California: No rockets because of political statements
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The principle that the state shouldn’t punish entities for political speech predates me by a considerable amount of time.
@jon-nyc said in California: No rockets because of political statements:
The principle that the state shouldn’t punish entities for political speech predates me by a considerable amount of time.
I understand you've fixated on your personal definition of "punish", but an adjustment to a discretionary sweetheart deal is not the sort of "punishment" meant to be outlawed by the first amendment.
As an example that you've failed to grapple with before, imagine a vendor with a huge government contract in San Francisco, becomes extremely politically active, and was spending their profits to support a bunch of abhorrent right-wing causes, as far as the population of SF was concerned. Does the first amendment block SF from changing vendors? Obviously no, and obviously this defeats your principle.
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Do other companies launch in California? Boeing or such?
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@jon-nyc said in California: No rockets because of political statements:
The principle that the state shouldn’t punish entities for political speech predates me by a considerable amount of time.
I understand you've fixated on your personal definition of "punish", but an adjustment to a discretionary sweetheart deal is not the sort of "punishment" meant to be outlawed by the first amendment.
As an example that you've failed to grapple with before, imagine a vendor with a huge government contract in San Francisco, becomes extremely politically active, and was spending their profits to support a bunch of abhorrent right-wing causes, as far as the population of SF was concerned. Does the first amendment block SF from changing vendors? Obviously no, and obviously this defeats your principle.
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@Horace said in California: No rockets because of political statements:
Does the first amendment block SF from changing vendors? Obviously
noyes, since O’Hare Trucking vs Westlake (1996) and obviously this confirms your principle.@jon-nyc said in California: No rockets because of political statements:
@Horace said in California: No rockets because of political statements:
Does the first amendment block SF from changing vendors? Obviously
noyes, since O’Hare Trucking vs Westlake (1996) and obviously this confirms your principle.Thank you for name dropping a case. To be clear, I put it at a zero % chance you could describe in coherent words what that case establishes, such that your description matched with reality. But please do go look it up and summarize with your own words, then I'll look it up and see how well your summary conforms to reality.
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Respondent city maintains a rotation list of available companies to perform towing services at its request. Until the events recounted here, the city's policy had been to remove companies from the list only for cause. Petitioner O'Hare Truck Service, Inc., was removed from the list after its owner, petitioner Gratzianna, refused to contribute to respondent mayor's reelection campaign and instead supported his opponent.
So tit for tat grift was found to be illegal here.
Held: The protections of Elrod and Branti extend to an instance where government retaliates against a contractor, or a regular provider of services, for the exercise of rights of political association or the expression of political allegiance.
(a) In assessing when party affiliation, consistent with the First Amendment, may be an acceptable basis for terminating a public employee, "the ultimate inquiry is not whether the label 'policymaker' or 'confidential' fits a particular position; rather, the question is whether the hiring authority can demonstrate that party affiliation is an appropriate requirement for the effective performance of the public office involved." Branti, supra, at 518. A different, though related, inquiry, the balancing test from Pickering v. Board of Ed. of Township High School Dist. 205, Will Cty., 391 U. S. 563, is called for where a government employer takes adverse action on account of an employee or service provider's right of free speech. In Elrod and Branti, the raw test of political affiliation sufficed to show a constitutional violation. However, since the inquiry is whether the affiliation requirement is reasonable, it is inevitable that some case-by-case adjudication will be required even where political affiliation was the test the government imposed. The analysis will also accommodate cases where instances of the employee's speech or expression are intermixed with a political affiliation requirement. -
It’s still not comparable. SpaceX Is launching from Federal property on a military base as part of their approved Government contract. Does the Coastal Commission actually have the jurisdictional power to restrict their launches?
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Yeah I didn't mean to present the vendor example as analogous to this. Just something that tracked back to the same principle jon is using. In the SCOTUS decision, which was divided, there is still room for arguing whether a vendor can "effectively do their job" due to their politics. With a politically abhorrent vendor serving a population almost entirely aligned against them, funneling tax dollars to causes that population despises, any case against the government's ability to switch vendors would be ripe for legal interpretations that go counter to O'Hare Trucking vs Westlake.
