To: Fester Chugabrew
Many thanks for clarifying.
Is this something the common citizen reasonably enjoin upon his representative in congress: to establish mechanisms whereby public officials and citizens can be held accountable where fidelity to the Constitution is concerned?
If people demand action, something might change. The judiciary has been permitted to supervise its own for too long. Another organ is required to check its power, since Congress really never impeaches, let alone removes federal judges. Congress should be the ones to remove executive branch officials, but the Mayorkas is the first impeachment of a cabinet officer in ages. Congress can always amend the Civil Service Act, and I am sure that would threaten the Deep State. Ultimately, the problem is that we live in a massively corrupt nation, and the general morality of the citizens reflects that.
60 posted on
02/26/2024 9:23:04 PM PST by
Dr. Franklin
("A republic, if you can keep it." )
To: Dr. Franklin
The judiciary has been permitted to supervise its own for too long.
I have pondered that notion. No citizen oversight where standards for bar exams are set.
Jurisprudence has little if any oversight outside of itself, and so we are encumbering ourselves with legislation that does not address wrongs committed, but even the potential to commit a wrong.
72 posted on
02/27/2024 6:33:59 AM PST by
Fester Chugabrew
(In a world of parrots and lemmings, be a watchdog.)
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