Disney Analyst
Well-Known Member
The fat, sweaty, bloated one from Vegas? I’ll have to read his bio and see.
I think it’s Mickey Rooney, playing Elvis.
The fat, sweaty, bloated one from Vegas? I’ll have to read his bio and see.
Buc-ee simply likes Red.I'm not. I love Buc-ee's, but unfortunately the beaver wears a red hat for a reason :/
They do redeem themselves by offering employees actual really good wages and benefits. Can't say that about a lot of republican owned businesses.
That was just a correlation I made as a joke, but you can look at who Buc-ee's donates to see what I mean.Buc-ee simply likes Red.
Being a beaver, it should be that hunting safety orange hat.
I am sad that now colors are weaponized.
I think it’s Mickey Rooney, playing Elvis.
Hate to break it to ya, but that's EXACTLY the kind of person his political party loves embracing these days. He's the perfect person.I think it has been a bad battle to pick, though. Lashing out at Disney World just makes him look like a petty and petulant wannabe tyrant and his main opponent look positively statesmanlike.
Stop making me root for DeSantis here.Make no mistake, neither side wants this to go to the Supreme Court and for DeSantis to win. A win for DeSantis would mean corporations do not hold the same rights as inviduals. That ruling would mean an end to Citizen's United and all that corporate campaign money would dry up on both sides.
And of course two things can be true at the same time.The reasoning seems to be "Y'all just dun't like DeSantis!"
Let me think, where have I heard a similar defense of another individual before...
... I guess that quote from Abe Lincoln I saw on Google was right when he said not to believe everything you read on the internet.
Even if he had gotten 99% of the vote, it wouldn't give him the right to violate the constitution.The governors office tracks it's public opinion reactions constantly. I suspect the research data his office sees gives him the clear resolve to keep doing what he is doing. Even the Florida legislature easily passed the bill last year that Disney were ardently against. Each legislator also has their finger on the pulse of their individual voters too.
They would not be sailing in these political waters if they did not feel the political wind behind them.
There is certainly a base that loves this but Florida is a purple state.I think it has been a bad battle to pick, though. Lashing out at Disney World just makes him look like a petty and petulant wannabe tyrant and his main opponent look positively statesmanlike.
Might want to read up on Vice’s reporting (an organization that is no friend of Desantis and would generally be aligned with Jones’ worldview):Well, I guess that's one way to spin what actually happened.
You cannot make this stuff up.
A 1983 SCOTUS decision laid out a case, and set the parameters for a judicial test to determine if a state can make a law that interferes with existing contracts. They can, provided:Today, he also said he was going to use the legislature to "nullify" the agreements. Correct me if I'm wrong, but isn't that against the US Constitution's contracts clause?
That’s how we end up there againAs a personal policy, I don't entertain Holocaust comparisons. Call me when the gas chambers open.
1. It wouldA 1983 SCOTUS decision laid out a case wherein a state can make a law that interferes with existing contracts, provided it:
Source: https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/459/400/
- Does not substantially interfere with the rights of the contracting party
- The state has a legitimate and significant interest
- The law is reasonably related to furthering this interest
In my humble opinion, not really an open and shut case, but I'll let the lawyers on this site weigh in with their take.
Court dismissed. Bring in the dancing lobsters!1. It would
2. They don’t
3. It’s not
Yeah, um….can revenge against a company that spoke out against the Governor be the state’s legitimate and significant interest?A 1983 SCOTUS decision laid out a case wherein a state can make a law that interferes with existing contracts, provided it:
Source: https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/459/400/
- Does not substantially interfere with the rights of the contracting party
- The state has a legitimate and significant interest
- The law is reasonably related to furthering this interest
In my humble opinion, this is not really an open and shut case, but I'll let the lawyers on this site weigh in with their take.
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