Legal AF by MeidasTouch - Trump Under Investigation, Obamacare Saved, and the #RetireBreyer Movement
Episode Date: June 20, 2021On a “Baker’s Dozen” Episode of LegalAF (#LAF), MeidasTouch’s Sunday law and politics podcast, hosts MT founder and civil rights lawyer, Ben Meiselas and national trial lawyer and strategist, ...Michael Popok, first explore the House Judiciary's decision to open an investigation into the Former’s misuse of subpoena power against the media, Apple, and Democratic leaders. Next up, the Legal AF analysts drill down on 3 new SCOTUS decisions: (1) 9-0, affecting LGBTQ+ foster parent rights, (2) 8-1, addressing child slavery lawsuits against Nestlé under the Alien Tort Statute of 1789 (ATS); and (3) a 7-2 decision crafted by Justice Breyer confirming the constitutionality of Obamacare once and for all. Speaking of Breyer, Ben and Michael give their views on the growing #RetireBreyer movement seeking to have him step down before the midterms to given Biden a guaranteed SCOTUS pick. Walrus-alert: Ben and Popok discuss the DOJ’s decision to end both the criminal and civil cases against former National Security Advisor John Bolton for publishing a memoir which the Former did not like. Easter egg alert: Popok slips in a Hamilton: The Musical reference. Rounding out the podcast, the Analysis Friends discuss Biden’s decision to protect transgender and gay students under Title IX from discrimination and retaliation in higher education in response to 20 states attempting to ban transgender students from competing in sport. And no #LAF pod would be complete without Ben and Popok discussing some gun-toting political candidate, in this case the white St. Louis Republican attorneys who brandished guns and AR-15s when peaceful #BLM protestors marched past their wealthy enclave, and the husband’s decision to now run for the US Senate. Finally, and for added fun, Ben, perhaps listening too intently to a “supersonic dog siren,” forgets momentarily just which legal podcast he is actually hosting, prompting Popok to ask if Ben’s law partner (and host of another legal podcast) is renting space in Ben’s head. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to the Midas Touch podcast legal AFBA stands for Analysis in the F stands for friends
Ben Myceles of Garagos and Garagos joined by Michael Popak of Zupano Patricius and Popak
Michael Popak.
How are you doing this weekend?
I am doing terrific. We're recording from a remote location again. Popock on the move.
We are coast to coast, cover to cover with all the legal info fit to podcast.
I love it. And Popock, you know, there is a little bit of an internal feud brewing, you know, my law partner, Mark
Erer goes who clearly listens to the legal AF podcast.
He threw in a little line the other day, which he said to me in connection with the very
positive result he did on one of our cases.
He made a comment.
He goes, so next time, Ben, you say that legal AF is the number
one podcast. You may want to think again, because Mark is the host of the reasonable doubt,
legal podcast. And I think Mark was taking it a little, a little to heart that we're
saying we're the number one legal podcast in the country.
So I'm competitive. I'm going to have bread when he does the edit.
If Mark doesn't do a promo for legal AF in his podcast,
we're going to blur out what you just said
about reasonable doubt.
There's no doubt you should listen to reasonable doubt
podcast.
My hope is that Mark is reasonable doubt podcast.
We'll tell listeners to come here as well.
You know, it's an interesting dynamic over at reasonable doubt podcast because you have Mark who
is a lifelong liberal, although his views don't always necessarily align there, but he's been a big
Democratic donor, big supporter, as far as I've always known, Mark. But he does it with Adam
Corolla, who has different views
and where they agree or disagree on certain issues
is interesting and it's always an interesting legal discussion.
But that's reasonable doubt podcast.
We are legal AF.
We are unabashedly Democrats on this show.
Popock and me, we tend to agree on most issues.
Sometimes we disagree on things, but
ultimately our sides probe democracy. So there's really not a lot to disagree with and talking
about pro democracy. Popo, let's get right into it with an update from what we talked
about on the last podcast as we now start to learn about more illegality and secret subpoenas being
issued by the Trump DOJ.
Of course, we told our listeners, he really shouldn't call the DOJ by the name of a president
because it's supposed to be independent and pursue independent investigations.
But when it comes to the Trump DOJ, the name is apt because Trump used
it to attack his political opponents. And of course, we learned that secret subpoenas were issued
with respect to media targets and to congressional targets, political enemies. Let's just be clear what it is of Donald Trump. And now with the DOJ being independent with Biden as president,
there is an inspector general investigation going on
an internal investigation, in other words,
there's also a house investigation going on now
with the House Judiciary Committee.
And then there's a question if the Senate will be doing an investigation, but the Senate
is being blocked by Mitch McConnell.
No surprise there.
Polpok, what's going on here?
Yeah, I think you just laid out all of the different places that this is going to end
up in that we're going to be talking about. Cherry Nadler, who heads the committee that's important here looking at the judiciary,
has decided that he has the right as the chair of that committee, controlled by the Democrats,
to open up an investigation as to the use by Trump of what we refer to as an enemy's list
the use by Trump of what we refer to as an enemy's list in an exonian fashion to go after
Apple, New York Times, Huff Poe, Washington Post, even his own lawyer. We've also seen Donald McGand has been his records were secretly subpoenaed along with his family.
And to find out if that was done in a way that only despots use that power, which is to try to attack enemies
in the dark, in secret. Look, let me make it clear for our listeners. Presidents have
used the subpoena power in the past, even Democrat ones, to go after certain people. They have.
It's just the way that Trump did it and has done it.
And clearly only going against people that got under his skin
or that he thought leaked information
or that he thought were anti-America first
or whatever his doctrine was.
Fascism, I think his doctrine ultimately was fascism and going after enemies.
And the American first bullshit was all about how do we support white supremacy?
That's what that was about.
Well, and he took the term America first from white supremacist in the 1920s, the 1930s that used it
in marches and all sorts of really anti-American approaches.
But the question has gotta be,
if this president, ex-president, went against Eric Swalwell,
I know has been a guest on the Midas Touch show.
Adam Schiff, the House Intelligence Committee member.
Bar and sessions are gonna be called
before Nadler's committee, the
Judiciary Committee to testify, whether they do or they don't. And I'm sure at the end
of the day, they're going to give some sort of testimony, or they're going to be subpoenaed
by that committee and compelled to get testimony about what really went down at the end of
the day. And of course, that's in the House, as you
alluded to, in the Senate, Mitch McConnell, without hearing a bit of evidence, has already
drawn a line in the sand and said, oh, I don't think we should have a House investigation.
