Monday, February 23, 2026

The Constitution? What's That?

They are thugs, pure and simple. There're so many parallels in history with dictatorships throwing laws out the window. We are seeing that here.
A number of court challenges are tied to these constitutional amendments, with potentially significant consequences for immigration law.
NBC News
Feb. 22, 2026
By Allan Smith and Scott Wong


In and out of court, more than half of the amendments enshrined in the Bill of Rights are being fought over as a direct result of President Donald Trump’s immigration enforcement surge in Minnesota.

In his second term, Trump and his administration have been aggressive in stretching the boundaries of political conventions, resulting in a number of court challenges. Trump’s push to eliminate birthright citizenship, freeze federal funds and bypass Congress through executive orders have tested the separation of powers.

The Twin Cities campaign, though, has been a flashpoint, with fights over at least six — the first, second, third, fourth, fifth and 10th — of the first 10 amendments. Conservative-leaning scholars see both lawyers and judges overstepping their bounds in fiery filings and opinions, while liberal-leaning counterparts see a notable disregard by the Trump administration for Bill of Rights provisions.

[...]

Yoo added that the contests over the Fourth Amendment might be the most significant as the space where individual liberties may most be at stake. That amendment protects individuals from unreasonable searches and seizures and requires the federal government to obtain warrants based on probable cause to enter a person’s home. It has been tested under a Trump administration policy that allows Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents to enter people’s homes with administrative warrants issued by the executive branch, instead of a judge.
I keep on having flashbacks to the Boston Tea Party, Writs of Assistance, and the Quartering Act!


When U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents wear masks and use unmarked vehicles to make arrests, a federal judge from West Virginia wrote, the tactics violate the U.S. Constitution’s Fourth Amendment by eliminating officer accountability and stripping people of due process.

“A mask does one thing: it hides the face of the officer wearing it. On a public highway, in a civil arrest of a person suspected of no crime, the only purpose served by hiding an officer’s face is to prevent his identification. And preventing identification serves only to eliminate accountability.”

The Fourth Amendment protects against unreasonable government searches and seizures of persons, houses, papers and effects. It requires that warrants be issued only upon probable cause, supported by oath and specifically describing the place to be searched and the items to be seized.
The judge had this to say...
Lawyers for the people in these cases contend that they have cooperated with the immigration system and that judges in that system should make final determinations of status. Instead, they have been caught up in sweeps, arrested and sent to jail without being charged with a criminal offense.

Just last week, such cases were before Judges Thomas Johnston, Irene Berger and Goodwin in the southern district. In each case, the judges agreed that the original basis for arrest was flimsy, that being held in jail without a hearing was improper and that the people who were arrested should be released.
This is just one of many cases around the country that judges are ruling that the Constitution is being ignored!

Last week, the top federal judge in Minnesota accused Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) of violating nearly a hundred court orders in the month of January. In a ruling that was part of a contempt case involving Todd Lyons, the acting director of ICE, the judge, Patrick J. Schiltz, wrote, “ICE has every right to challenge the orders of this Court, but, like any litigant, ICE must follow those orders unless and until they are overturned or vacated.” ICE, Schiltz added, “is not a law unto itself.” The ruling marks perhaps the most serious turn in an ongoing battle between federal courts and the White House, with the Trump Administration often appearing to blatantly ignore court orders, or to comply with them only after being repeatedly warned to do so.

[...]

I think judges are being very careful. If they hold the government in contempt, and the government still doesn’t abide by the court orders, we might very well be in a constitutional crisis. The judges appear to be hoping upon hope that if they threaten contempt, the government will come into line, either in the individual case before the judge or across the board.
The Trump adminstration is just thumping their noses at the Constitution and the laws!

Sunday, February 22, 2026

Laws! What Are They Good For?

War, Law huh, yeah
What is it good for?
Absolutely nothing
Say it again, y’all
War Law, huh (good God)
What is it good for?
Absolutely nothing, listen to me
“War” by Norman Whitfield and Barrett Strong

You see, the Department of Justice lied by omission. They didn’t think it was relevant to tell a judge that the warrant was for a reporter… and the judge is really, really pissed at them.
Devan Cole, CNN
Fri, February 20, 2026


A federal judge ripped into the Justice Department on Friday for failing to inform him of the applicability of a law intended to protect journalists from government searches and seizures when it asked him for permission to raid a Washington Post reporter’s home earlier this year.

