The Supreme Court is corrupt.  And we saw that last 
week as one decision after another rolled back progress.  But the worst 
decision was the Colorado case.  My brother and I were talking about it 
(he's gay) and he said to pass on thanks to Ava and C.I. for getting it 
when most do not, see "Media: Corrupt Court, Corrupt YOUTUBE."  The ruling says that gay men and lesbians can be 
discriminated against for 'religious beliefs.'  As they explain, this is
 a two-tiered citizenship for Americans.  Lesbians and gay men are 
less-than and no longer have full rights.  This is offensive. 
I
 can't believe we're back to this garbage in this country.  If you 
missed it, the Civil Rights Movement and, before that, the Civil War 
were about saying no to a two-tier system of citizenship.
 
Colorado’s Attorney General Phillip Weiser took on the U.S. Supreme Court’s ruling that
 a web designer couldn’t be compelled to create wedding websites for 
LGBTQ couples, calling the decision a “license to discriminate.” 
MSNBC’s Simone Boyce asked Weiser what Justice Gorsuch meant
 when he wrote, “Under Colorado’s logic, the government may compel 
anyone who speaks for pay on a particular topic to accept all 
commissions on that same topic.”
“What
 he is trying to say is that here is someone that had a free speech 
interest that was being implicated in a negative way,” Weiser said. He 
continued:
But
 the problem, first off…this is a made-up case. This was based on 
hypotheticals, and the court didn’t have to deal with the whole 
equation. In a real case, you have a victim who is denied services, and 
the consequences of the court’s ruling would be much more self-evident. 
But second, let’s be clear, here; whoever creates a website, or whoever 
creates any artistic work can make whatever they want. Our position, 
they have to sell it to everyone, and they cannot restrict the sales in a
 public business because they don’t like someone’s ethnicity, religion, 
race, what have you.
Weiser said the Supreme Court’s decision poses both legal and societal challenges.
“A
 societal challenge because we as a society now have a choice if we have
 an expressive business. We can serve everyone and stand for our 
nation’s motto of ‘E pluribus unum‘, or now, as you said, 
people have a license to discriminate, saying, ‘I have this expressive 
product and I’m not going to offer it to everybody.”
The attorneys who successfully argued a high-stakes case before the Supreme Court last week could be disbarred amid new reports that refute the veracity of a key document at the center of 303 Creative v. Elenis.On Friday, the Supreme Court's 6-3 conservative majority ruled in favor of a Colorado web designer who
 argued she should not have to serve gay customers due to her religious 
beliefs as a Christian, and that prohibiting her business from doing so 
would violate her First Amendment rights.
One
 of the documents that both sides of the case repeatedly referenced was 
an inquiry that Lorrie Smith received from an engaged same-sex couple 
asking her to build a website for their wedding. But in the days leading
 up to the court's bombshell decision, reports emerged that the inquiry 
was falsified and the man named in the complaint told several news 
outlets that not only had he never sent Smith the website request, but 
also that he is straight and has been married to a woman for the last 15
 years.
 
They should be disbarred.  They defrauded the Court.  Lorie Smith is not just a hate merchant, she's a liar who lied in Court, made up something that never happened.  That's what trash has to do in order to win and she's trash.  She's a hate merchant the world will spend the rest of her life hating.  
 
"Iraq snapshot" (THE COMMON ILLS):
Monday, July 3, 2023.  The corrupt Court has decimated American lives 
and, in one decision, has taken the full rights away from a group of 
pepole.
Since the US Supreme Court’s Dobbs decision 13 months ago, which overturned Roe v. Wade and
 deprived women of the constitutional right to access abortion, the 
ultra-right majority on the court has engaged in a rampage against basic
 democratic rights and the social rights of the working class.
This
 culminated Friday in two decisions with the same 6-3 split among the 
justices: to declare unconstitutional the Biden administration’s limited
 reduction of student loan debt owed to the US government; and to 
endorse the “right” of a commercial web designer to refuse to create 
materials for the wedding of a gay couple.
The class character of 
the first decision is obvious: an executive action by the federal 
government to bail out wealthy bank depositors is constitutional, but 
not a limited action to help debt-burdened students. The second decision
 destroys a constitutional right to be free of discrimination, while 
paying lip service to the First Amendment. The court declares that the 
web designer can justify her bigotry on the basis of “freedom of 
religion.”
