Legal AF by MeidasTouch - Legal AF Full Episode - 5/17/2025
Episode Date: May 18, 2025Ben Meiselas & Michael Popok head the top rated Legal AF podcast and tonight debate: The Supreme Court's rulings against the Trump Administration and its assault on Due Process and the Fifth Amendment... and how the Court is fighting back; whether the Court will allow Trump to continue to play "catch me if you can" with his policies, or off a new oral argument put an end to it and give lower court judges the tools they need to stop Trump; Trump ruining American's perfect credit score and its impact on everyone's pocketbook, Trump going after a former FBI director to distract from a failed overseas trip, and so much more at the intersection of law and politics. Support Our Sponsors: Uplift: Elevate your workspace and energize your year with Uplift Desk. Go to https://upliftdesk.com/legalaf for a special offer exclusive to our audience. Sundays for Dogs: Get 40% off your first order of Sundays. Go to https://sundaysfordogs.com/LEGALAF or use code LEGALAF at checkout. Three Day Blinds: For their buy 1 get 1 50% off deal, head to https://3DayBlinds.com/LEGALAF Soul: Go to https://GetSoul.com and use code LEGALAF to get 30% OFF your order! Check Out The Popok Firm: https://thepopokfirm.com/ Subscribe to the NEW Legal AF Substack: https://substack.com/@legalaf Remember to subscribe to ALL the MeidasTouch Network Podcasts: MeidasTouch: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/meidastouch-podcast Legal AF: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/legal-af MissTrial: https://meidasnews.com/tag/miss-trial The PoliticsGirl Podcast: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/the-politicsgirl-podcast The Influence Continuum: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/the-influence-continuum-with-dr-steven-hassan Mea Culpa with Michael Cohen: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/mea-culpa-with-michael-cohen The Weekend Show: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/the-weekend-show Burn the Boats: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/burn-the-boats Majority 54: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/majority-54 Political Beatdown: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/political-beatdown On Democracy with FP Wellman: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/on-democracy-with-fpwellman Uncovered: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/maga-uncovered Coalition of the Sane: https://meidasnews.com/tag/coalition-of-the-sane Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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unconstitutional? What did the Supreme Court actually address? What goes on next? We will
address it all here on Legal AF, but a big seven to two loss by the Trump regime in a
case involving the alien enemies act. I also want to talk about an oral argument that took place in front of the United States
Supreme Court this week as well on the issue of birthright citizenship, but more specifically
on the procedural issue regarding can there be a nationwide injunction blocking Donald
Trump's attempt via an executive order to get
rid of the constitutional right to birthright citizenship framed the way I
just framed it, which is accurately it's a pretty shocking case that it even got
to the Supreme Court, which a number of justices basically looked at the Trump
regime and said, look, y'all keep on losing all of the time in federal courts
across the country.
Is your whole plan to try to stop nationwide injections just because you are losers and you
know that you keep on losing and the nationwide injunctions allow you to be prevented from doing
what you're doing and without nationwide injunctions, you'll basically try to have all
of your loser policies and dangerous policies across the country. you'll basically try to have all of your loser policies
and dangerous policies across the country. We'll talk about that as well. Also, you've
got Donald Trump freaking out about the Supreme Court ruling. You've got Donald Trump welcoming
the Afrikaans, Afrikaners from South Africa. We'll talk about that while also sending other migrants here in the United States out without due process.
Talk about the Trump regime claiming
that the former FBI director took a photo of seashells,
that they view that as a death threat to Donald Trump,
and they're now investigating James Comey.
We'll talk about the MAGA Republicans threatening
to arrest Democratic Congress members.
We'll talk about the America's credit rating,
getting downgraded by Moody's and more.
Let's bring in Michael Popok.
Great to have you there, Popok.
I spent a long week in New York City,
and a lot going on.
Yeah, listen, I gave you a virtual hug before this started.
I'm so proud to be a part of the Midas Touch Network,
to be a part shoulder to shoulder with your brothers.
I'll say it because you won't, well you have,
but Webby's first ever podcast,
podcast of the year for the Midas Brothers podcast.
And then separately, YouTube got around to,
hey, we got a lot of podcasts,
a billion people a day listen or watch podcasts on YouTube.
We should rank and rate them.
And we placed three in the top hundred
in the first weekly ranking.
You might as touch at number five.
Legal AF at number 64,
and a little thing called the PO-POK intersection, which is basically my hot takes on Legal AF, the YouTube channel AF at number 64 and a little thing called the Popak Intersection,
which is basically my hot takes on Legal AF,
the YouTube channel at number 90,
beating out like, Smart List is not there,
Who's Your Daddy is not there,
but we have three for the Midas Touch Network there.
And that's a compliment to our audience.
As we've always joked or only half joked,
it would just be like me and Ben once a week
having a chat over a bagel,
a virtual bagel about politics,
if it wasn't for our dedicated and loyal audience
that vibrates on the same frequency that we do,
and that has joined together with us
in this fellowship of resistance.
We are a channel of action,
and that's what I hope people take away
from a show like ours today.
They get the information they need
in talking truth to each other
in order to go into the streets and put it in to action.
Let's talk about the Supreme Court rule.
Let's just get into it right away, Mike.
The Supreme Court ruling was a seven to two decision.
The Trump regime lost.
