If I understand correctly, it means that the three letter agencies are not allowed to make laws and regulations. If I have it wrong, please help me understand it because this one is new to me.
You got it basically right.
Down with the EPA, down with the ATF and their egregious 'laws'. We seem to be getting our country back, one small step at a time.
It limits them back to what they were before the Chevron decision. The "Chevron Doctrine" held that agencies could interpret laws and enforce them and courts had to let them do it. It massively expanded the power of the agencies and nothing could be done about it.
I expect this to bring on some lawsuits against the EPA in particular because they have gotten so bad about dictating things and getting away with it.
This also is a step in requiring that Congress get back to doing its job rather than punting to agencies.
I have no problem denying non elected .gov employees the ability to make and enforce regulations. In the meantime, a lot of damage has been done to us, for which we will receive no compensation.
and many regulations have not been overturned where this decision applies. It will take challenges to them with this SCOTUS ruling recognized as a precedent for them to be addressed ... all the while Congress critters will be trying to tack little amendments to various bills to return t the current status quo.
This might be the most important SCOTUS decision of our lifetime.
Quote from: Michael Bush on July 01, 2024, 05:37:44 AM
This might be the most important SCOTUS decision of our lifetime.
If it?s fully exercised, it is. The leftists are crying hard over on Reddit. The whole world is going to end.