There's enough investigation going on. Let's let the DOJ do its thing with its inspector
general and Merrick Garland's already come out as the attorney general and said he's going to get to the bottom of it.
Why do we need the house doing it?
It'll just be politicized because that's why the House has a committee that's called the
House Judiciary Committee and this is part of their jurisdiction.
And back to what you and I have talked about really, now we're in episode 13.
I think it's been a thread that's just been run through all the episodes.
This democracy has to reestablish the guardrails that the last president trampled over. Biden
talks about build back better, we got to build back better constitutional guardrails and
other protections so that this never happens again. Not that I'm worried about Trump getting
reelected. I think the chance of that happening is about as high as you would have been coming to the next vote.
But there'll be another egomaniac dictator, fascist,
that says, we'll look, look at the Trump playbook.
Let's go even further.
And we can't allow that to happen.
We've got to reclaim our democracy
and all of the institutional guardrails, checks and balances that were once in place that got ignored
by a feckless congress and a president who was out of control.
No doubt about that and let's break down these three
different places where these investigations are
emanating from and let's start with when we talk about an inspector general and people hear these words office of inspector general
that's basically a generic term that's used for the oversight division of different federal or state agencies in these case
federal agencies that are supposed to be kind of independent but embedded in the agency to investigate wrongdoing within the entity itself.
And so one of the things, though, that happened during the Trump administration was that there was
a purge of inspector generals generally. And so it was incredibly dangerous. And one of the
And so it was incredibly dangerous. And one of the elements when we talk about Trump's fascist tendencies are really his full
embrace of fascists.
And the types of things that he was doing to dismantle democratic institutions.
Well, there is this historical precedent of having inspector generals call out internal
wrongdoing.
And look, these individuals, because they worked
at executive branches, they still ultimately served at the request of the president who
could fire them at the end of the day. But presidents would endure usually fire, fire,
inspector generals, unless they went totally rogue and engaged in misconduct. Trump would
fire all of these inspector generals or a ton of inspector generals, simply for doing
what they were supposed to do, which was investigating wrong, doing so there's a litany of inspector
generals from the secretary from the state secretary to this department secretary of state
secretary general being fired. And there's a whole long list of state department general's,
other inspect generals being fired by the Trump administration.
Popak, I mean, that's not normal conduct, is it?
No, no, last time we saw something like that was again,
not to keep harping back up Nixon, but it was Nixon and all of his midnight
firings and midnight raids when Justice
Department and Inspector General's to wouldn't do is bidding.
It is a scary moment.
It was really the canary and the coal mine moment for me when Trump started to fire people
in the office of the Inspector General and at these various departments because they are
the watchdogs and you're right.
No president before Trump would have the temerity
or the brass to start firing the very watchdogs
who are installed to oversee and make sure
and root out corruption.
But this, again, he knew new boundaries,
and we now have to you and I,
you're our audience, the Midas mighty, and
all people that love liberal democracy and want to see it resuscitated under this administration.
Have to reinstall and strengthen one of the things Biden should be doing if he hasn't
done it already is by executive order or otherwise. And the power of the budget is to make these inspector generals more
robust, more muscular, give them more money in order to hold people in power accountable.
And Biden doesn't appear to me to be somebody that is scared of doing that.
He's willing to have his own feet held to the fire.
But for me, when that first happened, Ben, I was like, oh, that was like an oh moment for me.
He's on the one hand, he's calling the press the enemy of the people.
And on the other hand, he's firing all of the internal watchdog inspectors,
internal investigators against his administration.
And so that's the inspector generals. We then have in the House, the House Judiciary Committee, which is chaired by Chairman Gerald
Nadler, Congressman Nadler, and because of the composition of the House, it's not like
an evenly split situation that you have in the Senate.
So, Chairman Nadler, Congressman Nadler, you know, could start issuing subpoenas and could
start probing and conducting
this investigation. And that is what's beginning to take place there. And then in the Senate,
though, where we have this split, you would need the support of at least based on the rules.
One, Republican, that's part of this judiciary committee to start authorizing that there be subpoenas
that there start being this investigation.
And it shouldn't shock us knowing what we know.
This was a group of Republicans that blocked
an investigation into the insurrection
against our democracy.
So it shouldn't be shocking that the center Republicans are
moving to block the inquiry into Trump's Department of Justice's data seizure. And yet again,
it's just as a lawyer, as a student of the law, as a practitioner, it's just so disconcerting to see people who are so accomplished, you know, in title, you know, maybe not in actual
practice, though, who are supposed to be moving the law forward, with basic things such as potential
illegal subpoenas. We're not even asking them to cast judgment.
We're asking them at the very least, utilize the powers that you have.
One of your main mandates when you're in the Senate is to conduct investigations, to
have oversight, to have hearings, and to totally just discard that on issues like unlawful
data searches, investigating the insurrection,
it's just disturbing as a lawyer.
Yeah, yeah, with Oc, the days of senators taking their job as statesmen and not their politics
and their party first are over.
Whether we ever recover from that, I don't know.
But if you go back in time in the 70s and 80s,
Republicans and Democrats often cross the aisle.
Yeah, Daniel Patrick Moynihan, you had Tipo Neal,
you had other statesmen that joined together
in gangs of 10 or 15 or 20 or 30
and just past policy that was appropriate for the good
of the country.
It's over.
The Senate in the hands of McConnell is just an organ of the GOP.
It's just an extension of the GOP.
It's completely symmetrical.
There's no gap.
You think, well, not allow their party to do anything, the senators to do anything that they
think has a political consequence that's against their ability to, in this case, win the
midterms in 2024.
But for people that are new to politics and new to litigated politics the way you and I
talk about it, go back in history. There were there were times in recent
history where people shed and put aside their partisan politics and ruled for the good of the
country. We just have not seen that in the last 10 years. Yeah, moving to article three to our
judicial branch, I want to talk about some Supreme Court rulings, Popeye. I want to
begin by talking about this case involving a Philly Foster care case. The case, I believe,
is called, was it it's Fulton. And it's a unanimous ruling that didn't seem, it did support the right of an organization
under the guise of its kind of religious mandates, I mean frankly to discriminate in the selection and foster care by excluding LGBTQ parents from adopting children.
And there was a unanimous decision
that was reached by the Supreme Court.
And we talked about in past episodes how rare it is
for there to be unanimous decisions.
But ultimately, you know, citing with the first amendment and the free exercise
clause therein, which protects a person's right, to freely exercise their religion.