This case involves the invocation of the Alien Enemies Act, although the Supreme Court ruling did not get to the merits, right, of whether the Alien Enemies Act was properly invoked or improperly invoked. time. For now, what they were addressing is whether or not an injunction that's already
been in place that the Supreme Court had to issue on an emergency basis, preventing the
next group of victims who are at this Blue Bonnet detention center in Texas, and they're
said to be shipped off to the concentration camp in El Salvador, whether they can be shipped
off or not shipped
off and what process is going to be due to these individuals.
Just to remind everybody, there was that first group of migrant victims, 75, 80% without
a criminal history, who were sent to the concentration camp in El Salvador when the Trump regime
defied an order by Judge Boesberg in Washington, D.C., blocking that from happening.
The Trump regime said, oopsies, too late,
nothing we can do about it.
And then when the Supreme Court said, can you return?
You know, what are you doing here?
Or at least as relates to Abrego Garcia,
you know, can you facilitate, you know, his return?
The response by the Trump regime is,
nope, not in our jurisdiction.
We can't do anything about it. Go ask Naib Buccelli, the authoritarian leader of El Salvador.
So that happened with the first group of migrants. This is a second group of migrants. The Trump
regime wanted to do it again. The lawyers for the migrants who are being temporarily
housed in this horrible detention center
where there's like very little access to the outside world.
You may have seen that drone footage of the Reuters drone
over this blue bonnet detention center in Texas.
Like the migrants formed an SOS with their bodies,
like a distress signal to this drone.
But anyway, they had lawyers who basically said,
hey, they're about to get sent to this concentration camp
as well in El Salvador.
So they filed before a judge in Texas.
And the federal judge in Texas basically took,
and the Supreme Court goes through the history.
It was like over 24 hours doing nothing.
And then, because the judge didn't do anything at all,
then the lawyers were like,
you're basically denying our ability to help our clients.
They went to the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals,
which oversees the Texas federal courts and said,
hey, the federal court hasn't ruled the Fifth Circuit,
which is made up of right-wing justices,
almost exclusively right-wing justices
and Trump appointees, said nothing that we can do.
We don't have jurisdiction because the district court
has not made its ruling yet, so you can't appeal it
unless the district court rules.
So procedurally, there's nothing we can do.
And then the lawyers for these migrants went to the Supreme Court, asked for an emergency
stay or emergency injunction to block these migrants from being sent to El Salvador.
That was a few weeks back.
And the Supreme Court stepped in and said, we're going to, let's pause the status quo.
We're ordering the Trump regime not to send these migrants
to El Salvador pending further proceedings.
Send us briefing, let us know what's going on.
A few weeks past, Popeyes, let me turn it over to you now.
Because now the Supreme Court, a few weeks after,
ordering that these migrants not be sent to El
Salvador, they then finally made their ruling. It's seven to two. Tell us about the ruling.
Yeah. Let me do the quick takeaways since you did a good initial dive in there. No one,
until the United States Supreme Court gets around after the Fifth Circuit does their job,
which they failed to do the first time around and were admonished by the Supreme Court gets around after the Fifth Circuit does their job, which they fail to
do the first time around and were admonished by the Supreme Court in this ruling, until
the Fifth Circuit is done with its appellate briefing, until the case comes back up to
the United States Supreme Court through the normal ordinary channel and probably hits
the court sometime in the new term starting in October.
No one gets deported outside of the United States
in the federal court's jurisdiction,
any federal court's jurisdiction,
until the United States Supreme Court says so.
So, even though they did not rule
on the substance of the Alien Enemies Act
and bent over backwards to tell everybody,
we're not ruling on the substance.
And that is true.
But from now until the next five or six months,
whatever it is, you and I are not gonna have to make a report,
at least under the Alien Enemies Act,
that a person has been removed, deported, expelled,
whatever you wanna call it, to a foreign prison
outside of the federal jurisdiction of a judge.
We may do reporting, and I've just done hot takes
and so have you, about the use of other policies,
whether it be immigration law or under other tools
in Donald Trump's tool bags to deport people,
they just did another illegal deportation
under their third party deportation plan,
which is we wanna get rid of the person,
but his home country won't take him.
What do we do?
We'll send him to a third country that will take him.
There's some problems with due process
related to that as well.
But we will, at least for now, based on this ruling, will not have to talk about Alien Enemy Act illegal
deportation in violation of due process to a foreign country. However, or not even however,
that was a bad segue. This is exactly identical to the 7-2 decision and lineup that you and I
talked about four weeks ago with that one A-M decision.
This is the same case.
This is a case we call AARP, not that one,
brought by the ACLU in Texas.
And to remind everybody how we got here,
that ruling a month ago was sort of a temporary ruling.
Ground the planes, wheels down,
don't send anybody until we make a decision about process.
What I might take away from this, and we'll read from some pages of it, of the decision
bed, is that the Supreme Court felt put upon, felt, at least seven of them, felt like they
were being dragged into something and being dragged down from on high to do something
that they didn't really want to do
because the district court judge in Texas
and the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans
fell down on the job.
And basically, how dare you?
Well, they've said the Fifth Circuit
should have entered the injunction
instead of making us do it at one o'clock in the morning
and wasting our capital.
You see it throughout the pages of the complaint.
It's an admonishment of the Fifth Circuit.
They're chastising the district court judge who said,
I don't know why I do accents every time,
I believe the Trump administration when they tell me
they're not gonna be sending people to Venezuela
or to El Salvador while I'm trying to make a decision.
And the ACLU is like, I'm sorry?
That's your order?
Forget you, we're going to the Fifth Circuit.
Fifth Circuit, you've got it.
The planes are being fueled.
The seats are in the upright and locked position.