I'm stuck here.  These are 
appalling decisions that need to be called out and they are part of many
 others including MARCUS DEANGELO JONES V DEWAYNE HENDRIX from the week 
before last.  At THIRD, we didn't do "truest" statements this week -- 
where we quote from an article, report or video segment or speech.  I'm 
glad.  Because I know one of the nominees would have been a Friday piece
 at WSWS.  And I didn't agree that it deserved a truest.  WSWS published
 an article covering the student loan debt decisions.  A bad decision by
 the Court that will have real consequences.  WSWS then published an 
article about the bad decision where the Court overturns Affirmative 
Action -- a monumental injustice.  And it tried to fold into that 
article what Patrick Martin calls above 'refuse to create materials for 
the wedding of a gay couple.'
That is the worst
 decision from a legal stand point and I get that most people do not 
grasp the law in this country.  But if you want to destroy a community, 
that's the decision to use.  
They can build on it, they can expand to include other groups.  
It is a decision out of Nazi Germany.
The Court no longer believe in equaltiy.
Any
 legal scholar should look at the decision and tell you what happened is
 there is now a two-tier system of American citizenship.  There is a 
system where straights (and assumed straights) have full  rights and 
gays and lesbians do not.  There is no pretense of equal in the eyes of 
the law.
That should frighten the hell out of everyone. 
This is not minor.  We are supposed to be built on a system where the law is fair and the law is equal.
You have the right to this, I have the right to this.
We have to go back to the 1800s to find something similar.
Discrimination is okay -- legally okay -- and we're pretending this is something minor.
Again,
 don't think, "Well I'm never going to have a same-sex wedding."  This 
can be expanded.  This is something out of A HANDMAID'S TALE and the 
fact that so many people do not appear to grasp that goes to how easy it
 is for rights and liberties to be stolen from all of us.
If
 you're not getting this, you are part of the problem.  You need to 
grasp what the law now says and what a huge shift this is.  
And on the right, those who are openly on the right-wing, are celebrating.  They grasp what just happened.  
The
 ones who are hiding their right-wing nature?  Well I don't see a word 
on this from RFK Junior.  I see Junior Tweeted repeatedly on Sunday 
about releasing the records on his uncle's death.  Because that is the 
most important thing right?  Oh, and he made time to apologetically call
 out the case overturning affirmative action -- apologetically and 
pathetically because if he doesn't hold onto his right-wing base, he has
 nothing.  
The last name means very little 
when, many, many weeks later, you still can't pull together a campaign. 
 You're still trying to hang out with Moms For Liberty and you're too 
much a boy to stand up.  RFK -- Senior -- was not a saint by any means 
-- as many women could have attested -- but at the end he did find a 
voice.   I'd say, "Took him along enough," but he was only 42.  Junior 
is 69 and can't find his voice.
RFK, at the end, spoke for the people in need, the migrant workers, the people under assault.
Having to wear a mask during the height of COVID was not an assault.
And I'm getting tired of all the freaks on this issue.  
It
 was a pandemic.  We never told you what to do here.  We didn't shame 
Eric Clapton or try to -- I even noted that he would probably come out 
of the pandemic looking good.  We didn't worship at Fauci.  He was lousy
 at his job and he should have been fired.  
But
 we also grasped that it was a pandemic and that many people were just 
trying to survive it, not to hurt anyone and not to hurt themselves.  
That reality is lost in RFK Jr.'s campaign of crazy.
You didn't want the vaccine, you really didn't have to get it.
I
 didn't get it until the end.  I was on chemo and a hundred other things
 and my doctors wouldn't let me -- a fact that I made known here 
repeatedly.  
I don't know of anyone who went to prison for refusing the vaccine.
But it's a big issue to Crowd Crazy to this day.
Because they felt so damn impotent.
Guess
 what, butt hurt, so did the rest of the world.  It's what happens when 
something no one is expecting sweeps up the planet.  
But that's all he and Naomi Wolf and other increasingly unhinged people have to offer.
Did Fauci lie?
He
 lied repeatedly.  We noted it repeatedly.  It's why he should have been
 fired.  He certainly should have been fired when Joe Biden was sworn 
in.  He had repeatedly contradicted himself and lost the trust of too 
much of the public.
COVID continues.  The COVID
 measures are gone.  We have real problems to deal with.  That doesn't 
mean journalists shouldn't look into what took place or how consensus 
was formed or forced behind closed doors.  It does mean it's not really a
 campaign issue.
Unless you're some right-wing 
crazy who can't deal with the fact that COVID actually scared you.  As 
it should have.  A world-wide pandemic is scary.  But you can't deal 
with your own fear,  so you're scared and pissed off and looking for the
 craziest fool who'll speak to that and you run to Junior.  
Ava and I wrote about the two-tiered citizenship that now exists in the US in "
Media: Corrupt Court, Corrupt YOUTUBE" on Sunday at THIRD and here I posted multiple interviews and commentaries and statements.  
