@Phil
phil spade
@Phil · 3:53

Election 2024: The night the lights will go out in Georgia

article image placeholderGeorgia lawmakers approve new election rules that could impact 2024 presidential contest
When following presidential elections. In the past, I have focused on the normal things, on speeches, on debates, on the polls. But this year, I'll be following exactly where I think this war will be waged. And that's in the courts and legislative state legislatures all over the country. Now, while it has always been a case to some degree, this year I think it is way different, and I think it is going to get very, very messy

Think 2020 was messy? New law says you aint seen nothing yet https://s.swell.life/SU8toMCpMczdgmy

@Essielayne1sShe
Essielayne 1sShe
@Essielayne1sShe · 3:25
But I agree with you, and it is a much more subtle way of winning. It feels like a zero sum game. And I would also even offer this as a point, because we are not looking in so much of a desire to make the country successful across the board. That ideal has sort of dismissed itself for the reality of the situation, and that is those who are in power are structuring the dynamics for accessing power and maintaining power
@Phil
phil spade
@Phil · 2:21

@Essielayne1sShe

When I think of the executive branch, the two departments that come to mind the most, Department of Homeland Security and the Department of Justice, well, most of their stuff is in courts right now. So the courts seem to be where most everything is happening. And conservative justices used to blame democratic judges for legislating from the bench, but that tide seems to have turned. And I see a lot of cases within the appellate courts where that is exactly what a lot of conservative justices are doing now
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