Art, people are being sent away from your jurisdiction.
Do something.
Well, we don't think we have jurisdiction.
You didn't get the trial court judge enough time.
Chicken and egg, egg and chicken.
Screw you, we're going to the Supreme Court.
And they finally get the Supreme Court four weeks ago to issue that order. Now here's what the concurrence and the split was. Alito
and Tom is far to the right. They're always huffing and puffing and clutching their pearls over
jurisdiction. Oh my, we don't care about human beings being sent to gulags. We just care about
procedure and jurisdiction. We don't have
jurisdiction to do anything. They don't, let me just translate that, Alito and Thomas in the far
right don't care if people are sent in the interim away from federal jurisdiction into dark gulags.
They don't care about those people. They're just, they're not human beings to them. Whereas the seven of the majority,
including Roberts and Kavanaugh and Gorsuch
and Amy Honey Barrett said, wait a minute,
we don't wanna be stampeded
by the Trump administration anymore.
We don't wanna be forced to make a fast decision.
We're gonna go back on our timetable.
Stop deporting.
We will get around to deciding whether you have the
right under the Alien Enemies Act to do what you're doing. In the meantime, you are not
to do it any longer. And when we're done, and if we grant the appeal, which they're
going to grant the appeal on the writ, we'll get back to you and let you know if you have
the powers under the Alien Enemies Act that you claim. Now, Kavanaugh, some people interpreted Kavanaugh as,
oh, he wants to help the undocumented.
No, his concurrence was, I would have went further.
I wouldn't have sent this case back to the Fifth Circuit
to fix their problem and to do a proper appeal.
I would have taken the case right now
to the United States Supreme Court.
I would make the ruling right now
on full briefing and an oral argument.
We should do it now.
He's not all hot and bothered to do it now
because he wants to rule in favor of the migrants.
He's all hot and bothered right now
because he, along with three others on the court at least,
want to give Donald Trump the powers
under the Alien Enemies Act,
similar to what a judge in Pennsylvania just did,
where they're gonna say, well, let's talk about Catch-22.
He declares foreign terrorist organization,
therefore he can use his war powers,
and therefore we can't do anything about it.
That is where we are headed for the next term.
It's just that he couldn't get other voters
to vote with him from the court to do it now,
because I'll leave it on this, Ben.
The Supreme Court, despite the 13 emergency applications,
does not like to move that rapidly.
They are a deliberative body.
They are a body that likes to percolate and marinate.
They want briefing, they want oral argument,
they want a full record, and if that means till next term,
then that will happen.
But they did enjoin, and they did issue the injunction,
and they did it for a unique reason.
Not necessarily because they think the undocumented
and the Venezuelans are going to win.
It's not because they think their likelihood of prevailing.
It is to preserve and protect their jurisdiction
as a federal court to make the ultimate decision,
knowing, and they cite to, Donald Trump's Abrego case saying,
look, we've seen the position you've taken.
They didn't quote the graffiti New York Times headline
against Senator Van Hollen.
Yeah, yeah, you're never gonna get him back.
But they said, you're taking the position
that once the person is in El Salvador,
you can't get him back and we can't have that.
So they were diplomatic in how they criticized the Trump administration,
but criticized the Trump administration.
Nonetheless, Fifth Circuit definitely got its ass handed to them
as did the district court judge.
So this case before the Supreme Court does not rule one way or another
about whether the invocation
of the Alien Enemies Act by Donald Trump in the first instance is valid.
The Supreme Court is going to eventually rule on that issue, whether it's this case or other
cases work its way up to the Supreme Court.
Overwhelmingly, but not unanimously, overwhelmingly, we've seen courts, both Trump appointees and
non-Trump appointees ruling on this issue have actually been finding that Trump did
not have the right to invoke the Alien Enemies Act because the Trende Aragua is not actually
a country, even if you accept that there's a massive threat that's taking place,
there's not an incursion by a country trying to take over territory like a war, which is an alien
enemies act, what the Alien Enemies Act was created in the late 18th century to empower wartime presidents to do these expulsions of individuals who could be literally
soldiers of a foreign country invading.
Now, there was over this past week one Trump appointed judge in Pennsylvania who found
that the Alien Enemies Act invocation was valid.
This has been the only judge who has found so far,
federal judge, that it is valid.
It's a judge by the name of Stephanie Haynes
from Pennsylvania, Trump appointee.
And in making this ruling, however, though,
she said, yes, Alien Enemies Act could be invoked,
but then you
have to give at least 21 days of process for the migrants to file a lawsuit, even if you
accept that the Alien Enemies Act was properly invoked, 21 days to file habeas corpus petitions,
and then have full proceedings to adjudicate their rights.
Not one day, not two days, not five days,
a 21 day process.
So the issue about Alien Enemies Act,
was it properly invoked?
And if it was properly invoked,
then what is the process that's really not decided
by the Supreme Court?
What they definitively said, Michael Popak,
in their ruling in the 7-2 decision,
is that the current process that the government wants is bad. It's unconstitutional. The current
process, which if you take the government's own words, it's like 24 hours, one day. The process
that was given to these migrants at Blue Bonnet detention, that is invalid. And the Supreme Court says, we'll definitively say that.
So, and we're gonna issue this broader injunction
that basically until this case gets back to us
on a full briefing, you're not sending really this group
or any other group of migrants to El Salvador
without us figuring out the contours
of should alien enemies act have been invoked?
If no, then this is all invalid. If yes, then what process is going to be owed?