And the Supreme Court here case Philadelphia that this was discrimination
against LGBTQ plus parents.
So how does this happen, Popa?
How is it unanimous?
I mean, we're even though we've talked about the court being split six, you know, at
this point, six three with six being Republican appointees, three being Democratic appointees, or have become
essentially Democratic appointees. How does this happen? It happened because Chief Justice
Roberts, who wrote the opinion, wanted to find a way to get a majority, in this case, a unanimous
decision, on the most narrow grounds he could think of without touching the third
rail of the precedent from 1990 of employment division versus Smith. In that case, which
is still the law and has not been overturned by this new case, if a law is found to be neutral
and generally applicable on its face, there won't be religious exceptions.
Roberts was worried about the court, frankly, the way you and I are worried about the court,
in the hands of corsage, county barrett, and cabanol, and Alito and Thomas, that they would
find a way, you know, mischief would be made, and they'd find a way to use this case to
attack a private division versus Smith. I think fearing that and not wanting to
overturn that precedent which would have dire consequences for
the LGBTQ community and others. He found a narrow path and the narrow path is
a little hyper technical and let me see if I can describe it.
The city of Philadelphia has an anti-discrimination set of laws on its books.
The question in the case was whether the anti-discrimination laws somehow would fit under the employment division versus to Smith, but he didn't want to touch that. So he looked to an exception that was in the text of the Philadelphia local law.
It gave the city the right to grant exceptions to the anti-discrimination law on its books,
the municipal law on its books.
And what Roberts tried to do is say, since you have this discriminatory exception, we're going to find that since
you reserve for yourself that power, that that violates the First Amendment and the Free
Exercise provision.
And he got all of the justices to join on that.
I think the liberal justices were afraid that if they didn't join in on that, and you and I don't know it was going
on behind the scenes in caucuses and conferences and other opinions that might have been circulated
and draft. And I'm sure Alito was circulating something in draft that was much more dire to the
gay community and the LGBTQ community. And so I think it I'm guessing, I think it's scared the
crap out of some of the liberal justices and they said all right, this is the way we're going to uphold or find
that law actually violates the person. Okay, I'll sign on to that because they're afraid
of what would have happened had a clone of another way. So that's why on its face all
the headlines were like below the LGBTQ foster community, terrible case 90, but when you really look under the hood,
I think it was a way for Roberts not to have this be as devastating as people have suggested that it is.
Which is interesting because it still fairly is devastating. I mean, there are
440,000 children who are in foster care right now across the United States,
who are looking for a home.
And basically what this religious institution was saying
is that even though these children need and want
to find a home where they could be loved,
that's simply because someone is a member
of the LGBTQ plus community, that they don't have the right,
because the religious expression gives the religious group the right to discriminate
on religious grounds against the LGBTQ plus community. And I get that there was a nuanced
analysis here that didn't attack the right to discriminate
but attack more surgically, the underlying law, and whether it was a neutral law or not
a neutral law in terms of its effect.
But at the end of the day, what it does, like when you really break it down, are kids who
deserve to be in a loving family aren't kids who deserve to be in a loving family
aren't going to get to be in a loving family.
And what was saved here was, I guess,
an overall view of allowing just straight up discrimination
to take place at Brunppen.
Well, I'll do it in two ways.
What I totally agree with you.
It is no doubt that in the city of Philadelphia,
the city of brotherly love that Catholic members
of the LGBTQ community are not going to be able to go
to Catholic social services and foster care child.
That is the impact of what just happened.
However, I believe that there is a way
for the city of Philadelphia.
I don't know, I don't know, the city of Philadelphia. I don't know,
I don't know its current government. I don't know who's in control there. It's usually
Democrat. I think they could probably fix their law and their anti-disclute, their local
anti-discrimination law now being given the guidance from the Supreme Court and find a way to
thread the needle. Remove the discretion from the anti-discrimination law.
Don't allow any exceptions.
And they might be able to,
we might be back up two years from now
talking about Catholic services versus Philadelphia, part two.
And it's interesting as we talk about
some of the nuance here.
Sometimes the Supreme Court,
well, it's important to know this about the Supreme Court.
The Supreme Court doesn't hear cases
and hear evidence for the first time.
They, the only evidence that ever comes before them
is evidence that is put before the trial court.
You know, in this case, it's a district court.
In some cases, you know, you could hear a case
at a state court level that may conflict
with a federal law at some point,
but you're utilizing the evidence that's developed
at the underlying trial court level.
And sometimes the Supreme Court does not necessarily want
to address every aspect of the case.
And sometimes the Supreme Court can find in a very surgical way, very narrow ways to dispose
of a case or to address certain aspects of a case.
There are entire cases that could be based on some
complex dispute that takes place, right? But all the Supreme Court really cares about is
a very narrow, maybe jurisdictional issue. They don't care who's even necessarily right
or wrong in the underlying dispute with two people who may be going at it or two groups
or multiple groups
suing each other. And the Supreme Court at a very scalpel level may say, look, the one issue
we want to address here is the issue of standing. And we're going to talk about that in a
little bit too. But I want to talk about just kind of one of those examples as well, which
was a jurisdictional issue that dealt with a topic that is incredibly distressing, incredibly,
it forces us to grapple with
kind of just multinational corporations
and what their responsibilities are,
especially American multinational corporations.
I remember when this case was filed, Popak, it was this case against Nestle also against
Cargill, but Nestle is what stood out because obviously we know all the Nestle candies and
chocolate bars and all the things that, you know, that's Nestle.
But the accusation was these lawsuits against Nestle for supporting slavery, supporting slave labor in foreign countries by importing those products
here and facilitating basically slave trade.
I never thought we would say next on legal AF, child slavery, pro-orcon.
And at the end of the day, you can all be it, everybody should be against child slavery.
But at the end of the day, the headline though reads, Supreme Court throws out child
slavery lawsuit against Nestle.
But when you really dig into what the Supreme Court here did, and what was going on in
the courts below, the issue was really a jurisdictional
issue. And could American companies be sued in America because of certain dealings that
they have internationally? And this happens a lot. And there are times of course, where American companies that interact internationally that are based
in America can be sued here.
You know, here, the plaintiffs, though, were the victims ultimately of slave labor.
They were the slaves of the family of the slaves who were abroad, and they were coming into
American courts, not in their own jurisdiction,
but suing the American corporations, Nestle and others here.
