From the right: Supremes Slap SWAT Stupidity
The Supreme Court just unanimously opened the door for âinnocent injured parties to hold federal law enforcement officers accountable,â notes the Washington Examinerâs editorial board.
In 2017, a SWAT team led by an FBI special agent raided the wrong Atlanta house, but a lower court tossed the homeownersâ lawsuit. Huh?
âThe Federal Tort Claims Act was amended in 1974 specifically to allowâ for compensation in such cases.
The 11th Circuit had âheld that unless a source of federal law âspecifically prescribesâ a course of conduct,â any âofficial act is immune from suitâ; now the Supremes have ârejected that test,â demanding âa rule that is more in spirit with the 1974 amendments.â
Libertarian: DOGE Cuts Inspire Innovation
âDownsizing pushed the Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau to adopt tech solutions that it could have tried years ago,â cheers C. Jarrett Dieterle at Reason.
DOGE cuts are âclearly forcing agencies to think more creatively and to explore new ideas for increasing efficiency and cutting costs.â
Look at the agency tasked with approving labels on cans and bottles of alcohol: âThe TTB is exploring the use of artificial intelligence (AI) to help with the label review and approval process,â though âbefore the staff reductions, it does not appear to have been on the agencyâs radar.â
Plus: The pre-DOGE TTB had expanded its own brief âto police the naming protocols of orange-tinted Pinot Grigio. If downsizing is what it takes to pull Washington back from that sort of micromanagement, we need more of it.â
Mideast beat: Jewish State Here To Stay
âThe meaning of [Israelâs] attack on Iran is unmistakable,â argues Commentaryâs John Podhoretz: âIsrael will not allow itself to be wiped off the earth.â
Rather, âit will thrive, as successful nations that defend themselves from evil and prevail in the wake of it always thrive.â
Indeed, itâs proof âIsrael is now a realityâ â it has âlegitimized itselfâ â and will âendure, as the Jewish people have endured.â
âThe sheer scale of the first nightâs sorties and attacks leaves one breathless,â indeed âmute at the audacity of the planning and the magnificence (thus far) of the execution. And one wonders, yet again, if what is happening here is once more a sign not just of Israel finding its own salvation in Jewish self-rule â but of Godâs providence.â
Israeli opposition leader: A Nation United
âPrime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is my political rival,â Israeli opposition leader Yair Lapid concedes at The Jerusalem Post, âbut his decision to strike Iran at this moment in time is the right one. The whole country is united in this moment, when faced with an enemy sworn to our destruction, nothing will divide us.â
Fact is, âthe Iranian regime has repeatedly said, without hesitation and without shame, that its ultimate goal is the destruction of the State of Israel,â and its actions such as funding âterror organizations that do everything they can to murder Jews in Israel and abroadâ bear that out.
âIsrael isnât interested in destroying Iranâ; âwe went to war for the only reason that justifies war â we had no choice. A nuclear Iran would have been an existential threat to the State of Israel. Iran cannot be a nuclear state. Not now. Not ever.â
Economist: Fed Owns Far Too Much US Debt
The Federal Reserve âhas become the largest single holder of U.S. national debt,â frets Judy Shelton at The Wall Street Journal.
It now âowns $4.2 trillion in U.S. government debt in the form of Treasury bills, notes and bonds,â estimated to hit â$9.9 trillion in 2035 â more than double todayâs amount.â
Yet âthe central bank owned less than $500 billion in Treasurys before the 2008 global financial crisisâ and Fed chief Jerome Powell in 2019 vowed to reduce the size of that portfolio.
âThe ramifications of the nationâs compromised debt funding raise disturbing questions about the commingling of government functions.â
One way out: âCongress could rescind the Fedâs authority to pay interest on reserve balances, which was granted in October 2008 as part of an emergency packageâ to push the central bank back toward traditional operations.
â Compiled by The Post Editorial Board