N ot enough is being said about ripple effects. We still haven't felt the real fallout from the destructive policies and harebrained leadership we are currently stuck with. The effects have yet to fully ripple. When these policies are announced, we’re all rightly appalled at the immediate headlines. Then, even before the next news cycle, we’re on to the next atrocity before the last one even has time to dry. Outrage fatigue sets in, and we can’t keep up. But the toxic effects of these policies, while easily predicted, tend to happen in slow motion, and over time. Often, they’re not even perceptible, except through statistics. When the head of the Bureau of Labor Statistics was fired last month for publishing employment numbers that reflected reality, as opposed to Trump’s fantasies, it was clearly a ripple effect of terrible policies, and Trump didn’t like it at all. Whether they ripple through the economy, the environment, the legal system, the healthcar...
Even if all your knowledge of criminal law was learned, not in law school, or even in high school, but by watching reruns of Law & Order , you would still have a better understanding of the basics than, it appears, anyone in the higher levels of the Justice Department. You would, at least, be somewhat familiar with concepts like “probable cause” and “reasonable doubt,” which is more than it seems we can say for U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro. Pirro, known more for her boozy lies on Fox News, seems to have forgotten much about the law since first being admitted to the bar, pun intended. Fortunately, there are judges willing to throw out her slipshod, outrageously political cases, which have seen a number of D.C. residents tossed in jail for the most specious of reasons. All so that Trump — as well as Pam Bondi, Stephen Miller, Kash Patel, and Pirro herself — can show the deluded base how effective they are at fighting crime in the supposedly blighted streets...