Supreme Court poised to drop another bombshell
ruling after Roe v Wade
BizPac Review,
by
Terresa Monroe-Hamilton
Original Article
Posted By: Imright,
6/28/2022 4:48:28 PM
It seems overturning Roe v. Wade may not be the biggest decision to come down from the Supreme Court as its ruling on West Virginia v. the Environmental Protection Agency could strip the government and alphabet agencies of their unfettered powers.
The case asks whether pressing policies that have an impact on the lives of all Americans should be made by unelected bureaucrats or by Congress. The ruling could decide that governing by executive agency fiat is unconstitutional, according to Fox News.
The case takes direct aim at President Biden’s climate agenda and involves the Clean Power Plan.
Reply 1 - Posted by:
Flyball Dogs 6/28/2022 5:02:15 PM (No. 1199960)
Our own, DVC, has been alluding to this for several days.
(And I thought I was a news junky.)
9 people like this.
Reply 2 - Posted by:
Urgent Fury 6/28/2022 5:05:36 PM (No. 1199961)
Roberts is on the phone with his handlers now.
17 people like this.
Reply 3 - Posted by:
Pegmo 6/28/2022 5:13:26 PM (No. 1199964)
This would be so awesome!!
16 people like this.
Reply 4 - Posted by:
qr4j 6/28/2022 5:24:01 PM (No. 1199971)
Politicians are too lazy and too scared of the consequences of debating and crafting “big question” legislation. Yet that’s what it should be doing. Such laws should not be left to the unelected bureaucrats to form and them enforce, the will of the people be damned.
14 people like this.
Reply 5 - Posted by:
smokincol 6/28/2022 5:40:18 PM (No. 1199983)
yehhhh, go to it, kids, now is the time to smash the communist uprising and send them all to Hell where they belong, destroy the shadow government, save America
20 people like this.
Reply 6 - Posted by:
DVC 6/28/2022 6:15:40 PM (No. 1200024)
As much as killing "may issue" concealed carry laws and overturning Roe v. Wade are big deals. And the coach being allowed to pray, blocking their assinine anti-Christian rules, that's a huge thing.
And THEY ARE all three big deals, each on their own.
But, this may well, depending on how they rule, and exactly what is in the text of the ruling, could be even bigger and more far reaching in redressing the horrors of the bureacracies. This could unwind decades and decades of fraudulent overreaching by ALL of the alphabet bureaucracies.
I hope I'm not reading too much into it, but if this goes the way it might, this may be the biggest reversal of leftist, big bureaucratic unConstitutional laws in our history.
We may set back the Deep State more than we (or THEY) ever imagined possible, all in one nearly magical week of Supreme Court rulings.
27 people like this.
Reply 7 - Posted by:
sterling431 6/28/2022 6:25:07 PM (No. 1200033)
This case is huge with broader implications. Pray that the SCOTUS overturns this abuse of power by the Dems. If it is overturned it will be a game changer for much of Biden's train wreck admin orders.
16 people like this.
Reply 8 - Posted by:
MDConservative 6/28/2022 6:33:30 PM (No. 1200039)
The problem is the legislation passed by Congress that demands agencies make the rules, and allows these "policy changes" as part of the enabling act. Be interesting to see how this turns out.
6 people like this.
Reply 9 - Posted by:
DVC 6/28/2022 6:43:25 PM (No. 1200048)
Very odd. On a laptop no problem going to Bizpac Review. On my phone with Firefox (same browser as laptop) cannot get, get "file not found" for ANY story or the top site home.
Seirch to the native browser on Samsung Galaxy....goes to the site just fine.
1 person likes this.
Reply 10 - Posted by:
GoodDeal 6/28/2022 6:45:21 PM (No. 1200050)
Time to roll back their idiotic Marxist decision that carbon dioxide is a pollutant.
16 people like this.
Reply 11 - Posted by:
EJKrausJr 6/28/2022 6:55:51 PM (No. 1200058)
Hopefully this turns out to be true. Then the dismantling of the DC bureaucracy can begin. Fire them all. Start over. Small government is efficient government.
11 people like this.
Reply 12 - Posted by:
2assume 6/28/2022 7:09:52 PM (No. 1200065)
Please God, please please please
11 people like this.
Reply 13 - Posted by:
Ashley Brenton 6/28/2022 7:32:56 PM (No. 1200081)
This is potentially huge.
Imagine, the BATF being informed that its rules and regulations regarding firearms are invalid because they were not the result of a legislative process and that Congress cannot allow agencies to write their own laws.
13 people like this.
Reply 14 - Posted by:
jeffkinnh 6/28/2022 8:27:09 PM (No. 1200130)
I'm not sure that the article is correct in implying that environmental decisions would return to the states. The environment is not limited to state borders. Polluted air and water can cross many borders.
However, it would put a major crunch on environmental actions to require that Congress take direct and specific action. Congress created the EPA, and other agencies, to insulate them from the fallout of environmental actions by government. This would put things directly in their control and they would be, shudder, responsible for what happens. The EPA would request and propose a budget. Congress would approve the action and the budget, or deny it. The EPA would only be empowered to do what Congress said and for what Congress approved as a budget.
There is a side effect. IF agencies are to be constrained to legal Congressional limits, there MUST BE accurate accounting of spending, something the government has shown itself, perhaps deliberately, incapable of doing. Mega corporations can track their income and spending but the federal government can't? Further, this opens agencies open to law suits. If legal appropriations are prescribed, then people can sue if agencies exceed those limits or fail to provide concise accounting to prove they have not.
Maybe Congress will decide that it is too much trouble to stick their noses into what should be private functions.
Whatever happens, this could be like a nuclear bomb into government operations.
7 people like this.
Reply 15 - Posted by:
Flyball Dogs 6/28/2022 10:17:28 PM (No. 1200227)
When I first went to Washington after graduating from Auburn, my dream job was to work for Congress.
I landed an interview with a prominent committee and was given a short civics quiz — which included writing a rough outline of how a bill becomes law.
A few months later, I begin reading The Federal Register and was stunned to read “rules and regulations” that were made up by agency pencil pushers — The Deep State — that were no part of the original legislation passed by Congress.
And thus it has grown to become the current fetid swamp.
10 people like this.
Reply 16 - Posted by:
mifla 6/29/2022 5:04:10 AM (No. 1200378)
The Supremes are on a constitutional roll, keep throwing the dice.
2 people like this.
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