We're going to issue an injunction that freezes the status quo for now. But they say in their
order, and let me just read from their order for anybody arguing right for any of the Trumpers who argue
There's no due process. You don't give due process. I think the Supreme Court made it very clear. There is due process
They said the Fifth Amendment entitles aliens to due process of law in the context of removal proceedings
procedural due process rules are meant to protect against the mistaken or unjustified
deprivation of life, liberty, or property.
We have long said that no person shall be removed from the United States without opportunity
at some point to be heard. Due process requires that notice be reasonably calculated under all of these circumstances
as well.
So they're leaving no doubt to this question, which there was never doubt to begin with
for all of these people that you may see on like corporate news, like trying to have debates,
right? Do migrants get due process?
They don't get due process, they're migrants.
The Supreme Court's saying they get due process.
The Supreme Court though here is saying,
we are not yet going to decide as the Supreme Court
what that process looks like.
They're saying we're gonna now remand,
send this case back to the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals and let them
figure it out.
Should the Alien Enemies Act have been invoked?
What's the process?
And then bring the case back to us.
In the meantime, you can't remove any more of these migrants to concentration camps in
El Salvador.
So that was the ruling.
Justice Kavanaugh, to your point Michael Popak,
said, why are we doing this?
Why do you wanna go back to the Fifth Circuit,
go back to the Supreme Court?
I disagree slightly with your analysis Popak,
that I don't think Kavanaugh is saying
that I'm definitively going to rule against.
It's my prediction.
What'd you say?
It's my prediction that What'd you say?
It's my prediction that once he gets the case, he's going to side with Trump.
But then siding with Trump though has a caveat though.
Does it look like Judge Haynes?
Or who then has a 21 day or 30?
Yes, you could invoke it, but then you have to have this type of process.
Or does it look more like Judge Gonzales,
a Trump appointee of Texas who said the Alien Enemies Act
was not properly invoked, or the judge in Colorado
will be judged in Maryland.
No, no, I think he's gonna side with Haynes.
Look, there are four losses for Donald Trump
on immigration and deportation.
You can call one of them a win, but there are four losses.
He's on an epic losing streak, right?
We've talked about them at length.
You've got the JGG case with Boasberg, okay?
You've got the Brega Garcia case with Zinnis.
You've got the AARP case twice.
So the takeaway is, as you and I have just distilled it,
is what is the new law, the new teaching
of the new law?
You have to have writ of habeas corpus type notice and due process before you can remove
under the Alien Enemies Act or really anything else.
They haven't decided whether that can be done by class action certification or that can
be done just individually with petitions
But in all of those the alien enemies act can be addressed by the federal courts
Under this new teaching of the four losing cases for Donald Trump
The only win Donald Trump has gotten is when they mentioned well national security interests
We have to be you know
Careful about that when we're interpreting due process under the Constitution fine
But it does suggest and reinforce here,
as you noted by the Supreme Court,
it reinforces that there are due process and notice rights.
And one day is not enough and two days is not enough.
Look, you're in prison, let's just put a fine point on this.
You're in detention.
Unless you're like you and me,
like you and I have phone numbers for lawyers
in our contact book and I have phone numbers for lawyers in our contact book,
and I've had that for 35 years. I can get a lawyer on the phone in about 10 seconds, and so can you.
The average person, and especially one who's been put in detention,
this probably does not have a lawyer relationship or one that they can easily contact. We got to
give time for the lawyers to find the clients and the clients to find the lawyers and things be done
in their right language
and get before a federal judge, and it takes a minute.
I mean, Donald Trump's crying about it.
Oh, they won't let me get rid of criminals!
And they're releasing them into the streets.
That's another lie.
All of these people, whether they're named
Debrego Garcia or any of these people,
are going to remain in detention under U.S. jurisdiction
until a federal judge says otherwise.
They're not going home with their families.
They're not hitting the streets for more crimes
if that's what they really are charged with.
They are staying in detention.
This is all about which side of the ocean.
Are we going to keep our detainees in our system
or are we going to delegate them in violation probably
of the Eighth Amendment
to a foreign country to take care of it without due process?
And the Supreme Court has said,
oh, I don't know how many times the Supreme Court
can tell this administration, you must give due process
and you can't swirl away, ferry away people
to avoid federal jurisdiction.
You know, it's a really great argument that you make too, because we see a lot of these cases being brought as Fifth Amendment due process questions.
It could be because I haven't seen the argument, or maybe it's there and I just I haven't read it or haven't focused on it enough.
But there is under the Constitution, cruel and unusual punishment. And I do wonder if a third level of analysis
should then be addressed as this last here,
assuming that you say you have a process,
deportation is the outcome.
Should that outcome basically be tantamount to death, right?
I mean, sending somebody who should be deported
to a concentration camp in El Salvador is very different
than sending somebody back to their home country,
even if they're an asylum seeker and posing the threats
and harm that could be caused by sending them back
to a regime that they were fleeing
I've been sending them to an El Salvador concentration camp in a country that they're not from
Certainly to me is cruel and and unusual punishment and this is at the same time that
Trump has invited into the United States
You know like El Chapo's family, Trump cut a deal with
Chapo's family this past week. I know it's not getting a lot of attention, but Chapo's
kid is under indictment in the United States as well, was extradited from the Biden administration.
