Saturday, July 01, 2023

Y'All Done P*ssed Them Off!

The Court of fools.

I can't wait to see an owner deny a Christian family from praying inside their business.

The Supreme Court made it legal to discriminate or deny services to those who do not agree with their views. So if you're a far right media personality, say Candace Owens and she comes into a business with her husband George Farmer and someone recognizes her.

They can deny her service not only because she is Black, but she is married to a white man and her views go against the political views of the owner. She can cry racism, call for boycotts, say it's the left all she want on her trolling accounts but it is legal and there's nothing she can do about it.

Scott Presler, Joey Mannarino, Terrence K. Williams, Tammy Bruce, Caitlyn Jenner, Andy Ngo and every far right gay agitator who backed Washed Up 45 better hope they're not going into businesses that support Christian causes. They will be denied services and be forced to leave or be formally removed.

Republicans got a part of the Paycheck Protection Program which was signed by Washed Up 45 but extended by President Joe Biden during the coronavirus pandemic. 

About 45 House and Senate Republican members took from the PPP and had their debts forgiven. Rep. Ralph Norman (R-TX) literally took from the PPP but had the audacity to say that Americans are obnoxious for asking for student debt forgiveness.

Norman and Republican cheered the Supreme Court's controversial decisions.

Affirmative action is no longer allowed in colleges and the workplace.

You can use religion as an excuse to not work certain days at an essential business.

You can legally deny LGBTQIA Americans (broad) from businesses or services.

The presidential powers are limited in certain issues. 

Democrats are motivated by the decisions.

Democrats are hoping the court’s moves to halt student-debt forgiveness, end affirmative action in college admissions and back a Christian website designer opposed to LGBT marriage will help President Joe Biden once again harness voter anger as he enters a tough reelection battle.

“The last two days of the Supreme Court have done more to help Democrats mobilize people of color and mobilize young people than any piece of policy or legislation that they say they’re going to be able to move through Congress,” said Cornell Belcher, a pollster and alum of Barack Obama’s presidential campaigns.

Public support for student-debt forgiveness is split but sharply increases among key constituents for the president — including young, Black and Latino voters. More Gen-Z voters were aware of the debt-cancellation plan than any other major policy under Biden, according to a Generation Lab/Voters of Tomorrow poll.

Biden spent the week painting the Supreme Court as squarely outside the mainstream — while pointing the finger at the Republicans he’ll run against in 2024.

There’s risk the Supreme Court’s decisions this week may frustrate progressive voters who have already expressed disappointment Biden couldn’t accomplish more during his term.

The unfavorable rulings for the president and his supporters has underscored the limitations of the presidency, leaving Biden with few options beyond small-bore executive actions to blunt the court’s edicts. The White House was criticized by abortion-rights supporters who said it responded too slowly to the overturning of Roe v. Wade.

Some Black Americans are unhappy with Biden’s progress on voting rights and police reform. A May ABC News/Washington Post poll found Biden’s approval among Black Americans at 52%, down from 82% when he took office.

Republican presidential candidates, for their part, have sought to capitalize on the court rulings as evidence Biden has pursued an extremist agenda. For leading candidates like Washed Up 45 and Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, painting the president as beholden to “woke” special interests is a central tenet of their platform.

The former president told supporters Biden’s student loan plan was “very unfair” to millions of people who paid their bills through hard work at an event Friday in Philadelphia.

The reaction to the loan decision among Republicans was notably muted compared to the celebration Thursday over the affirmative action ruling, which polls indicate divides Biden’s electoral coalition. While Black voters support affirmative action programs, White and Asian voters are opposed — and the issue is particularly salient in suburban communities that delivered Biden the White House in 2020.

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