And it was interesting, Popat, because I believe before this reached the Supreme Court,
and correct me if I'm wrong, I thought that the Court of Appeals was saying that there
may be an angle based on the your ninth circuit
you're not here at California. You're ninth circuit allowed the case to continue and
didn't have a problem with standing but but but I don't want to interrupt your thought.
Yeah, but then the Supreme Court ruled eight one. Again, another opinion, this wasn't
unanimous, but another eight, another opinion where the court seemed to
reach a significant supermajority or exceeding a supermajority consensus, that
this lawsuit should not proceed. So Popeye, what happened in this case?
Yeah, this case has a lot of interesting objects going on. We'll talk about
the eight one, we'll talk about who wrote the majority decision, and we're going to give our Get Ready Legal AF law students. We're going to
be talking about the alien tort statute, the ATS from 1789, which is what was at issue here.
So this was the plaintiffs were a group originally, their adults now, but they originally were
originally, their adults now, but they originally were child slave labor in West Africa, in Mali,
who were employed, no, that's the wrong word, enslaved by manufacturers and growers that traced their self back to Nestle, and that lawsuit argued that Nestle and Cargill, which is another big business, had control over decision making
and knew or should have known the child slave labor in West Africa was being used for their
ultimate product and the delivery of their product.
And so that all sounds terrible.
Like why isn't that a lawsuit?
And it probably is or is in West Africa.
Question is, can that lawsuit, even though the U.S. companies,
these multinational companies
based the U.S. like Nestle?
Whether that can be brought into
a federal court here in the United States,
and the hook, the jurisdictional hook
that the plaintiffs tried to use
was the alien tort statue,
which it has been used successfully for atrocities and violations
of international law forever.
There are many individuals and governments that are brought to task here in the United
States, foreign governments, foreign agents, military officers, and the others who committed torture,
slavery, and other atrocities on the international level, offending international sensibility,
and various foreign treaties and international treaties who were then hailed into court in the United
States and under what's called the ATS, that's okay.
But the Supreme Court has, and a number of decisions over the last 20 years, put limits
on which defendants can be brought into a court here in the United States.
And this case now stands for the proposition that a US company, a US corporation or company, cannot be sued under the alien tort statute,
or the ATS, even if all those facts are true,
you can't sue them here in the United States.
They already ruled three years ago
that you can't use the ATS to sue a foreign company,
a foreign company in the United States under that.
So what are you left with? Well, you're left with military officers, people that tortured,
individual, individuals acting under color of law,
rogue governments, they can still all be sued. So it has that sort of very narrow,
but you're right, very narrow basis. The ninth circuit and the lower courts let this case proceed all the way up.
And this Supreme Court said, you know what, you shouldn't have done that.
That case should have been ended at the trial level on a motion to dismiss.
And the other optic that I referenced before is, and I'll just throw it out there.
Not only is it eight to one, but Thomas is writing the decision.
So I mean, I don't know why Thomas to 1, but Thomas is writing the decision. So, I mean, I don't
know why Thomas was picked, but it is strange. We have a West African set of plaintiffs, and
you have really the only black justice writing the decision. So, many signals are being
sent here, many optics are being established for a decision that on its face, as you said,
looks incredibly bad and almost pro child slavery.
Yeah, and to be fair and to be clear, you know, Nestle has denied the underlying allegations.
But obviously, you know, from those who have studied the region and are aware of the
seriousness and severity of the problem, it is clearly something systemic
that takes place and whether there's that correlation with Nestle or not, Nestle did
dispute it.
But one of the things we see with these Supreme Court rulings also are conceptually
recognizing that if you allowed this lawsuit to proceed, then what would follow it?
And if you play it to some of its logical conclusions,
everything that's made, whether it's a car,
whether it's a building, no matter what the type of product is,
it comes from various elements across the globe
in an increasingly flat world where all of our economies are interconnected.
And so the question that could arise though is if a certain company in America brings in,
let's just use the car example. If Ford needing certain
types of rubber for its tire, has to get certain things from an area that may be engaged
in this conduct, would Ford be sued? And would you have lawsuits that are rampant? Now,
there are ways to deal with this and there are common sense limitations that could be played.
So one of the questions are, should our judiciary be drawing these bright lines?
But I definitely think that these are considerations that are made when these rulings are made
and they're not made in a vacuum.
Moving from that lawsuit and that Supreme Court decision to one that I was certainly incredibly happy with the result, and I have to admit, I had no clue what the Supreme Court was going
to do here.
And I tend to think the worst whenever there's an Obamacare challenge in front of this Supreme
Court, but in a recent decision, Obamacare survived yet another challenge with the Supreme
Court rejecting the latest GOP lawsuit, and this decision saves insurance for 31 million Americans. And look, when I say rejects the latest
GOP lawsuit, I'm not injecting the partisanship in here just because I'm a Democrat. This was literally a lawsuit that was filed by Republicans and by Republican leadership
trying to utilize when Donald Trump removed penalties associated with the mandate in
Obamacare where these Republican state leaders basically wanted to say, well, now if there's no penalty,
the entire Obamacare should go out the window and pull up. I'll let you break it down with
a little more legal nuance than that. But at the end, at the end of the day, though,
what these Republican leaders were fighting for so hard and what they didn't prevail on
though, is if the Supreme Court ruled the other way,
effective immediately 31 million Americans would have lost their healthcare. That's what, that's, I mean, the havoc that that would create, the chaos that that would create. And it's like,
at the end of the day, come up with your own, if you have a better plan than Obamacare,
which Americans overwhelmingly support and even
Republicans supported, they don't like calling it Obamacare, but overwhelmingly support
the healthcare that they're getting and they're receiving, it's like they've never even
come up with the plan. Remember Trump saying, I'm coming up with my health plan, I'm just
like infrastructure, I'm coming up with my plan, never came up with it, but they wanted
to steal healthcare from 31 million Americans.
Yeah, yeah, but and back before I'd launch into a little bit of analysis on it, back to your point,
I, I don't want to leave the impression that Trump removed the tax mandate and by executive
order, he took it to zero. And that led the Republican governors
that jump up and then it's, ah, ha,
that was all done in coordination.
They convinced Trump that if he with his pen,
if he reduced the mandate,
because they're interpretation of what Roberts had done
to save Obamacare when he was first became
the Chief Justice when Obamah was in office,
that the foundation they believed for all the votes with a linchpin of the case in favor of Obamacare
was that if there was a mandate that people either get insurance or have to pay a tax,
that because the government has the power to tax and as the power through interstate covers
to regulate, therefore there could be a national health care plan like the Affordable Care
Act, which is now known as Obamacare.