And then over the last week, there were like 17 members of Chapo's family were just seen crossing the border in Tijuana
Did no coordination with Mexico and as part of some deal and no one really knows what's going on
But as part of some deal with the Chapo's who are in prison Guzman the Chapo son
It's Octavio Guzman cooperating with the government. They're letting Chapo's family
And so the family members of cartel members of the some of the worst they're letting Chapo's family and so the family members of cartel members
Of the some of the worst they're being welcomed in while we're sending
individuals who have no criminal history to concentration camps in El Salvador I
Just want you to think about that. Let's take our first quick break of the show when we come back
I want to talk about the oral argument that took place this week before this big week in the Supreme Court under the birthright
citizenship case. So let's take our first quick break of the show. We'll be right
back after this quick. Oh reminder check out Michael Popak's YouTube channel the
Legal AF YouTube channel wherever as make sure you search Legal AF on YouTube
and then also Michael Popak's got the Legal AF sub stack
as well, check out the Legal AF sub stack.
All right, let's take our first quick break of the show.
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Welcome back to Legal AF, joined by Michael Popak.
Popak, a big week in the Supreme Court,
there were also oral arguments in the case,
Trump versus New Jersey, a consolidated group of cases
where via an executive order, which is not a law,
Donald Trump tried to overrule the constitutional right of birthright
citizenship because he doesn't like it.
There have been numerous nationwide injunctions blocking Trump's executive
order implementation to remove birthright citizenship, and I guess
thereby remove people in the United States
who became citizens because they were born here
or would no longer be viewed as citizens.
I just want you to think about a dangerous proposition
that would, where the logical extension of this goes
to what Trump wants to do.
You were born here, you've been a citizen,
he's gonna what, revoke your citizenship
and send you to concentration camps in El Salvador. So there were numerous
nationwide injunctions in federal courts across the country. And the way the Trump regime
brought this to the Supreme Court was procedurally saying that the idea of nationwide injunctions
is invalid, despite the fact that all of the Trumpers relied of nationwide injunctions is invalid, despite the fact that all of the
Trumpers relied on nationwide injunctions to derail former President Biden's agendas
on issues where Biden was like helping people gain access to health care and helping forgive
student loan debt.
The Trumpers would all run to this judge in the
Northern District of Texas, Judge Kazimeric, this
Trump or judge, he would issue nationwide
injunctions and it would block anything that Biden
was doing one after one.
But now this is how the MAGA Republicans handle
things that we hate nationwide injunctions now
because we keep on losing not just from Biden
appointed judges, but a lot from Trumpointed judges and George Bush judges and Reagan judges
and Obama and Clinton judges, but because all the things that Trump's doing illegal.
So Trump tries to challenge this idea first.
These are the nationwide injunction was invalid
because I want you to think about the nefarious way that what Trump's trying to do here because if you could get rid of the
nationwide injunction, even if a specific federal court still holds that say birthright citizenship is a constitutional right, which it is and that Trump's executive order is unlawful, that federal judge could
only what enforce it within their district. So if it was a district court in the central
district of California, it would just be like in the Los Angeles region. And how would you
even how could you even possibly just as an enforcement mechanism just as a practicality do it?
So what the Trump regime wants to do here is if you can get rid of the concept of nationwide injunctions generally
Then even though Trump loses you're gonna have to force
cases across in every single district in the country and every single one. If you want to block Trump's unlawful behavior in the meantime,
Trump will implement all of his unlawful behavior.
That's why procedurally they didn't go.
They didn't go after the issue of birthright citizenship because
they knew they would lose that but they want to go after the issue
of nationwide injunctions because if you get rid of nationwide
injunctions, then you could do all of your unlawful activity.
And really the judges have no enforcement mechanism outside of a specific district
where the case is taking place.
So Popeye, let me just show you some of the highlights of what went down and then
get your take on it.
So first you had Amy Coney Barrett, Trump appointee, and he or she is asking Trump's
lawyer, the Solicitor General, Trump's former personal lawyer, John Sauer, who is now the
Solicitor General, which is the top job at the Justice Department that argues in front
of the Supreme Court. She's saying, so I'm just trying to understand like your position.
Are you saying that you don't respect
the circuit court decisions
and you don't conform your conduct to that?
What are you saying here?
Here, let's play this clip.
Opinions and judgments here.
Did I understand you correctly to tell Justice Kagan
that the government wanted to reserve its right
to maybe not follow a second circuit precedent,
say in
New York because you might disagree with the opinion. Our general practice is to
but there are circumstances when it is not a categorical practices and that is
not this administration's practice or the long-standing practice of the
federal government and I'm not talking about in the Fourth Circuit are you
gonna respect a second circuit I'm talking about within the Second Circuit
and can you say is that this
administration's practice or a long-standing one? As I understand it,
long-standing policy of the Department of Justice. Yes, that we generally, as it was
phrased to me, generally respect Circuit President but not necessarily in every
case. And certain examples, some examples might be a situation where we're
litigating to try and get that Circuit President overruled and so forth. Well, okay. So I'm not talking about a situation in which, you know, the Second Circuit has a case
from 1955 and you think it's time for it to be challenged. That's not what I'm talking about.
I'm talking about in this kind of situation. I'm talking about this week the Second Circuit
holds that the executive order is unconstitutional. And then what do you do the next day or the next
week? Generally, we follow that.
So you're still saying generally.
Yes.
And you still think that it's generally the policy,
long standing policy of the federal government
to take that approach.
That is my understanding.
Okay, so, but it sounds to me like you accept
a Cooper versus Aaron kind of situation
for the Supreme Court, but not for say the Second Circuit.
Like where you would respect the opinions and the judgments of the Supreme Court and you're
saying you would respect the judgment but not necessarily the opinion of a lower court.