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It’s still not comparable. SpaceX Is launching from Federal property on a military base as part of their approved Government contract. Does the Coastal Commission actually have the jurisdictional power to restrict their launches?
@LuFins-Dad said in California: No rockets because of political statements:
It’s still not comparable. SpaceX Is launching from Federal property on a military base as part of their approved Government contract. Does the Coastal Commission actually have the jurisdictional power to restrict their launches?
The coastal commission’s ruling covers only non-USG flights. IOW Starlink.
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@jon-nyc said in California: No rockets because of political statements:
@Horace said in California: No rockets because of political statements:
Does the first amendment block SF from changing vendors? Obviously
noyes, since O’Hare Trucking vs Westlake (1996) and obviously this confirms your principle.Thank you for name dropping a case. To be clear, I put it at a zero % chance you could describe in coherent words what that case establishes, such that your description matched with reality. But please do go look it up and summarize with your own words, then I'll look it up and see how well your summary conforms to reality.
@Horace said in California: No rockets because of political statements:
But please do go look it up and summarize with your own words, then I'll look it up and see how well your summary conforms to reality.
As long as we’re giving each other homework assignments, you go run a mile. When you’re done I’ll summarize the case for you. Video or it didn’t happen.
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@LuFins-Dad said in California: No rockets because of political statements:
It’s still not comparable. SpaceX Is launching from Federal property on a military base as part of their approved Government contract. Does the Coastal Commission actually have the jurisdictional power to restrict their launches?
The coastal commission’s ruling covers only non-USG flights. IOW Starlink.
@jon-nyc said in California: No rockets because of political statements:
@LuFins-Dad said in California: No rockets because of political statements:
It’s still not comparable. SpaceX Is launching from Federal property on a military base as part of their approved Government contract. Does the Coastal Commission actually have the jurisdictional power to restrict their launches?
The coastal commission’s ruling covers only non-USG flights. IOW Starlink.
Still launching from Space Force’s base, no?
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@Horace said in California: No rockets because of political statements:
But please do go look it up and summarize with your own words, then I'll look it up and see how well your summary conforms to reality.
As long as we’re giving each other homework assignments, you go run a mile. When you’re done I’ll summarize the case for you. Video or it didn’t happen.
@jon-nyc said in California: No rockets because of political statements:
@Horace said in California: No rockets because of political statements:
But please do go look it up and summarize with your own words, then I'll look it up and see how well your summary conforms to reality.
As long as we’re giving each other homework assignments, you go run a mile. When you’re done I’ll summarize the case for you. Video or it didn’t happen.
Eh. I'm getting into better shape, and in my day I was in better shape than you ever have been, or ever could be. Meanwhile, you're not getting any smarter. I do note that David French uses that O'Hare case when discussing Disney vs DeSantis, so that's where you got it, and whatever you managed to absorb from what he said, is what you'd be capable of parroting. And Disney vs DeSantis? Dismissed by a judge. Since we're appealing to legal authority to settle this, I thought you'd appreciate that.
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@LuFins-Dad said in California: No rockets because of political statements:
It’s still not comparable. SpaceX Is launching from Federal property on a military base as part of their approved Government contract. Does the Coastal Commission actually have the jurisdictional power to restrict their launches?
The coastal commission’s ruling covers only non-USG flights. IOW Starlink.
@jon-nyc said in California: No rockets because of political statements:
@LuFins-Dad said in California: No rockets because of political statements:
It’s still not comparable. SpaceX Is launching from Federal property on a military base as part of their approved Government contract. Does the Coastal Commission actually have the jurisdictional power to restrict their launches?
The coastal commission’s ruling covers only non-USG flights. IOW Starlink.
OK, phone call from SecDef...One partial use government satellite per launch.
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@jon-nyc said in California: No rockets because of political statements:
@Horace said in California: No rockets because of political statements:
But please do go look it up and summarize with your own words, then I'll look it up and see how well your summary conforms to reality.
As long as we’re giving each other homework assignments, you go run a mile. When you’re done I’ll summarize the case for you. Video or it didn’t happen.
Eh. I'm getting into better shape, and in my day I was in better shape than you ever have been, or ever could be. Meanwhile, you're not getting any smarter. I do note that David French uses that O'Hare case when discussing Disney vs DeSantis, so that's where you got it, and whatever you managed to absorb from what he said, is what you'd be capable of parroting. And Disney vs DeSantis? Dismissed by a judge. Since we're appealing to legal authority to settle this, I thought you'd appreciate that.