And the Republicans became like, biopically focused that if we ever were able to pull that linchpin and take away that mandate, that tax, the whole thing would fall like a house of cards.
They really believed this.
This was the, in the ether, this was in their echo chamber where they got together and
this is the fantasy world of magical thinking that they thought about.
So they got Trump, because he's a stooge for this kind of thing, too, with his pen, eliminate or lower. He couldn't eliminate it completely,
because that he'd have to do by legislation. So he lowered it to zero. So if you didn't get
Obamacare, or you'd be penalized with a zero tax, and that's where the Republican said, aha,
zero tax is no tax at all.
And we have standing back to standing.
We have standing our 20 states to say that Obamacare is constitutionally informed and should
be and should be eliminated.
And the greatest thing that happened because people have listened to you and I and they
know our politics are meshed with our constitutional analysis is is that not only did a public care survive,
but every time it gets challenged,
the vote count in its favor goes up.
We're now up to seven to two before it was like,
hold it on five to four when Roberts came up with it,
you know, back in 08, 09, 10.
Now we're up to seven to two and Coney Barrett,
which is the one that you and I are most worried about.
She was as skeptical as the rest of them, basically back to this narrow grounds that Supreme Court
sometimes like to use to exercise their power.
They said, you know what, you 20 states, if you're being taxed zero, you have no injury.
And if you have no injury, you've come here for at best an advisory opinion and
we don't give out advisory opinions, sorry, there's the door. That was the ruling. And it all turns
on zero, even though zero means no injury. No injury means no lawsuit means no standing and
you're out. So I thought it was a very creative way for the justices to, and Breyer wrote this,
we're going to talk about Breyer in a minute, 82-year-old Justice Breyer wrote the decision.
But he got, look, he got seven to two. I thought Alito's comment was the most telling
because there's no more conservative on that, or I know you hate that term. There's no more right-wing Republican on that bench than Samolino.
And Samolino actually framed it this way.
He said, this was part three of the Obamacare trilogy.
Well, a trilogy suggests that there's only three, and that we're done with them.
So I think even he is put the nail in the coffin signalling to the rest of the kind of right wing nut jobs. Don't come back here attacking Obamacare. It is firmly
enmeshed into our society, the way social security is, the way Medicare is, the way the student
loan program is. People depend on a 10% of America relies on it for their healthcare coverage.
Goodbye. I don't think we're going to see in our reasonable lifetime another Obava Care Challenge.
And look, if at the end of the day, there is a better plan or better proposal out there,
come up with one.
I mean, no one's preventing, nobody prevented Trump from coming up with the plan that he claimed
was better, other than himself
because he's an idiot.
And you're not.
And your administration ended.
We're still waiting for his plan.
Yeah.
And there's one thing you mentioned there, though.
I want to talk about, I want to talk about Justice Stephen Breyer, though, who wrote
that seven to two opinion.
You mentioned that he is 82 years old. He was appointed by Bill Clinton.
And this past week, legal scholars published a letter calling for him to retire and lauding
his work and thanking him for his service. But this comes in response to the fact that
Mitch McConnell says that in the event, the Senate, that the Republicans controlled the Senate pretty
much regardless of time.
He would not allow a vote for any Supreme Court justice that's nominated by President
Biden, which I believe him, you know, at the same time Democrats want to play all nice
and not eliminate the filibuster and play by all of these bizarre
and racist procedural rules that frankly are as Democrats want to pass bipartisan legislation
that's bipartisan for the people.
Republican senators utilizing racist vestiges like filibusters to prevent the will of overwhelming majority of people
on all of these issues that we've discussed from getting passed.
But you have Mitch McConnell saying, look, I will never allow you to nominate a Supreme
Court judge president, even though that's your role.
And even though I sent it, we have an obligation to confirm your nominations, I'm not going
to do that the same way we did it with Obama.
And so because of
Breyer's age and because the current composition right now are six Republican appointees to
three Democratic appointees, the question becomes, God forbid, something happens in there
and there's not a Democratic president in the future, we can't lose another democratic appointee. It's so crucial.
And because Breyer is now 82, let's appoint someone who's young. You know, late 40s, early 50s is
usually the age where someone can sit for many, many, many years. And so, Popo, do you think Stephen Breyer
should retire from the Supreme Court?
Yeah, let me see how I come out on this.
I'm gonna hear it as I say it,
because I'm a little bit of two minds.
I think at the end, I think I am in favor of him retiring,
not because he doesn't do good work.
He does.
He just wrote a tremendous opinion,
which means that he didn't just get picked
to write the opinion to save Obamacare again,
but his force of intellect and his persuasiveness
in the chamber was so effective that he got the votes
and wrote the opinion.
And so that can't be understated.
However, we just went through in our recent
lifetime, Justice Kennedy, Anthony Kennedy, who was Republican or Republican appointed,
but over time became the leading centrist on the Supreme Court. It was known, not as the
Roberts Court, it was known as the Kennedy Court, because even though he was an associate
justice and not the chief justice, he, in all pivotal decisions over a 20-year period,
was in the majority.
So the New York Times often does another online news agencies often do a review at the end
of the year of all the votes that were taken and how the votes were cast and who
cast them. And year after year after year, Kennedy and he reveled in being the centrist
and being the last vote in the important five to four decisions of our lifetime.
And so when he decided to resign, he, he, at the end of the day, even though he's a centrist, he's a Republican.
And so he decided in his 80s or late 70s, early 80s that he was going to give Trump a pick.
So we have a centrist, but believe that he had an obligation more or otherwise to retire,
if he was going to retire, while his party that nominated it was in power, gave
Trump a pick.
That pick became Brett Kavanaugh.
So we went from centrist Kennedy, who I couldn't live with, and you could live with, because
on major issues, he did what was right for the country.
And he's been replaced by Brett Kavanaugh, okay, say no more.
Now we've swung hard right.
My fear, your fear, which is well established.
And McConnell's, like you said, has said, if in 2024, which is only the midterms, it's
not even like the last six months or a year, and he keeps shifting on his doctrine.
His doctrine used to be, I'm not going to allow Marik Garland to become a Supreme Court
Justice, because we're in the last year going into an election of an outgoing president, which
is written nowhere.
Okay, we were like, well, that's effed up, but we'll deal with it.
Then, Cody Barrett came up and Cody Barrett became, oh no, somebody dies six weeks to go
before an election and we're in control of the Senate.
No, no, we're gonna shove that justice through.