And again, and I think in the vast majority of instances, our practice has been to respect
the opinion as well in the circuits as well.
But my understanding is that has not been a categorical practice in the way respect
for the precedents and the judgments of the Supreme Court has been.
So you're not hedging it all with respect to the precedent of this court?
That is correct. I believe the quotation from our application directly addresses that and we stand by that completely.
Okay.
Now let me show you Justice Kagan, what she had to say at these hearings.
It sort of depends on the government's own actions in a case like this one where one can expect that there is not going to be a great deal of disagreement
among the lower courts.
I mean, let's assume that you lose in the lower courts pretty uniformly as you
have been losing
on this issue
and that you never take this question to us.
I mean, I noticed that you didn't take the substantive question to us. You only took the nationwide injunction question to us. I mean, I noticed that you didn't take the substantive question to us.
You only took the nationwide injunction question to us. I mean, why would you take the substantive
question to us? You're losing a bunch of cases, this guy over here, this woman over here,
you know, they'll have to be treated as citizens, but nobody else will. Why would you ever take
this case to us?
Well, in this particular case, we have deliberately not presented the merits to
this court on the question of the scope of remedies, because of course, that
makes it a clean vehicle where the court doesn't have to look at the past.
You're ignoring the import of my question. I'm suggesting that in a case
in which the government is losing constantly, there's nobody else who's going to appeal,
they're winning. It's up to you to decide whether to take this case to us. If I were
in your shoes, there is no way I'd approach the Supreme Court with this case. So you just
keep on losing in the lower courts and what's supposed to happen to prevent that?
Again, I respectfully disagree with that forecast of the merits, but in response to the question,
what I would say is we have an adversarial system.
And if the government is not, for example, not respecting circuit precedent on the court's
hypothetical in the Second Circuit, someone easier in the Second Circuit could take the
case up and they could say, look, the government is violating circuit precedent on the hypothetical
multiple circuits.
So Popak, doesn't Justice Kagan get to the heart
of the issue?
Didn't she expose the scam of what this is all about
to begin with right there brilliantly?
And okay, John Sauer, then why didn't you bring
the merits of birthright citizenship
in front of the Supreme Court
if you were confident you are gonna win it.
That's why I wanted to give that description
before passing it to you of the real kind of sneaky
and deceitful way they were going about this oral argument.
And she called it out perfectly right there.
Yeah, and so it was a complicated oral argument.
We actually covered it on the LAF.
We had about 90,000 people that joined us,
and we did a little pregame and postgame,
and we'll do that again.
That may be the last oral argument
for the rest of the term.
It should be.
There may be an emergency application oral argument,
but that should be the last one.
And it was really the first oral argument
about a Trump policy since he's been in office.
All the other oral arguments this term
were about past Biden practices or law but not involving Donald Trump. And yet it was not, even
though we talked about it as a birthright citizenship case, that was the context,
was whether the four different court rulings issuing nationwide injunctions to stop Donald
Trump from ripping the beating heart of birthright citizenship in the 14th Amendment out of the Constitution was constitutional or not through
an executive order.
That was the backdrop.
That was the context.
But they were there arguing for two and one half hours, including two advocates against
the Donald Trump administration and John Sauer, who's difficult to listen to,
both because of his arguments make no sense
and because of the timbre of his voice,
arguing as a Solicitor General, just to remind people,
he used to be Donald Trump's criminal appellate defense
lawyer, and that's how he got the job as the number four
in the Department of Justice and considered
to be the 10th Justice of the Supreme Court.
But he did not do well that day, mainly because his argument is so pathetic.
He did not do well even with the right wing.
Amy Coney Barrett said, no, no, no, no.
Don't cut off Justice Kagan.
You're not answering her question.
Let's go back to her question.
Are you telling me, this is Amy Coney Barrett leading it.
Are you telling me that you're not gonna respect precedent
from the Second Circuit in New York, in a New York matter?
I wanna just understand what the position
of the Department of Justice and the administration is.
And you saw him tap dancing his way around that.
And then she said, what we're here on
is about whether the proper vehicle
to bring this case back to the United States Supreme Court
on the underlying substantive merits issue of birthright citizenship is
the proper vehicle, a class action where a federal judge certifies a class of
people impacted by this executive order, or is it a nationwide injunction from a
single judge with single parties in front of them? And why do you care, which
it is, this goes back to the Kagan point, they don't care. Because they're going to oppose both, because they want a divide and conquer.
They want every baby born to a parent who's not a US citizen to hire a lawyer.
Okay, that's the underlying merits of this case.
Because if every baby has to go individually into a courtroom that will of course allow the policy de facto to continue
and there's no incentive. In fact it is a disincentive for the Trump administration to
take any of those cases up on appeal or let any of them get up on appeal before this term is over.
Their term is over and that was Kagan's point. We see your trick. Your trick is you'll never bring
these cases up
to the United States Supreme Court
and we'll get them two and three and four years from now.
And even Kavanaugh said, what do we do with the babies?
Give me what the federal, this was Kavanaugh.
No, no, I don't understand.
Tell me how the administration is going to handle this.
Well, it'll be for the federal administration
to handle it. No, no, no, I heard that. Explain to me how you handle this. You have a series
of countries who have said if you're not, the baby's not born in that country, they
are not recognized to be a citizen of that country. And the baby was not going to be
recognized to be a citizen of the US. So what do we have? Citizenless babies?
Tell me how that works. And of course, John Sauer can't answer it.
