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TSiegelast Wednesday at 7:37 PM2 repliesview on HN

In 2020, five years ago, was essentially the exact same court as today, except KBJ replaced Breyer. The precedence in question dates to 1935 Humphrey's Executor v. United States where a conservative Supreme Court sought to cut back executive power of a liberal president. Now we have a conservative Supreme Court expanding executive power for a conservative president. If you think the Roberts court would have let Joe Biden have this much power well then I have a bridge and some student loans to sell you


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CGMthrowawaylast Wednesday at 7:41 PM

Humphrey's, which held that for-cause protections are constitutional for agencies that meet certain tests, while broadly relevant to current events (FTC etc.), is not relevant to FCC as FCC charter does not have explicit for-cause protections.

delichonlast Wednesday at 8:18 PM

> If you think the Roberts court would have let Joe Biden have this much power well then I have a bridge and some student loans to sell you

Yes, I do think the time horizon of every SCOTUS member is longer than four years. I believe Gorsuch when he says:

  I appreciate that, but you also appreciate that we're writing a rule for the ages. -- https://www.supremecourt.gov/oral_arguments/argument_transcripts/2023/23-939_3fb4.pdf
I think that they all have the hubris to see themselves as part of history and write their opinions for future generations. Not that they aren't biased by current events, but that they see themselves as larger than that.
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