So, okay, now he said,
because he's been, anything that he's done
has met with no resistance,
which is a democratic problem, by the way.
He said, okay, now, I'm just announcing right now,
if we take back the Senate in 2024, with two years left
on the clock for Biden, and anybody dies or retires in that period while wearing control,
Biden is not getting a pick, which is unprecedented and unheard of.
So look, he's already drawn that line in the sand, I think as a patriot, I think but Breyer should retire soon
before the midterms and allow Biden to have a pick
to replace him, that's gonna be a left of center justice
because if he doesn't and Biden doesn't get reelected
and the Senate is not in control,
we're gonna have a seven to two right wing panel.
And right now, I mean, the six three
is fairly entrenched where, you know,
for every ruling though that saves Obamacare,
you're going to see, and we've talked about, you know,
in the past, you know going to see, and we've talked about, you know, in the past,
you know, some really, really, really difficult bad rulings to stomach. And we've talked about
what's coming on the horizon. And we talked about the challenges to Roe v Wade. We've talked
about gun legislation. We've talked about a number of issues, which the Supreme Court's not following
their past precedent.
And so we're going to obviously keep you updated
on what's going on there.
But I mean, at some point it's going to become
almost impossible to turn back the time here.
Now, I want to talk about switching gears back
from Article 3.
Now let's go back to the executive branch. Let's talk about
the DOJ, which was the subject of last weekend's legal AF. The DOJ now has dropped its criminal
probe and its civil lawsuit against John Bolton over Bolton's book about Donald Trump.
You know, it was interesting when Bolton was appointed, Bolton was critical of Trump,
but then he seemed to counter to Trump. He was appointed national security adviser. I mean,
Bolton was really a, when I started agreeing with Bolton also on issues, that was kind of one of those moments
too, where you were like, wow, I never thought in a million years there could be such a president
that so fucked up that I'm agreeing with a walrus.
I'm agreeing with John Bolton about, you know, his, about, you know, uncertain political
issues. And Bolton released a book where Bolton was basically saying and confirming everything
that, you know, that we knew that Trump was doing, but to hear someone so inside, someone
so high up saying it, that basically Trump was engaged in quid pro quo, whether it came
to Ukraine, basically everything Trump did was a quid pro quo with
foreign governments to try to keep himself in power, breaking virtually every law.
And Trump turned, as we've talked about in the past, the DOJ into his own law firm, both
criminally trying to have bolted and investigated for leaking on Trump's mind, talking about
state secrets that shouldn't have been in a buck.
Although in my own view, even though the criminal probe piece of it
has come under more scrutiny whether Bolton should or shouldn't have released the information,
Bolton was talking about illegal conduct that the Trump administration was getting into.
To me, there's no state secrets over the president engaged in illegal quid pro quo with foreign
governments.
And then Trump also had his DOJ sue, Bolton civilly, as like a violation of confidentiality.
Well, the new DOJs ended the criminal investigation, ended the civil lawsuit.
What this basically means is that one bolt is not going to be
criminally charged with anything.
Bolton can keep the proceeds as well from the advance and the money he's made from the
book.
But Popeye, what's going on?
No, I think you just hit the nail on the head.
I found the most fascinating thing about Bolton's memoir as he named it after the song in
Hamilton, but Aaron Burr sings, which is the room where it happens.
Aaron Burr famously having shot and killed a president
in an assassination over in We Huck in New Jersey.
So, you know, that title alone should have sent shivers down
the spine of Trump that that was going to be the title of the Memoir.
But, you know, this is more of the cleanup that you and I have talked about
that the Biden presidency and the Department of Justice
is doing, sometimes they're siding with things
if they think they have to about presidential power,
particularly the Trump DOJ, as you referred to it,
was prosecuting those cases.
And but I think, you know, look,
they have a, Mara Garland has a long list of cases
that are still in progress,
that the Trump DOJ commenced.
And he's got to make a decision,
yeah, your name,
whether the Department of Justice
is going to continue it or drop it.
And this is one of those cases
that they were like,
we're dropping these cases,
we are not,
you know, last week we talked about
the Carol defamation case, the better woman who claims that she was sexually assaulted and raped by Trump. And, you know, I know a lot of the our followers and listeners were sort of
troubled by the fact that the Department of Justice is going to maintain that case and argue that
it should be dismissed under eventually under absolute immunity for the president or a president.
But here they've said, you know, what we're not going absolute immunity for the president or a president.
But here they've said, you know what, we're not going after John Bolton, and his memoir
pay out from his publisher.
You know, the, you know, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the,
the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the,
the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the,
the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the,
the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the,
the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, which we'll talk about when we have more time in First Amendment law about prior restraint.
The judge had already allowed the book had been published and distributed. The judge was not
going to stop it or enjoy it from going to the public or continue to be sold on Amazon or
bookstores. So that cat was literally out of the back. So prior, the judge was not going to issue
it's called the prior restraint order, which they almost never do in a media case or first amendment case.
So having said that, you know,
really you're gonna make John Bolton a criminal
because he published truth in his memoir.
It's a terrible place to be up at your right.
I never thought that I would side with,
I always thought he looked like Captain Kangaroo
because I grew up in that era,
but I never thought I'd side with Bolton,
but I, he was totally a patriot when it came to Trump.
He got the hell out of Dodge when the wheels came off. He wrote the memoir. He's along with,
the guy that was the general, the Colonel who was the chief of staff. All those people that
thought, there are going to be books written about a group of people in the cabinet
There are going to be books written about a group of people in the cabinet who thought about exercising the 25th amendment to remove an incompetent president Trump. Those books are going to
start coming off the shelves over the next couple of years because there was enough scuttle but
that they needed a majority of the cabinet to do that. They probably didn't have the majority
of the cabinet, especially a cabinet packed
with all of Trump's buddies and McConnell's wife. But, you know, I think there's going
to be memoirs that they had at least four or five people that were on board to try to
remove Trump before his first term even got started.
And when I talked about calling him a walrus, that actually was an excerpt from the book, the room where
it happened. When questioned about his approach on mitigating climate change on ecosystems,
while Bolton was in the room, Trump remarked, look at Bolton's mustache, every walrus is jealous
of that thing. It looks like a polar bear died on his face. That was actually printed in the book.
That was the president of the United States right there.
Switching gears though from this bolt in walrus gate over to Biden administration, extending title 9 protections to transgender students, Popeye, one of the things that you and I have done together
and separately is we litigate Title IX cases.
If you can briefly maybe explain to our listeners
what Title IX is and with this news that Biden
has extended Title IX protections to trans gender students,
what are the implications of that?
