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radix radix @lemmy.world
Posts 8
Comments 570
USA President term limits
    1. if he ran as VP for another person, which is constitutionally allowed, he could be elected as VP

    This is an interesting, but untested, legal theory. When Al Gore ran in 2000, there were murmurings of whether he should try to get Bill Clinton on the ticket as VP. Ultimately, there was some consensus that this part of 12th Amendment wasn't superseded by any others: "But no person constitutionally ineligible to the office of President shall be eligible to that of Vice-President of the United States."

    It's a bit of an open question whether that means only those parts of the eligibility requirements in place at the time (35 years old, natural born citizen, etc), or whether new requirements are also included, such as already serving two full terms as President. Clinton/Gore didn't want to push those boundaries, but Trump certainly could try.

    Edit: The 2012 book Constitutional Cliffhangers has a whole chapter dedicated to this and similar scenarios. It became a must-read in Trump's first term, and is even more of one now.

  • USA President term limits
  • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Twenty-second_Amendment_to_the_United_States_Constitution

    Section 1. No person shall be elected to the office of the President more than twice, and no person who has held the office of President, or acted as President, for more than two years of a term to which some other person was elected President shall be elected to the office of the President more than once. But this Article shall not apply to any person holding the office of President when this Article was proposed by the Congress, and shall not prevent any person who may be holding the office of President, or acting as President, during the term within which this Article becomes operative from holding the office of President or acting as President during the remainder of such term.

    "No person shall be elected to the office of the President more than twice," doesn't say consecutively. It would take a HUUUUGE leap of logic to insert that word where it doesn't exist. I'm sure someone will make the argument, but by the letter and the intent of the law, Trump is done after this term.

    "and no person who has held the office of President, or acted as President, for more than two years of a term to which some other person was elected President shall be elected to the office of the President more than once." If Trump has a heart attack and dies before January 20, 2027, Vance would take over and serve 2+ years as President, meaning he could only be elected once for one four-year term.

    The rest of Section 1 just means anyone who was in office at the time is grandfathered into the old rules (no limits).

  • Save point
  • That cat has a quest for you.

    Probably involving fetching some treats.

  • Anon remembers 7th grade
  • That's going to go on your Permanent Record!!

  • Fake Cop Gets Caught Pretending To Be A Cop In Front Of A Real Cop
  • Dejiulio Jr. reportedly admitted his crime at that point.

    Dead giveaway that he's not a real cop.

  • Lemmings living in red states, how’re you doing?
  • Pro: a handful of my state's absolute worst officials are set to quit their jobs and we get a do-over.

    Con: they're quitting to join the administration and they'll be way more powerful and everyone else will suffer.

    Sorry. I did what I could.

  • Which dystopic megacorp do we get first in our brave new world?
  • RobCo

    Military contractor and aerospace giant obsessed with autonomous AI.

    Replace Robert House with El*n and it's halfway there already.

  • What was the worst car you've ever owned?
  • My first car was a rusty 72 Pinto. Objectively bad, but there's a freedom associated with a total shitbox as a 16yo that I've never had since.

    Later had a mid-80s Cutlass Ciera. It already had an engine replaced by the time I got it, and that engine ran fine, unlike literally anything else in/on that car.

    Briefly had a 77 F250. Also on a replacement engine, but this motor didn't last long. That beast only got like 9 MPG, so it wasn't worth fixing.

    The 99 Jetta was fine for a few years, but when things started breaking, they broke in bunches. Finally a mechanic told me there was nothing he could do, so I had to scrap it.

  • new tattoo
  • Maybe it's in cursive, and he's just younger than yellow shirt.

  • Can Trump pardon himself even though he did criminal stuff outside of office?
  • For federal stuff, yes ... probably, it's never been tested, but the current SCOTUS won't stop him.

    Not for state crimes. Like the 34 felony counts in NY. But enforcement of any sentence (probably financial) is unclear. Also unprecedented.

  • Trump's eligibility
  • He is over 35, a natural born citizen, and has lived in the US for 14 years. He was impeached, but not convicted. Accused of insurrection, but the wheels of justice turned too slowly.

    That's the extent of the legal requirements to be eligible to be President. The theory was that any other social disqualifications would be handled at the ballot box.

    That theory is now proven to be incorrect, but fixing it takes a constitutional amendment.

