So I've seen a few hysterical people across the internet freaking out about Trump firing the acting-Attorney General, saying that he's tearing down the separation of powers, the checks and balances, etc.
Am I mistaken in thinking that the AG is answerable to the executive branch, not the judicial branch? I thought the Supreme Court was the one to watch as far as judicial went, not the AG.
Nah, that's pretty much it. AG's just the head of the DoJ, which is an executive branch department and by extension mostly under the president's jurisdiction. Doesn't strictly speaking have anything to do with judiciary anything, nor much to do with checks and balances.
Probably just folks getting confused by the name of the title and assuming it's not executive branch stuff, tbh.
That seems to be happening a lot of these days. People read headlines and assume that they have enough information to both provide their own commentary and to spread it further. It's like a rumor-mill, except a thousand-times faster. Terrifying.
So here's where this leaves the hypothesis that Trump's administration is more competent than it appears:
He's clearing house with questionably-legal pronouncements, finding people (such as the previous AG) who won't be his enforcers, or might leak information. These people are then systematically removed.
Okay, I don't go further than that, because here's a problem with that conspiracy theory: those people in question were already temporary holdovers from Obama administration, and in fact, the AG in question was due to be relieved of duty by
tomorrow.
Starting today, he will start stocking the Supco. His appointees will be those he has leverage over. Expect at least one more justice to die of "natural causes," such as polonium poisoning.
Once he has a foundation in the supreme court, then he sets to work with the serious business of screwing the entire nation.
What if he doesn't do that, what conclusion would you make?
The main way we can resist is to ensure that local areas won't work with the feds. We still have two years before we even have a chance to clear his legislative support.
The general problem with that approach is that the "feds" have full control over the army and have all legal rights to invade a rebellious province and subjugate it. Well, maybe not exactly "full legal rights", but, well, CIA torture prisons.