Thanks Ben. Yeah, we have a Title IX case going on right now together. So Title IX was passed in the 70s and protects
athletes, students, anyone that has a connection to a university from discrimination and retaliation.
A lot of times people prefer to it because they're talking about what used to be women's
sports being improperly maligned, not given enough budget, not given equal time with the
men's sports, that's some of that.
But it goes further and it really protects against all discrimination and retaliation in higher education through
the statute that we refer to colloquially as Title IX and Trump as part of his, you know,
terrible nefarious plan to undermine transgender and gay rights in America.
The stroke of his pen did a number of things.
Against transgender rights, one of it was to have Betsy DeVos, who was then the secretary
of education, go through and find ways to effectively not protect transgender individuals from discrimination, retaliation, a population that cries out for
and calls for what I would think would be the most robust protection is now been left
without a net, without a safety net, without a government standing by it under the Trump
administration.
So now the Biden administration has come out and its Secretary of Education, basically being ordered by Biden,
has reestablished that transgender athletes will be protected under Title IX from discrimination
retaliation. And it's not in a vacuum or just an esoteric theory. There are, I think, 20 states
that are currently considering banning primarily transgender girls from competing as females
with other people that were born genetically female in sport.
And so with those on the books, federal government had to do something, what they've done is step
in and it said, no, you can't do that.
If someone's going through gender assignment operations and is transgender, you're going
to have to let that person compete, that girl compete in lacrosse or in track and field or in gymnastics
or whatever the sport is, at least in America, they're going to have to do that.
And so that is an amazing accomplishment.
And one that Republicans like to rub our noses in it when they say elections have consequences,
but when we win, they should also, and we should
go back to the liberal democratic society that we had before Trump got in office. And you and I
have a case that we're doing related to Title Dye that's very important as well.
No, absolutely. And I'm glad that Biden is enacting common sense legislation to protect the
transgender community and education consistent
with the protections afforded in the workplace and the fact that a major piece of the Trump
agenda was to remove that right.
One of the kind of ongoing, you know, dog whistles, you know, or supersonic dog horns, if you will, that the Republican party feeds
in terms of red meat to its base is to use the transgender community and discriminating
against the transgender community as a major focal point of its policies and as a major thing that it stands against.
The Republicans, we talked about,
you know, they stand for taking away your healthcare.
They stand for taking away rights.
You know, and we talked about it before
when it comes to, in the foster care case,
I mean, imagine depriving that the fight is,
how do we deprive a community of children
who could be aligned with a community
of loving and caring parents
from the LGBTQ plus community?
How do we separate them?
Similarly, how do we separate families at the border?
It's all about separation. And that's why I like, you
know, that's why I'm a Democrat at the end of the day, you know, and I hate when Democrats
try to tear each other down. We're the party in our policies of uniting and bringing people
together. And that needs to be ingrained in our DNA also, kind of sticking together and
bringing people together and fighting for people as a political party and not fracturing,
because ultimately what we stand for is, how do we give people human rights? How do we
treat people with dignity? How do we make the law work for everybody? And this is just
one example of that.
Yeah, the Republicans have for national office have always been a wedge politics party.
They have to win on wedge issues, whether it was gay marriage, gays in the military or
or something else. It was always d and now they've converted w
your point because I've been
about how the republicans are
reclaimed the house in the
people are as you can see decisions based on the mid is that. And what the Republicans have latched on to at least at present
is that this is going to be a campaign,
a midterm election campaign about crisis.
Democrats would run on that.
So it's crisis at the border, crisis in foreign policy,
crisis in supply chain, crisis in COVID.
Everything is a crisis.
And then they come in.
This is like the old,
you know, I talk about it in the past, it's like the old firemen who's also an arsonist
starts the fire. And then he comes in and claims, hey, I just saved the, you know, the
family from the burning building. And the Republicans are doing that now. By the way,
to our Republican friends, everything is not a crisis. Well, they create and at the end of the day, they, they, they, it's like the old expression
about throwing mud against the wall and seeing, you know, where it sticks.
Every day they come up with something new, whether it goes from, you know, Dr. Sous,
whether it comes from, I mean, it's, it is.
It's always a contrived, you know, problems that, you know, that,
that they, that they create. But where Democrats have to be, we have to uplift other Democrats.
We have to, we have to make the law work for everybody. And where they take advantage,
where the GQP Republicans take advantage is that Democrats are very unforgiving of other Democrats and
very not about building coalitions.
And so the Republicans can seize on that take advantage of that fracture as they stay together
whereas Democrats need to look at the end of the day, I think that we have to be able to speak to people who may disagree with us.
I think at its core, people want to embrace other people when you get out of one-on-one level
and you start to know people, but we can't always just condemn individuals who may at first not fully embrace our idea.
Anyway, I can go on that Rand forever.
I'll say that for the Midas touch podcast.
But talking about the type of people who are running for office, the type of people who
are going to be representative of who the GQPY Democrats need to stand together.
I'll use the legal side to make my political point here, though,
which is that St. Louis couple, Mark and Patricia McCloskey,
who had the, she had a handgun.
He had what looked like an AR-15 style assault weapon
in front of their home as peaceful protesters.
And that's what it was.
It was peaceful protesters who were walking past their house
on a peaceful march.
These nut jobs took their guns and pointed it
at the peaceful protesters.
Lawyer nut chaps.
They're both lawyers.
Yeah, these are educated lawyers,
brandishing these assault weapons and pointing it at peaceful
protesters who were passing their residence simply because they thought that these people
shouldn't even be in their neighborhoods.
There was no video of them encroaching on the stairs or doing anything that we saw in
January 6th with the insurrection.
These are people walking on the streets as was their constitutional right protesting the
systemic oppression in the wake of the George Floyd murder.
By the way, it was a murder, the police officers were convicted of murder and we had every
right to be mad as hell at the systemic injustices which led to that murder
of George Floyd.
And these individuals, these nut jobs had AR-15s pointed at primarily black protesters.
I looked at these images again in these stories, Popeye.
I mean, these were crazy images of what these McLeovskis were doing, pointing these guns. But at the end of the day, they pled to kind of a nothing misdemeanor.
They had to find that, a turn in their $750 fine or something, that a turn in their weapons
and their weapons got destroyed.
The McLevskis and McLevskis, they wanted to donate.
They are 15s to charity.
They said the judge
wouldn't allow them to donate that to charity in order that those weapons be destroyed.