  • Evangelical leaders celebrate Trump’s victory as a prophecy fulfilled
  • Name one of the ten commandments Trump hasn't broken challenge [impossible]

  • What is Trump going to do to social security since he is now going to be president? Just wondering because my mom gets SS and she does not want me to support here?
  • The conventional wisdom is that Social Security is a so-called "Third Rail" of politics. Nobody is going to touch that and live to tell the tale.

    Of course, we would have had a similar thought about non-controversial stuff like "cooperating with the World Health Organization," so there are no guarantees, but wholesale restructuring of the program would (hopefully) cause more backlash than any politician wants to deal with.

    The blueprints he's working from doesn't say anything about SS by name: https://www.newsweek.com/what-project-2025-could-do-social-security-1923892

    Despite being over 900 pages long and spanning most of the departments of government, including defense, homeland security, agriculture, education and energy, the mandate text does not provide direct policy positions on Social Security or its government agency.

    That's not to say the program will be entirely unaltered, but that page suggests the extent of the (public) policy proposals seems to be raising the retirement age by a few years. Not great, but nobody seems to be loudly advocating for slashing existing benefits.

  • Useful Idiot

    8
    TIL: ACLU has a webpage that provides answers to scenarios you might experience while you are voting.
  • It can happen, but it's hard to imagine that it could change the outcome.

    https://www.npr.org/sections/biden-transition-updates/2020/12/14/946080856/who-are-electors-and-how-do-they-get-picked

    Generally speaking, the parties send a slate of names to be electors. If Trump wins a state, the electors sent by the GOP are sent to Washington. If Harris wins, the Dem electors are sent. Many (not all) states outlaw faithless electors.

    When it does occasionally happen, it's a useless vote that wouldn't have changed anything anyway. For a group of party loyalists to all work together to flip the outcome would be ... unimaginable, frankly.

  • Why are the Latinized/Romanized forms of ancient Greek names more popular?
  • You have not experienced Shakespeare until you have read him in the original Klingon.

  • Microsoft: Windows Server 2025 now generally available alongside System Center 2025
  • Or some sports games. Madden 2025 is almost entirely obsolete by January 2025.

  • Is there as much enthusiasm for Trump online today as eight years ago?
  • I don't see the original source (probably some dense campaign finance disclosures), but there's some numbers going around on bluesky the last day or two:

    Trump's "small dollar" donations are only like 1/4 of what they were four years ago. Three different billionaires have each spent more than all the normal people combined.

    The grassroots support sure seems like it has cratered, and he's being puppeted into a virtual tie by a very small number of people.

  • Rookie celebrates prematurely, drops ball before crossing endzone. Touchback for Texans. Jets be Jets.
  • How does this keep happening? Is there some secret contest to see who can drop the ball closest to the line?

    Just hold on and hand it to the ref. It's not rocket science.

  • Political Memes @lemmy.world radix @lemmy.world

    JD is headed to Kentucky

    3

    "Optimizing"

    Just because a 3060ti is technically capable of ray tracing doesn't mean I want you to keep turning it on every time the driver gets an update.

    16
    www.cbsnews.com County sheriffs wield lethal power, face little accountability: "A failure of democracy"

    More people were killed by U.S. law enforcement in 2023 than any other year in the past decade — and it's increasingly happening in small towns and rural areas.

    County sheriffs wield lethal power, face little accountability: "A failure of democracy"

    > More people were killed by U.S. law enforcement in 2023 than any other year in the past decade, outpacing population growth eightfold.

    0
    www.cbsnews.com Handcuffs in Hallways: Hundreds of elementary students arrested at U.S. schools

    Black children and kids with disabilities were disproportionately impacted, according to CBS News analysis of Education Department data.

    Handcuffs in Hallways: Hundreds of elementary students arrested at U.S. schools

    "Don't make a wrong move," the officer said as he pinned the struggling subject to the ground. "Period."

    The officer tightened the handcuffs around the subject's thin wrists.

    "Ow, ow, ow, it really hurts," the subject exclaimed.

    The officer pressed his weight into the subject's small body while school staff watched it all unfold. The person he was restraining was 7 years old.

    39

    TIL ~62% of the atoms in a human body are Hydrogen, and are as old as the universe.

    54

    Who wants to play some D&D?

    14

    Please no more

    13