An e-mail asked why I didn't include the ACLU?  
This is their statement:
WASHINGTON - The Supreme Court this morning issued its ruling in 303 Creative v. Elenis. David Cole, Legal Director for the American Civil Liberties Union, offered the following response: 
“The
 Supreme Court held today for the first time that a business offering 
customized expressive services has the right to violate state laws 
prohibiting such businesses from discrimination in sales. The Court’s 
decision opens the door to any business that claims to provide 
customized services to discriminate against historically-marginalized 
groups. The decision is fundamentally misguided. We will continue to 
fight to defend laws against discrimination from those who seek a 
license to discriminate.”
The American Civil Liberties Union and the ACLU of Colorado filed an amicus brief
 urging the Supreme Court to reject the First Amendment challenge to a 
Colorado civil rights law requiring businesses open to the public to 
treat customers equally.
June 30, 2023 - In response to the 
Supreme Court ruling that businesses may deny services to LGBTQI+ 
people, the Center for Constitutional Rights released the following 
statement:
Today,
 in its latest display of its political activism, the Supreme Court 
sanctioned discrimination by giving businesses that engage in 
"expressive conduct" a license to deny services to LGBTQI+ people. We 
have known for a long time that in the eyes of the Court, there are only
 two Constitutional rights that matter: the First Amendment right to 
religious expression and the Second Amendment right to bear arms. 
Nonetheless, today’s decision was crushing. It deals another blow to a 
community already under attack in legislatures across the country, by 
the very same movement that claims the allegiance of six justices on the
 Supreme Court. 
Public 
accommodations laws regulate what businesses must do, not what they must
 think, if they seek the public benefit of accessing the public 
marketplace. Such nondiscrimination laws, like the one in Colorado, are 
designed to ensure that LGBTQI+ people can freely shop for services like
 everyone else, rather than being required to shop for businesses that 
don’t discriminate against them. The right-wing justices have once again
 signaled that their mission is to dismantle laws that protect 
marginalized communities and to use the law to back punitive and 
exclusionary social hierarchies. As Justice Sotomayor lays out in the 
dissent, “[t]hose who would subordinate LGBT[QI+] people have often done
 so with the backing of law.” 
In
 this case, the Court was so determined to carry out its mission that it
 bypassed Constitutional requirements of standing by weighing in on an 
imaginary dispute concocted by conservative legal activists and issuing 
an advisory opinion, so that they could legislate policy.
The
 Religious Liberty Clauses of the First Amendment have been historically
 used to protect minority religions against discrimination by 
majoritarian orthodoxy and to advance a pluralistic, egalitarian 
democracy. It is thus especially perverse that this Court would delight 
in producing the exact opposite, anti-democratic result: granting 
orthodox Christianity an imagined constitutional freedom to discriminate
 against the minority LGBTQI+ community. And, as Justice Sotomayor 
emphasized, the decision is not limited; it could give license for 
businesses to discriminate against interracial couples because of the 
(pervasive) extremist-evangelicalist commitment to segregation. 
Together
 with yesterday’s decision invalidating affirmative action, this ruling 
lays bare the values of this Court. In six justices’ view, the 
Constitution says it is just fine for a business to exclude someone on the basis of their protected status (LGBTQI+), but it is unconstitutional for a university to include
 someone on the basis of their protected status (race). This is bigotry 
masquerading as law. And, in so ruling again, this Court continues to 
advance a Jim Crow jurisprudence in which the white, male, Christian 
insider’s freedom is made meaningful only through the subjugation of 
vulnerable populations. For this conservative movement, as for John 
Calhoun or George Wallace, discrimination fuels their feelings of 
freedom. These six individuals somehow retain the power to impose their 
18th Century values on a democratic majority that believes in equality 
and fairness. The Court has little legitimacy left. 
We
 reject these cruel and unlawful decisions, and the cowardly attempts by
 a right-wing movement to wield the Constitution to protect white power 
and deny the human rights of the multitude. But human rights cannot be 
suspended by reactionaries in robes. And they cannot be secured by even 
enlightened court rulings. If there is solace to be found today, it is 
in the knowledge that that task before us is the same as it was 
yesterday: to resist, organize, and unite. Our potential collective 
power, and only that, offers hope of liberation and full human dignity 
for LGBTQI+ people and other marginalized communities.
I
 cannot believe how many people are missing the point on this.  I have 
nothing against a gay but I own a bed and breakfast and I just can't 
allow a gay into my home with another gay because my Bible tells me it 
is wrong.  Or: I own a small hotel in New Hampshire and I rent rooms out
 by the hour but not to a gay because of my Bible.  You have no idea how
 this can expand out.  The Court knew.  They knew what they were doing.