But you know, the McCloskeys after getting the misdemeanor basically go to the courthouse
steps, they state, I'd do it again. And they try to make a political statement that they
had every right to do that. And by the way, the McCluskey's are people now who are held by the Republican Party
as conquering heroes.
These are the representatives of, these are the face of the GQP 2022 campaign.
The husband filed to run for the US Senate from Missouri.
And he's the leading candidate, you know And he's the leading candidate, you know.
He's the leading candidate.
These are people who are asked to speak at the Republican convention.
These are people who go around the country, who speak as leaders of the Republican Party.
And it's because the image of them pointing guns at black and brown people.
That's what it comes down to.
And that's the imagery of what
Republicans want their base to see. These are the types of people who support.
You can line up, and I know might as touch as, or will, you can line up in any given election
season. How many candidates brandish weapons in their ads? The ads that they at the end, they say,
I approve of this ad.
Line up, and it's more than I care to talk about,
but there are dozens and dozens of campaign ads
that any given election season,
where one of the candidates is brandishing a weapon.
He's firing or she's firing a gun, a handgun.
She's, they're at a gun range.
They're firing an AK-47, they're with a long rifle,
whatever. 99.9% of those candidates are Republican. They think that's their image,
they think that's their brand, it's some sort of cowboy party, and they try to grab for themselves that Western mystique of being the cowboy.
I'm sure none of these people ever have fired a weapon other than for show.
They try to grab the flag, which I found personally offensive as a patriot,
that the Republicans and Trump tried to grab away from me and my patriotic and democratic ideals,
my American flag.
And Democrats have to reclaim that.
We have to reclaim the flag.
And we have to call them out.
Places like Midas Touch has to call out and just show all these crazy ads where people
try to act like they're cowboys and sharpshooters. And at a time when we have 250 mass shootings since the beginning of the year, it is for
me, it is morally bankrupt for a party, such as the Republican party.
And I have my own views in the Second Amendment, which we will talk about here.
Overall, however, we have a party that's morally
bankrupt and has decided that in the face of children being shot, serial killings, mass shootings
and the like, and I think it's appropriate to gin up their base by firing weapons in hands. I mean, it's really disgusting.
We just had a shooting yesterday in New York
where gangladi style, a guy jumped off a scooter,
jumped over to two children on the sidewalk,
two children, to get to the victim
and shoot the victim while he was straddling
the two children with his legs.
Now, fortunately, the children are now psychologically traumatized because there was a gunman standing
over them firing at another human being. But this just happened on the streets of New York.
And at the same time, some idiot in Alaska or Alabama or Georgia or Texas is going to fire a
weapon in their political act.
You know, and because this is this happened
in St. Louis, Missouri,
I mean, it reminds me, you know,
we had a guest on the Midas Touch podcast, Jason Kander,
who was a democratic secretary of state.
Someone whose name has been talked
about as potential future presidential candidates,
they're incredible.
Speaker, he was an incredible guest,
but he talked about how the Republican party thinks
it's patriotic to wrap themselves in the American flag outfits
and then go in with those outfits and commit an insurrection
against our government and claim their patriotic
because they use the flag to destroy our government
and destroy our institutions.
But at the end of the day, it makes a great point there that the law is incredibly important
because if we lose the sensibilities and the protections of our democratic institutions,
what our checks and balances and our system was built on and what our system sought to protect are
the challenges that were confronting. I was buoyed, I was excited, I was nervous, I
a whole host of emotions, but I'm proud that our institutions just barely, just barely held up in the face of total annihilations. But at the end of
the day, our institutions are being battered. You know, the Republicans see our institutions
like the boxer who managed to survive the ninth round, but they're going in to the 10th round
and they see a bruise and battered democracy is what the Republicans see.
And the Republicans see that democracy that's ready to be taken down.
The same way Hitler saw institutions being ready to take down after failed coup attempts
in Germany. That's what,
I mean, I say this in stark and scary terms, but that's how the Republicans are viewing
our democratic institutions because they see that if democratic institutions prevail,
their party, this imagery of white people pulling guns out at black and brown people,
that's not okay, that's not acceptable.
They wanna preserve a world where that is acceptable.
They wanna preserve a world where the Mokoskis
don't get a misdemeanor,
where the Mokoskis are held as heroes.
That's what they are fighting for as a Republican party.
And that's why we fight
every week here on reasonable here on legal AF. I was about to say reasonable. That is not
what they fight for. See marks in my head. That's what we fight for here every day on legal.
Yeah. That's what we fight here every day on, you know, every week on legal A.F. and I'll make this as my way to deal with that.
Fast one. I want to leave no reasonable doubt that our democracy will be safe and secure.
I want to make sure that that is ultimately protected, Popeyes. And so I thank you again for joining
us here. What are you going to say, Popeye? I was going to say Ben Blink, if Mark has made you mention his show so many times on our
show.
Well, you know, I wanted to get the reference of Jason candor.
And as we were talking, I wanted to see who went after Jason candor as the secretary
of state.
And so I have this image on my computer pulled up right now
of J. Ashcroft's face just staring me
on his Wikipedia profile and it's haunting.
And so that will be my excuse for getting where I was
at this exact moment.
Well, let me tell this to our listeners out there as well.
Hope you enjoyed this episode of Legal AF.
And look, there's been a lot of people
who have called Popok and I,
but we've helped out.
I mean, I have a number of clients
that have come from Legal AF who have legal issues.
And people who say whether it was a personal injury,
accident, a catastrophic injury, a wrongful death,
a sexual harassment style case, we've gotten a ton of injury, wrongful death, a sexual harassment style case.
We've gotten a ton of calls, breach of contract, founder cases where founders of corporations
who have been deprived of millions of dollars have called us, but high level, multi-million
dollar big ticket cases.
We've gotten calls from a popo can eye representing people as a result of legal AF and for you calling.
So, you know, you can reach out, you can email Poe Pock and I, we'll get back to you, we always get back to you.
We can't always say we're going to handle your case, that may not be a case that we can handle,
but we'll do our best to look into the issues if there is indeed a case.
And whether it's us or somebody at our firm, so feel free to reach out to me at benatgarragos.com
B-E-N-At-G-R-G-O-S.com and Popeye Woods, your email address for those.
Mine's easy, it's M-Popock P-O-P-O-K, at Z-P, that's Z-ZRAPP, or law.com.
Thank you for listening to this week's Legal AF.
We'll see you same time, same place next week.
If it's Sunday, it's Legal AF.
Shout out to the Midas Mike.
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