@Horace said in California: No rockets because of political statements:
And Disney vs DeSantis? Dismissed by a judge.
Ruled against at district level but appealed the very next day to the circuit court. The two parties later reached a settlement. DeSantis replaced the Magats on the improvement district with serious people and agreed to renegotiate the terms of the deal with Disney. Disney agreed to suspend the appeal pending the renegotiation.
Kind of like what I thought would happen - once his campaign tanked, he’d quietly walk it back. He is a traditional business-friendly Republican politician, after all.
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@Horace said in California: No rockets because of political statements:
And Disney vs DeSantis? Dismissed by a judge.
Ruled against at district level but appealed the very next day to the circuit court. The two parties later reached a settlement. DeSantis replaced the Magats on the improvement district with serious people and agreed to renegotiate the terms of the deal with Disney. Disney agreed to suspend the appeal pending the renegotiation.
Kind of like what I thought would happen - once his campaign tanked, he’d quietly walk it back. He is a traditional business-friendly Republican politician, after all.
@jon-nyc said in California: No rockets because of political statements:
@Horace said in California: No rockets because of political statements:
And Disney vs DeSantis? Dismissed by a judge.
Ruled against at district level but appealed the very next day to the circuit court. The two parties later reached a settlement. DeSantis replaced the Magats on the improvement district with serious people and agreed to renegotiate the terms of the deal with Disney. Disney agreed to suspend the appeal pending the renegotiation.
Kind of like what I thought would happen - once his campaign tanked, he’d quietly walk it back. He is a traditional business-friendly Republican politician, after all.
And the one judge who actually looked into the legal principles involved here, disagrees with you. You appeal to the authority of the case French alerted you to, while shrugging off the ruling already made. I'm not a huge fan of an appeal to legal authority to determine whether your principle is coherent, but if that's your measure, you lose. If your measure is common sense, then you can go ahead and think San Francisco wouldn't be within its legal rights to sever business ties with a vendor who started selling white supremacist pamphlets as a side hustle. That won't be anybody else's common sense.
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@Horace said in California: No rockets because of political statements:
And Disney vs DeSantis? Dismissed by a judge.
Ruled against at district level but appealed the very next day to the circuit court. The two parties later reached a settlement. DeSantis replaced the Magats on the improvement district with serious people and agreed to renegotiate the terms of the deal with Disney. Disney agreed to suspend the appeal pending the renegotiation.
Kind of like what I thought would happen - once his campaign tanked, he’d quietly walk it back. He is a traditional business-friendly Republican politician, after all.
@jon-nyc said in California: No rockets because of political statements:
@Horace said in California: No rockets because of political statements:
And Disney vs DeSantis? Dismissed by a judge.
Ruled against at district level but appealed the very next day to the circuit court. The two parties later reached a settlement. DeSantis replaced the Magats on the improvement district with serious people and agreed to renegotiate the terms of the deal with Disney. Disney agreed to suspend the appeal pending the renegotiation.
Kind of like what I thought would happen - once his campaign tanked, he’d quietly walk it back. He is a traditional business-friendly Republican politician, after all.
@jon-nyc said in California: No rockets because of political statements:
@Horace said in California: No rockets because of political statements:
And Disney vs DeSantis? Dismissed by a judge.
Ruled against at district level but appealed the very next day to the circuit court. The two parties later reached a settlement. DeSantis replaced the Magats on the improvement district with serious people and agreed to renegotiate the terms of the deal with Disney. Disney agreed to suspend the appeal pending the renegotiation.
Kind of like what I thought would happen - once his campaign tanked, he’d quietly walk it back. He is a traditional business-friendly Republican politician, after all.
I will forever regret the campaign he ran. He should have destroyed that orange blowhard.
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It’s just hard to be a post-Trump candidate in the Trump era. Vivek suffered the same fate.
I wonder if he’s kicking himself for not waiting. I bet he’d have easily been VP nominee had he played his cards right. And then he’d be odds on favorite for 28. Now he’ll have Vance to deal with.