John Sauer likes to keep going back when he's pressed on the merits
about slavery. This is where Donald Trump got the big idea
to keep talking about slavery.
You know, when he's not talking about the N-word
as being nuclear, uh, another, another, again,
uh, trolling of black and brown Americans
and those that are fair-minded.
But this administration loves doing that.
He started his whole argument with slavery.
He ended his rebuttal with slavery.
Yes, yes, John, these amendments came out
during the reconstruction period of our America.
And yes, they were originally done to protect former slaves,
now black Americans, and their voting rights,
and in their citizenship and the rest,
but it no longer just applies to that any longer.
And so the only issue for appeal is whether,
whether they are going to find that a single federal judge
is permitted to use a nationwide, universal,
or cosmic, whatever they want to call it, injunction, and then have that one single
matter come up to the United States Supreme Court through a proper appellate process or
not.
And that was the whole debate.
That's why the first question out of the box was Clarence Thomas.
I wish Clarence Thomas would go back to not talking.
15 years he never asked the question.
Well, let's talk about the Bill of Peace.
The bill, isn't this like a Bill of Peace?
I'm like, are we going back to Bill of Peace's
where churches got together,
where they have common attacks by their congregants
about how to solve a problem
where they didn't like their pastor?
We're going back to the Bill of Peace.
Forget Bill of Peace's. The question is, why can't one federal judge issue a nationwide injunction, about how to solve a problem they didn't like their pastor. We're going back to the bill of peace, forget bill of pieces.
The question is, why can't one federal judge
issue a nationwide injunction,
which was used during the civil rights movement,
which was used during desegregation,
which was used for a hundred years in this country,
one shape or another,
to have that go up unitarily to the United States
Supreme Court through an appellate process.
And why do we have to have hundreds,
if not thousands of lawsuits
about the very same issue without it? And the class action thing doesn't work because,
because first of all, the Trump administration is fighting class actions being used by judges to
handle these issues. When Judge Boesberg in DC certified a class in order to stop the deportation
of 250 people to El Salvador without due process
they fought the certification of the class and even
Sauer said in response to one of the questions either from Sotomayor or Kataji Brown Jackson or or the Republicans
He said well, we will know we may oppose class action. It really depends on the situation
Because that's the lie. That's that's what Kagan caught him in.
You don't want any of these cases to come up
in a timely way to the United States Supreme Court.
And then you've got John Roberts,
who's trying to figure out a way to thread a needle here
and come up with a five to four,
six to three decision some way,
in which he's like, well, I'd like to hear
the answer to that question.
Well, we can do things quickly if we really want to.
So I'm like, this is the best you got?
Here's my prediction of the result,
which we will see in the next 30, 60, 90 days,
something like that.
I think they're gonna allow,
I think there's enough votes to allow,
if Robert sides in the right way,
to allow nationwide injunctions
under certain limited circumstances,
but the trial judges are gonna be given a factor test,
a limitation on how they can use it.
Now, I think birthright citizenship
will fit the factor test because it's a constant,
what are you gonna do?
Like if you're in Louisiana, you're a citizen,
but if you're in New York, you're not, or vice versa.
I mean, the constitutional violation of that magnitude
has to be addressed by a federal nationwide injunction.
I think that's what they do.
On the underlying merits of the birthright citizenship,
Donald Trump's gonna lose.
I don't see him getting five,
I don't see him getting five votes
to allow him to change the nature
of the 14th, the piece of the 14th Amendment
when it comes to citizenship in this country
by executive order.
I think he loses on the merits, but remember,
this is an issue about the tools that the federal judges have or not. If they don't allow judges to find
federal nationwide injunctions, then they're going to say a version of only the United States Supreme Court can issue the law of the land
from our lofty perch, and that comes up from individual cases below,
and we're not gonna allow that to be delegated
to lower level federal judges.
It's one of the two.
What do you think is gonna happen?
You know, look, the nationwide injunctions use,
to your point, is most appropriately used
in this exact situation.
Constitutional right, clearly invalid executive
order. If you did not have a nationwide injunction, you would literally allow the Trump regime
to be able to violate the Constitution by fiat of signing a bullshit executive order,
do everything it wants to do until the case finally makes its way to the United States Supreme court, clear constitutional right that you're
vindicating that makes sense to do nationwide injunctions.
The irony of this is that the abuse of nationwide injunctions is not happening
now against Trump.
It was the Trumpers who abused it against Biden, where you would have
a nationwide injunction out of a district court in Texas, which threatened the ability
of women to access Mifepristone. That's how it was being used until it reached the Supreme
Court. That's how it was being used when Biden was in office by Trumpers, not, you
know, to have judges, Trump judges go rogue and by nationwide injunctions,
take away constitutional rights until it went to the Supreme Court. So what could
be ironic out of this whole dispute
is that on these core constitutional violations by Trump,
nationwide injunctions are permitted to stay in effect.
But it would actually, I don't think it would be a bad thing,
actually, if you placed some guard rails
and some limitations on its abuse,
where it was most accurately manifested by
these kind of inexperienced rogue Trump judges who were using it.
I mean, the whole thing here, you know, also, I think to view in context of it also, you
know, is how Trump was using it under Biden.
We need to fight like hell to make sure
that we're gonna have future elections
because I think our very democracy is being threatened.
But ultimately when there's a Democratic president next
and a Democratic Congress, you just have to think through
that are these Trump moves ultimately gonna backfire
against, you know, ultimately gonna backfire
against him as well also.
But, but Popeye, I think the decision is I don't think nationwide injunctions are going to be eliminated.
