Comment by madaxe_again

6 months ago

That isn’t how legislation is passed. If anything, it needs a section about acceptable tar shingle application standards for roofs within 6 nautical miles of any heliport operated in a subarctic area on the west cost. Then it’s looking like a bill.

Just last year, Congress snapped to attention and wrote and quickly passed a bill to ban the eminent national security threat of a video-sharing app. That bill doesn't do anything else.

Just a reminder that Congress, even now, can rapidly act on a laser focus when it is sufficiently motivated.

  • Perhaps not the best example to choose given that the president managed to fully ignore that law. Tik-Tok remains unbanned to this day despite there being no sale.

    • It was a perfectly fine example. Nothing in your comment has any relevance to what it's an example of.

    • The President is ignoring a lot of laws of various vintages. That's not generally under the purview of Congress.

  • Is there a good summary of that episode somewhere? I've tried to read up on it as I don't really understand how it was an eminent (imminent?) security threat.

There's a little of this, but more so, you only get one reconciliation bill per year. And anything that's not a reconciliation bill has to be bipartisan.