationwide injunctions. “It just can’t be right that one district judge can stop a nationwide policy in its tracks and leave it stopped for the years that it takes to go through the normal process,” she said in 2022.
... The U.S. Sentencing Commission, of which Jackson was a member, unanimously passed an amendment in 2010 slashing the prison terms of crack-cocaine convicts by as much as three years.
“It is always a challenge to follow Commissioner Jackson,” remarked fellow commissioner Judge Beryl Howell following Jackson’s defense of the amendment. Laughter followed, according to the court transcript. “And her poetry.”
Then-U.S. Attorney Stephanie Rose pressed Jackson on the decision in 2011. Jackson remained steadfast in her ignorance. “If we keep them in jail for the extra 36 months, or whatever, they’re going to recidivate at the same rate as if we released them early. So I don’t see how public protection is being affected one way or the other in that scenario,” Jackson said, according to Real Clear Investigations.
“Because during the three years they are in prison, they are not out committing new crimes, that’s the difference,” countered Rose.
As a D.C. District Court Judge, Jackson chose leniency in sentencing the worst of offenders: sex offenders accused of violating young children. Christopher Michael Downs appeared before Jackson in 2020. Downs had previously bragged about molesting his 13-year-old cousin, according to transcripts obtained by the New York Post. He also uploaded a video of a prepubescent girl being sexually abused. Though Jackson admitted Downs was at “risk of reoffending,” according to the Post, she only sentenced the man to 60 months – six years less than the prosecutors demanded. Jackson referred to federal sentencing guidelines for child porn as being “outdated” and “too severe” in several cases she presided over, writes the New York Post.
...



Once again why are there districts? Why should one district judge be bound by the decision of a district judge 3,000 miles away? What if he disagrees with it? What if the opposition judge shops and equally authoritative district judge to argue with the one who made the decision? That's why districts have lines..... That's why the supreme Court exists.
 
She is obviously in love with the sound of her own voice.

She really needs to get into acting full time as she has all the earmarks of that trade, which is mainly narcissism. I pray she does!


Supreme Court Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson talks a lot. That’s not just a qualitative observation. She consistently tallies up the most words spoken per justice. Take care not to confuse quantity with quality. When Jackson does open her mouth, it’s usually to expose her incompetency.
During a Supreme Court hearing, Jackson made the case for rule by nationwide injunction. “I would think we’d want the system to move as quickly as possible to reach the merits of the issue, and maybe have this court decide whether or not the government is entitled to do this under the law,” the justice said. “Wouldn’t having universal injunctions actually facilitate that?” Jackson apparently isn’t much for Article II of the Constitution, which vests executive power in the president. It seems she’d prefer the president permanently subordinated to a clique of appointed judges. Herself included.
supremecourt-2048x1230.png
...
That Jackson would prefer a judiciary-run government is fairly unsurprising. That she would say this outright is proof she has no sense. Even her fellow liberal Supreme Court Justice Elena Kagan has been critical of nationwide injunctions. “It just can’t be right that one district judge can stop a nationwide policy in its tracks and leave it stopped for the years that it takes to go through the normal process,” she said in 2022.
... The U.S. Sentencing Commission, of which Jackson was a member, unanimously passed an amendment in 2010 slashing the prison terms of crack-cocaine convicts by as much as three years.
“It is always a challenge to follow Commissioner Jackson,” remarked fellow commissioner Judge Beryl Howell following Jackson’s defense of the amendment. Laughter followed, according to the court transcript. “And her poetry.”
Then-U.S. Attorney Stephanie Rose pressed Jackson on the decision in 2011. Jackson remained steadfast in her ignorance. “If we keep them in jail for the extra 36 months, or whatever, they’re going to recidivate at the same rate as if we released them early. So I don’t see how public protection is being affected one way or the other in that scenario,” Jackson said, according to Real Clear Investigations.
“Because during the three years they are in prison, they are not out committing new crimes, that’s the difference,” countered Rose.
As a D.C. District Court Judge, Jackson chose leniency in sentencing the worst of offenders: sex offenders accused of violating young children. Christopher Michael Downs appeared before Jackson in 2020. Downs had previously bragged about molesting his 13-year-old cousin, according to transcripts obtained by the New York Post. He also uploaded a video of a prepubescent girl being sexually abused. Though Jackson admitted Downs was at “risk of reoffending,” according to the Post, she only sentenced the man to 60 months – six years less than the prosecutors demanded. Jackson referred to federal sentencing guidelines for child porn as being “outdated” and “too severe” in several cases she presided over, writes the New York Post.
...




She's the reason we invented duct tape, ya know. :laughing0301:
 
The idea is to get cases settled quickly by the lower courts with SCOTUS available for appeal

To have to wait on the SCOTUS for every decision creates gridlock
No. They need to have the cases forwarded up to SCOTUS for nationwide issues through the inferior courts. They just cannot issue injunctions outside their scope.
 
You haven't been grocery shopping recently, have you?
And?

Grocery prices have not broadly fallen in a sustained way—rather, they’ve seen a slowdown in inflation, with occasional month-to-month dips for specific items. Here’s an overview of what’s happening now:


1. Overall Grocery Inflation Trends

  • Food-at-home (grocery store) prices rose about 2.2% year-over-year in May, rebounding from a 0.4% drop in April, according to BLS data .
  • In April, food-at-home inflation slowed to 2.0% YoY, down from 2.4% in March — the slowest rate since early 2021 ().
 
Last edited:
And?

Grocery prices have not broadly fallen in a sustained way—rather, they’ve seen a slowdown in inflation, with occasional month-to-month dips for specific items. Here’s an overview of what’s happening now:


1. Overall Grocery Inflation Trends

  • Food-at-home (grocery store) prices rose about 2.2% year-over-year in May, rebounding from a 0.4% drop in April, according to BLS data .
  • In April, food-at-home inflation slowed to 2.0% YoY, down from 2.4% in March — the slowest rate since early 2021 ().
Why do you lie?

 
And?

Grocery prices have not broadly fallen in a sustained way—rather, they’ve seen a slowdown in inflation, with occasional month-to-month dips for specific items. Here’s an overview of what’s happening now:


1. Overall Grocery Inflation Trends

  • Food-at-home (grocery store) prices rose about 2.2% year-over-year in May, rebounding from a 0.4% drop in April, according to BLS data .
  • In April, food-at-home inflation slowed to 2.0% YoY, down from 2.4% in March — the slowest rate since early 2021 ().
Bullshit. I do grocery shopping every week. In fact, I am going now. Your opinion matters not as I see it with my own eyes.
 
15th post
Not a normal five years with Covid
Covid didn’t last five years you idiot

Heck xiden said there was no federal solution to Covid in his first year in office, back in Dec of 2021
 
Covid didn’t last five years you idiot

Heck xiden said there was no federal solution to Covid in his first year in office, back in Dec of 2021
The impact on prices is still around
 
Back
Top Bottom