This gets to the main reason I will probably vote for Trump again in 2020. We need the Supreme Court to enforce separation of powers. For 40 years or so, Congress has avoided legislating but punting anything controversial to the administrative agencies. Gorsuch and Kavanaugh (along with Thomas and Alito) seem reasonably likely to reign in the power of Administrative Agencies. Roberts seems something of a wildcard on that issue.whatthehey78 said:Not really an attempt to provide an answer to your questions...but, IMHO the players (elected officials) have learned how to "game" the system so as to benefit themselves and "be damned" the rest of us. They go to DC under the false pretense of helping America when, in fact they go their solely to enrich themselves. It (the system) apparently IS rigged. The swamp needs draining...PLEASE let it be so.will25u said:
OK. I have two questions. Please help me understand.
1. OK, people have been putting this information together with public data. The people don't have nearly the visibility of members of Congress/DOJ/FBI, etc. We KNOW there was corruption all around during the Obama years. So why is nothing happening? Maybe it is, and we just aren't privy to it YET. Horowitz/Huber?
2. (This may not be relevant to the Mueller Invest)Why do we give the power to these people with no true oversight? They(Congress) are their own gatekeepers in most of their benefits(maybe not the best word). They control their pay, how little they work, term limits, etc. And WE THE PEOPLE have very little control over what they do. Why would they implement term limits on themselves when it lessens their power? I feel like I can do nothing but just watch our corrupt government and hate it.
Sorry if the second question is a derail, if so just ignore it. But the first one I am really curious about.
Why is this important--this is one of the major ways our system has become rigged. Bureaucrats make the controversial decisions--bureaucrats who never come up for vote, are protected by civil service laws, and routinely receive high paying jobs as lobbyists (or others who interface directly with government). Pelosi, McCarthy, McConnel and Schumer-or any other member of Congress-don't have to defend their votes (except Supreme Court nominees in the Senate) to constituents because they never votes on anything really controversial ("I didn't vote for that, it was Health and Human Services' decision"; a.k.a. "we have to pass it before we can know what's in it").
PatentMike, J.D.
BS Biochem
MS Molecular Virology
BS Biochem
MS Molecular Virology