The decision empowers judges, yes, but it disempowers federal agency bureaucrats, which is key. You lament that the Left controls the media and has "other sources of power", but their most dominant area of control is the federal bureaucracy. Disempowering that bureaucracy from being legislator, prosecutor, judge, jury, and executioner all rolled into one may limit a few integralists monarchical fantasies, but here in the real world (where such things as Catholic integralism really are just fantasies) it can only help defeat the progressive machine.
I am doubtful that Congress will ever reassert control over the executive branch. The status quo works too well for Congresscritters, who can pontificate in platitudes, legislate in generalities, and disclaim all responsibility for the resulting mess. Therefore, my practical choice is between empowered judges (appointed by the executive) and empowered bureaucrats (answerable to no one). Of these two, I choose Door #1.
Imagine a world where the Department of Education requires local commitment to teaching natural law, virtue, the common good in social and political science courses starting in 3rd grade.
Would a 2nd Trump Administration promote "the family, Christian values, social order"? Given his clear pro choice statements about Florida's 15 week ban, Arizona's abortion laws, and his statements at the debate about choosing from your heart, it is likely that he will do whatever is best for his own interests.
The decision empowers judges, yes, but it disempowers federal agency bureaucrats, which is key. You lament that the Left controls the media and has "other sources of power", but their most dominant area of control is the federal bureaucracy. Disempowering that bureaucracy from being legislator, prosecutor, judge, jury, and executioner all rolled into one may limit a few integralists monarchical fantasies, but here in the real world (where such things as Catholic integralism really are just fantasies) it can only help defeat the progressive machine.
I am doubtful that Congress will ever reassert control over the executive branch. The status quo works too well for Congresscritters, who can pontificate in platitudes, legislate in generalities, and disclaim all responsibility for the resulting mess. Therefore, my practical choice is between empowered judges (appointed by the executive) and empowered bureaucrats (answerable to no one). Of these two, I choose Door #1.
Imagine a world where the Department of Education requires local commitment to teaching natural law, virtue, the common good in social and political science courses starting in 3rd grade.
Chevron is overturned and you're blackpilling?
Would a 2nd Trump Administration promote "the family, Christian values, social order"? Given his clear pro choice statements about Florida's 15 week ban, Arizona's abortion laws, and his statements at the debate about choosing from your heart, it is likely that he will do whatever is best for his own interests.