You need not take my word on this: Ask her admirers. “Ruth Bader Ginsburg had a vision for America,” Linda Hirshman argues in the Washington Post. What was her vision? “To make America fairer, to make justice bigger.” That is not a job for a judge — that is a job for a legislator. The job of making law properly belongs to — some people find this part hard to handle — lawmakers. Making law is not the job of the judge. The job of the judge is to see that the law is followed and applied in a given case. It does not matter if the law is unfair or if the law is unjust — that is not the judge’s concern. If you have a vision for America, and desire to make the law more fair or more just, then there is a place for you: Congress. That is where the laws are made.
First myth, make stuff up Supremes. All it does is jam the federal court system until it is useless
Second myth: We are a democracy. No we are mostly a republic. This myth causes all sort of complication and earmarks in legislation. Bonehead politicians and economists push these two ideas and the result is federal bankruptcy, all the time. Our voters are ill educated about the problem, as our public school teachers are not that smart.
The only solution is periodic devaluations to cover the losses. We need more frequent devaluations so the value of federal government becomes better understood. The era of faking this problem is over.
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