We have 26 GOP governors. Is there any reason for any red state not to join Texas in this lawsuit? We are a nation of laws. Blue states cannot flout the constitution with impunity. The issue here is much bigger than Donald Trump. Are we a constitutional republic or are we not?
Seventeen states have joined Texas in its lawsuit against MI, WI, PA, GA for unconstitutionally changing election rules thereby negatively impacting voters in all other states.
Seventeen states that have joined Texas in their lawsuit filed with the Supreme Court regarding 2020 election:
Alabama
Arkansas
Florida
Indiana
Kansas
Louisiana
Mississippi
Missouri
Montana
Nebraska
North Dakota
Oklahoma
South Carolina
South Dakota
Tennessee
Utah
West Virginia
2. It's become a favorite retort of many liberals that "there is no evidence of widespread fraud." First of all, nobody is alleging 'widespread fraud.' That is a media concoction. Republicans are alleging highly 'targeted fraud' in specific cities in specific states.
3. On election night, when President Trump was leading in swing states, it was clear where the fraudsters needed to strike surgically to overturn the election. Where is the need for 'widespread fraud' when you have the tools and people in place to surgically do what is needed?
Tax questions about Hunter’s income raise again the question of how he earned it.
Hunter Biden may have wanted to hold 10% for the “big guy,” but did he forget to set aside 37% for Uncle Sam?
2. A tax investigation focused on the Biden family’s highly questionable sources of income may finally force them to answer precisely how such income is generated in the first place. wsj.com/articles/hunte…
3. Exactly one year ago, Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi and six Democrats chairing House committees unveiled their plan to charge President Donald Trump with impeachment articles which did not claim he had committed any crimes.
It is an inspiring story. And a most relevant one for now and going forward. It's my honor to introduce you to Katalin Karico, if you have never heard of her. I hadn't until yesterday.
There is no doubt in my mind she will win a Nobel Prize some day.
2. The pioneering Dr. Katalin Kariko — who fled Communist-run Hungary at 30 for the US in 1985 with $1,200 hidden inside her 2-year-old daughter’s teddy bear — isn’t as powerful or rich as Moderna’s Stéphane Bancel or BioNTech’s Ugur Sahin. Nor has she ever been celebrated.
3. Kariko’s obsessive 40 years of research into synthetic messenger RNA was long thought to be a boring dead-end. She said she was chronically overlooked, scorned, fired, demoted, repeatedly refused government and corporate grants, and threatened with deportation.
2. In this case, I must object. None of the traditional arguments for why a pharmaceutical company should be allowed to price its product based on what the market would bear, as the company has to recoup its R&D costs, and it should be rewarded for risk taking, etc. apply here.
3. Pfizer's total investment, including a hefty premium for risk-taking, on the development of this vaccine was probably no more than $1 billion. Pfizer should be thanked for rising to the occasion and rewarded handsomely for their contribution with something like a 100% profit.
Free speech platform Parler performs well enough to earn hostile media coverage.
Twitter has never been a money machine but Twitter has completely dominated the market it created for 280-character political commentary. Until now.
2. WSJ: Having chosen to use its power to advance a partisan agenda, Twitter seems to have attracted a formidable competitor—so formidable that other media outlets backing Twitter’s agenda are now taking aim at the upstart.
3. WSJ: The upstart is called Parler, founded in 2018 and lately adding millions of users because it promises an open platform. According to Parler’s latest Community Guidelines, published last week:
Texas approached the Supreme Court directly because Article III provides that it is the court of first impression on subjects where it has original jurisdiction, such as disputes between two or more states.
Every state should join Texas in this lawsuit. At least all the red states should. We are a nation of laws. Blue states cannot flout the constitution with impunity. The issue here is much bigger than Donald Trump. Key question is: Are we a constitutional republic or are we not?