Doist is very much remote work (and has offices/legal presence in many countries). Global headquarters are in Portugal and CEO lives/works from Italy from what I can tell.
(Founder/CEO was born in Bosnia, grew up in Denmark, started to todoist during college, used a startup incubator in Chile, later moved headquarters to Portugal, gives lots of talks about entrepreneurship in EU)
How do you go on strike against a government if you are not a government employee? And what would it even mean to boycott your own government?
What sorts of direct action do you think could be viable?
So what do you expect anyone to do about it? Sure, journalists can write and write.
All we have is voting and that is off the table until 2026. If it still exists.
I don’t mean to be rude but the call to action of this article is nothing more than “be afraid”. Being afraid doesn’t stop this.
After O’Connor died, there was a discussion on The Political Junkie podcast where they were talking about her autobiography and in particular, about Bush vs Gore and what they were actually thinking about that case. And it had more to do with the whole maze of where things go depending on which contingencies (i.e. what cases happen next between Bush and Gore).
So according to her it was more about the structure of the laws and government than the decision itself. Which I don’t think is something that Cannon is dealing with. Cannons is a trial court judge. The questions at the Supreme Court are more about structure and function of the government.
I thought it was really interesting how Trump is a weird corner case because he’s never held any offices listed. Almost all other presidents have taken the oath prior to being sworn in as president for one of the offices explicitly listed.
Would literally buy an electric VW Beetle at this point for the lulz