They are a corrupt Court and there needs to be change immediately.  
Condemning the right-wing majority on the U.S. Supreme Court as corrupt and "heavily politicized," U.S. Reps. Ro Khanna
 and Don Beyer on Friday reintroduced legislation to impose term limits 
for the nine justices in order to "restore judicial independence."
Hours after the court ruled that businesses can refuse services to LGBTQ+ people and struck down
 President Joe Biden's student loan debt relief program, Khanna 
(D-Calif.) said that the framers of the Constitution established 
lifetime appointments for justices on the nation's highest court in 
order "to ensure impartiality," but recent rulings by the six right-wing
 members of the panel's supermajority have not held up that standard.
"The Supreme Court's decision to block student debt relief will put many hardworking Americans at risk of default and will be a disaster for our economy," said
 Rep. Ro Khanna. "Our Founding Fathers intended for lifetime 
appointments to ensure impartiality. The decision today demonstrates how
 justices have become partisan and out of step with the American public.
 I'm proud to reintroduce the Supreme Court Term Limits and Regular 
Appointments Act to implement term limits to rebalance the court and 
stop extreme partisanship."
The legislation would create an 
18-year term limit for justices appointed after the law was enacted. 
Justices would be permitted to serve on lower courts after their term 
was up. 
Beyer (D-Va.) said the time has come to impose term 
limits following numerous partisan decisions by the Supreme Court, 
including its overturning of Roe v. Wade last year, and revelations about undisclosed financial ties that right-wing Justices Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito, and Neil Gorsuch have had to Republican megadonors and operatives who have had business before the court. 
"For
 many Americans, the Supreme Court is a distant, secretive, unelected 
body that can make drastic changes in their lives without any 
accountability," said Beyer. "Recent partisan decisions by the Supreme 
Court that destroyed historic protections for reproductive rights, 
voting rights, and more have undermined public trust in the Court—even 
as inappropriate financial relationships between justices and 
conservative donors raised new questions about its integrity."
Currently, said Rep. Rashida Tlaib (D-Mich.), "six extremist, unelected activists" are doing "the bidding of billionaire Republican donors from the bench."
"This
 illegitimate Supreme Court has become a cesspool of corruption and is 
in urgent need of reform," she said. "It's time to end lifetime 
appointments to the Supreme Court."
A poll by Marist College in April found
 that 68% of Americans back term limits for Supreme Court justices while
 just 37% of respondents said they had confidence in the high court.
The judicial watchdog group Fix the Court endorsed Khanna and Beyer's proposal, noting that from the nation's founding until 1970, Supreme Court justices served 15 years on average. 
"That
 number has nearly doubled in the last few decades, as the power the 
court has abrogated to itself has also increased exponentially," said the group. 
The current system has allowed Supreme Court justices to "possess unchecked power for life," said
 Gabe Roth, executive director of Fix the Court. "Luckily, there's a 
popular, apolitical way to fix this: by requiring future justices to 
take 'senior status' after 18 years, at which point they'd fill in at 
SCOTUS when needed, rotate down to a lower court, or retire."
"This
 idea forms the basis of Rep. Khanna's bill," he said, "and I'm pleased 
to support his work to establish fundamental guardrails for the most 
powerful, least accountable part of our government."
Affirmative
 action is a needed program.  Programs can be ended and they can be 
restarted.  Congress, for example, can (and should) pass a new program.
But
 when we're dealing with the highest court in the land stripping rights 
from citizens?  Do you know how hard that is to come back from?
If
 you work for THE NATION, you clearly don't because they have nothing on
 their main page about this decision.  They've got the student debt 
decision, they've got affirmative action, nothing on this.
And
 yet a group of Americans have been given less-than citizenship by a 
corrupt Court.  They are no longer full citizens worthy of full 
equality.  They are less-than.  
And that should leave everyone outraged and apalled.
But
 some idiots don't grasp how it starts and how, if it's not called out, 
it builds.  The Bible was a justification for slavery, for example.  The
 Bible's not a manual for no-fault divorce.  You want to see where the 
Court builds next as they go through the list of denying full rights to 
American citizens?
You didn't read history?  You didn't Margaret Atwood?  You can't catch a documentary on Nazi Germany?
All
 the decisions handed down were awful and unfair.  Only one, however,  
gives the Court the power and the way forward to remove rights from 
citizens.  
The Court needs to change and it needs to change now.
The
 Democrats need to come up with a plan for Court reform that includes 
term limits and includes an ethics code and includes accountability.  
Now.
Gina asked me to note this from Marianne's campaign.
 
The following sites updated: