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Matt Lashof-Sullivan's avatar

Regarding the "MAJOR QUESTIONS DOCTRINE" paragraph, this is in response to the Supreme Court recently coming up with the "Major Questions Doctrine", whereby it sometimes strikes down rules made under a broad grant of authority because it thinks (in its infinite wisdom) that Congress surely couldn't have intended the authority to be that broad. For example, striking down greenhouse gas regulations on the basis that, despite the Environmental Protection Act authorizing the EPA to regulate pollution, regulating this pollution was kinda too much of a big deal.

This paragraph is just saying, "yeah we did actually intend it to be that broad" - this just means that if the Courts strike down a rule, it would be on any other basis besides "even tho the text of the act expressly allows this rule, it seeks like kinda a big deal so it's not allowed."

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MichaeL Roe's avatar

I can't help wondering if in a real emergency, the US government e,g, fires some missiles into Google's data centres and argues about whether it was legal or not afterwards.

(Look, we had about 3009 ms to shut you down, and sorry, the only way to do it killed a couple of hundred of your staff and did a couple of billion dollars in damage, but there it is)

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