Dan Bongino
π€ SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
emanating from the Supreme Court.
It's not a, wait, how do the justices not see this?
Folks, this is a huge problem.
And we've got a member of the Supreme Court, Kentonji Brown Jackson, who, folks, has the intellect of seriously, like a 20-year-old first-year law school student, if that.
I know I'm moving a little out of order, but just roll me here for a second, guys.
This may be one of the most incredible, and I don't mean that in a good way,
courtroom legal self-owns, S-E-L-F, not cell phone, self-own, you have ever heard.
Here she is in her arguments yesterday, basically stating like, hey, so if you commit a crime here and you're arrested, like somehow that means allegiance to the country and the subject to jurisdiction thereof.
If you're thinking I'm making this up, I am not.
Here is Gitanji Brown-Jackson.
You're not all, many, well, some of you are lawyers.
For those who are not lawyers in the chat, we got a lot of, we got 51,000 people here.
For those of you who are lawyers, sit this one out in the comment section.
For those of us who are not lawyers, does that make sense to you?
That in a courtroom, a Supreme Court justice is making this absurd analogy that because you were arrested in Japan, you somehow have allegiance to Japan?
Oh, my gosh, this this woman, I'm really trying to not be terribly obnoxious and control my language.