“How could you miss it? How could you think it doesn’t apply?” Magistrate Judge William Porter asked a DOJ lawyer during a hearing in Alexandria, Virginia.

“I find it hard to believe that in any way this law did not apply,” Porter added later.

The judge said during the hearing that he had declined to approve the warrant for materials from reporter Hannah Natanson several other times.

Justice Department attorney Christian Dibblee argued that the decision was made by department officials several rungs above him, but that he understood the judge’s “frustration.”

Porter shot back: “That’s minimizing it!”

“Ms. Natanson has been deprived of basically her life’s work,” Porter said during the hearing, echoing comments from her lawyer that she’s been unable to continue reporting and gathering confidential sources following the raid.
They knew what they were doing by withholding the information. They had been shot down with other warrants for reporters, so this time they decided to withhold the information!
Dibblee and DOJ attorney Gordon Kromberg tried to tell Porter on Friday that the department didn’t believe the law was applicable in this case, with Dibblee at one point saying it’s not the kind of “adverse authority” that lawyers are typically required to raise with a court when making requests for such warrants.

“You don’t think you have an obligation to say that?” Porter said at one point. “I’m a little frustrated with how the process went down.”
They are either lying to the judge or they flunked out of law school. So the government lawyers didn't think a law prohibiting searching of a reporter computer didn't fall under the law prohibiting the exact same thing?

Fox 59 reported that,
Porter said he intends to issue a decision before a follow-up hearing scheduled for March 4.

“I have a pretty good sense of what I’m going to do here,” the magistrate said without elaborating.

Pentagon contractor Aurelio Luis Perez-Lugones was arrested on Jan. 8 and charged with unauthorized removal and retention of classified documents. Perez-Lugones is accused of taking home printouts of classified documents from his workplace and later passing them to Natanson.

[...]

Post attorney Simon Latcovich said the information contained on Natanson’s devices could expose hundreds of confidential sources who routinely provided her with dozens, if not hundreds, of tips every day.

“Since the seizure, those sources have dried up,” he said.
Trump’s Department of Justice got what they wanted… fear. Oh, they knew what they were doing when they ignored the laws. Exactly. They created fear in potential whistleblowers. They created fear in reporters. Oh yes, Trump & Company got what they wanted!
The newspaper’s attorneys accused authorities of violating legal safeguards for journalists and trampling on Natanson’s First Amendment free speech rights.

Justice Department attorneys argued that the government is entitled to keep the seized material because it contains evidence in an ongoing investigation with national security implications.

The case has drawn national attention and scrutiny from press freedom advocates who say it reflects a more aggressive posture by the Justice Department toward leak investigations involving journalists.

“There is a pattern here, your honor, that this is a part of,” Latcovich said.
Yup. In Minneapolis, saying that the First and Second Amendments do not apply to protesters. Taking U.S. citizens off the streets without cause. Busting into homes without warrants. Ignoring court orders. And now lying to a judge. There is a pattern here… of ignoring the Constitution and the laws when they don’t suit them.

Trump Is Mad!

He is pissed off that "his" justices ruled against him! The nerve of them!


President Donald Trump’s vision of the Supreme Court, in which his three appointees are personally loyal to him, collided with the court’s view of itself Friday when six justices voted to strike down Trump’s signature economic policy — global tariffs imposed under an emergency powers law.

The outcome led Trump to launch an unusually stark personal attack on the justices, with special rancor reserved for the two Trump appointees who defied him.

 
The case represented a challenge of Trump’s many untested, yet forcefully stated imperatives on everything from trade to immigration policy and the court’s ability to maintain its independence and, at times, act as a check on presidential authority.

“The Supreme Court’s ruling on tariffs is deeply disappointing and I’m ashamed of certain members of the court, absolutely ashamed, for not having the courage to do what’s right for the country,” Trump said in the White House briefing room several hours after the court issued its decision, authored by Chief Justice John Roberts.
Government 101: Lesson #1 The courts are a separate branch of government and owe their allegiance to the Constitution... not to those who appointed them!
Trump, though, crossed a line in the way he assailed the justices who voted against him, Ed Whelan, a senior fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy Center and a former law clerk for Justice Antonin Scalia, wrote in an email.

