Monday, December 14, 2020

Texas and the Supreme Court

So 7 or the 9 Supreme Court justices turn down Texas presentation claiming they have no standing on the election results.  However, Justices Alito and Thomas disagreed.  By claiming Texas has no standing is a peculiar judgement.  When one thinks about the fraud in this election where hundreds of thousands of ballots mysteriously appeared between 12 midnight and up to 4 in the morning as well as days later.  Now, based on the pending results that Joe Biden would be elected to the presidency on fraudulent and corrupted ballots, does have an effect on Texas and actually the entire country.  The impact of electing an illegitimate president that won through corruption of the election process actually has an effect on every citizen in Texas as well as the other 49 states.  So, every state has standing as many will be adversely affected by the Biden administration and their plans to fundamentally change our country and destroy our constitution.  So, we all have standing.  It seems the Supreme Court would rather rule on the easy stuff and ignore the consequents of an election achieved through violating the constitutional laws established to make sure elections are fair and honest.  Aside from the changes in the election laws at the last minute that can only be changed by the state legislatures and not the state secretary or anyone else.  So, the Supreme Court has failed the American people and have ignored the constitution.  We all thought 5 of the 9 judges would at least support the constitution as written and not as some would like to interpret the constitution as they feel like.  So all the hoopla on the 3 judges nominated by the president and approved by congress was not what we believed would protect the constitution.  It seems it is okay to violate the constitution if any decision by the Supreme Court would fall to disfavor with the radicals.  So, fear wins out again.  Threatened riots, looting and burning and the court caves.  So much for honesty and integrity in the Supreme Court.

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