“It’s entirely fine for a president to criticize a Supreme Court ruling that goes against him. But it’s demagogic for President Trump to contend that the justices who voted against him did so because of lack of courage,” Whelan wrote.
But we all know by now that Trump doesn't give a damn about the Constitution, it is all about him.

Protect Children’s Innocence Act

Ever notice how the names of the Republican gives bills do the exact opposite. Like the SAVE Act guts voting laws! The Protect Children's Innocence Act uses language centered on “protecting children” and “innocence,” which carries very strong emotional and moral weight but it goes after vulnerable populations! It will cause lasting harm to children, it will butt in the doctor/patient relationship, and it will drive a wedge into the family.

Congresswoman Sarah McBride said this,
House Republicans just passed one of the most extreme anti-LGBTQ bills that has ever come before a Congress. If it becomes law, it will imprison parents and healthcare professionals. 

This policy isn’t just cruel. It’s radical. 

If I had come out four or five years before I did, my parents would have done the exact same thing that they did when I came out to them at 21. They would have gone and talked, first, to their pastor and, second, to a health care professional. They would have supported me — and if this bill was law, they would have been put in jail. 

For some of my Republican colleagues, these attacks on families and doctors are the point. Targeting vulnerable kids gives these Republicans the attention and self-importance that all bullies crave.

But that’s not what Congress is for. Our job should be working to improve the lives of the people who elected us — and that’s what I’ve been focused on every day. 

As long as Republicans hold control of the House, Mike Johnson and Donald Trump’s extreme agenda will continue unchecked. In 2026, we have an opportunity to take back the House, and it begins with defending this seat. 
She's right! The bill is punitive! The bill shows the vitriol they have for us!

Saturday, February 21, 2026

Saturday 9: With or Without You

Saturday 9: With or Without You (1987) 
On Saturdays I take a break from the heavy stuff and have some fun…  

Unfamiliar with this week's tune? Hear it here.
 
1) "With or Without You" is about the pain of love. What song reminds you of an old romance? Is it about the joy of love or the pain?
From back when I was dating. After the movie it was the Olympia Diner.

2) U2 lead singer Bono has admitted that, when the group recorded this song in the 1980s, he was wrestling with his real-life commitment issues. He was trying to resolve the responsibilities of being a husband with the demands of his career. He worked it through, and decades later both his marriage and his career are still going strong. Do you feel you have been more successful in your personal or professional relationships?
Professional relationships.

3) Bono credits his wife Ali with helping him through a tough period of writer's block, saying she put the pen in his hand each morning. What time of day finds you the most energized, productive or creative?
Now, it is very early morning… 4 AM until 7 AM

4) Bono likes to pedal around town when he's not onstage. What do you do for exercise?
Um… Er… nothing. That’s the problem, I have enough of a problem walking through the grocery store.

5) Bono is U2's lead singer, backed by three very talented bandmates: The Edge, Larry Mullen, Jr., and Adam Clayton. Bruce Springsteen is a big fan of U2's concert performances. If Saturday 9 were to bestow upon you a free ticket to any see any band or performer live, who would you choose?
Hmm… most of the bands that I like and preforming any more. Maybe one of these, The Eagles, Deep Purple, and Heart. 

6) U2 got together 50 years ago, when they were school boys in Dublin. Have you ever visited Ireland? If not, would you like to go?
No, and no desire to go.

7) In 1987, the year this song was popular, Cher won the Academy Award for Best Actress. Her most famous line was, "Snap out of it!" Without looking it up, can you name the movie that made her an Oscar winner?
Nope, I was never a big fan of hers, yes she does have a few songs that I like. Gypsies, Tramps and Thieves, and Half-Breed.
 
8) Also in 1987, the first Starbucks opened. What's your standard Starbucks order?
Decaf coffee black. And it blows their mind. One time a clerk said, “Ah… someone who likes coffee!”
 
9) Random question – Which self-help book would you be more likely to pick up, the one designed to improve your body or your mind?
Okay,
Which book should I pick up is to improve my body. But I’m at a point in life where I rather finding a book on keeping what you got. While improving my mind dose sounds interesting