I actually tend to agree with you. Perhaps there may be a few guardrail.
I think you nailed it. A certain factor test, which should be met on all of these issues anyway when Trump is abusing
them and I think that the Supreme Court is going to be very careful, you know, not to
disturb the constitutional right of birthright citizenship and just to flag this issue again
for everybody out there, notice that Donald Trump didn't bring the issue of birthright
citizenship to the Supreme Court. I don't want to lose that point.
So they're talking a tough game to their base, but why not bring that question?
The Supreme court would have answered that question because they know they're
going to lose it.
They want to chip away and they're hoping they can get right wing justices to chip
away at the procedural component to then snatch away, you know rights and
constitutional rights by you by gaming the procedure of it
But you didn't say before you before you leave your your takeaway from listening to
Kavanaugh Amy Coney Barrett
And and the rest account to five you don't think they're gonna change birthright citizenship
through this executive order, right?
Correct. Ultimately.
Okay. Correct.
Well, yeah, changing birthright citizenship
via an executive order to me
is the most unlawful of unlawful things.
And by the way, that issue was not even, you know,
as you heard Justice Kagan said,
that wasn't even the issue that was before the court. And I think that's what was very alarming to a number of the justices as well, which is
what's clear that you're trying to do here is get rid of the nationwide injunctions so that you can
take these loser issues so that you could try to act like a dictator. Yeah, and if only one federal judge makes a ruling in their district
It's effectively unenforceable and you've neutered the entire
Judiciaries, you know judiciaries power
we had we had Leah Littman from strict scrutiny on a couple of times with me and Alex Aronson on legal AF and
very
phenomenal for those that haven't seen her come on and take a look at the clips on Legal AF and she agrees with me we agree with each other that there they
took the case for a reason just to be clear and I was a little bit worried
going into this because every time they took a case whoever brought whoever was
the movement in this case the Trump administration they sided with the
movement I was like oh but but I think because they took this case given such a
backdrop of birthright citizenship, but then spent two
and a half hours on this, there's no chance we're going to
get a one liner. You and I are not going to report on, oh, they
just had stayed. No, they are going to, they took this case
against this horrific backdrop for a reason, and I think we are going to get a ruling
about the future of birth of nationwide injunctions
and how you use them.
Otherwise, there's no way they would have done this
for almost a three-hour oral argument
and decide to take this case at this moment
and give it up on the last oral argument of the term.
Let's take our last quick break of the show.
I wanna remind everybody about Michael Popak's law firm,
the Popak firm, if you have or know somebody
who has a catastrophic injury case,
whether that's a trucking case, a car accident case,
a wrongful death case, sexual assault,
sexual harassment cases, medical malpractice, a negligence
case, real serious injuries.
If you or someone you know wants a free consultation with Michael Popak's firm, reach out.
The consultations are free and Popak started his own firm because the demand was overwhelming
to do this.
Popak, where can people reach out to you and find you?
Yeah, thanks for that and talking about that, Ben.
And it's just been growing by leaps and bounds.
Even, you know, the need that we're filling
is even greater than I thought.
And it's just the number of contacts and cases
that we are now handling as a firm.
But it's easy, we make it easy on everyone.
Come to the website, www.thepopockfirm.com.
Some people put a C in my name, it's just P-O-P-O-K.
I made that easy too.
And then there's a 1-800 number, 1-877-POPOC-A-F.
And as they used to say in the old Time Warner commercials,
operators are standing by.
These is important matters for people and we take it deadly seriously and we really
want to work closely with you.
Now is the time to reach out to our firm.
Let's take our last quick break of the show.
I want to show you Trump's reaction to the Supreme Court.
He's been like freaking out all day about it and attacking the Supreme Court. He's been like freaking out all day about it and attacking the Supreme Court.
Doesn't exactly show stability when you're spending your days attacking the Supreme Court or the chairman of the Federal Reserve and calling him too late Jerome or too
late Powell. Not really a shocker then that Moody's downgraded America's credit score when
you have literally a maniac behaving this way. and Moody's in their credit ratings are not falling
for the Trump gimmicks, the fake deals with Qatar, you know,
the fake deals with the United Kingdom that aren't deals at all.
Fake deals with China, which is just total capitulation.
Wait, wait.
No, sorry. I mean, they're finished.
I want to tell you something good. Sorry. Yeah.
No, I was going say, they also buried
in the Moody's downgrade first time since 1917,
we are not AAA rated, which means you're in my
and our audience's credit card loans, credit loans,
auto loans, credit card loans, mortgages, student loans,
everything is going up because of the Moody downgrade.
They said they'll, they warned Donald Trump.
They said, we will downgrade again.
If you fire the Federal Reserve chairman they said the only thing that keeps us from downgrading and
declaring that the government is stable and this economy even though you're not bringing in enough revenue and
you are and you're spending too much is the independence of the Federal Reserve. I applaud Moody for putting a ring fence around J Powell
and everybody in our audience, religious or not,
should pray every day that J Powell does not quit his job
and give Donald Trump the ability
to appoint a new Federal Reserve Chairman.
Because the only thing that tethers our economy
to planet Earth is J Powell, our central banker.
Let's take our last quick break of the show. Reminder, subscribe to Michael Popak's YouTube channel, the Legal AF YouTube
channel. He gave you the we'll put in the description below
also where to contact his law firm also if you've got a case
and you want a consultation or you know somebody that does. I
will be right back after our last quick break of the show.
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All right, let me just show you some of the posts that Donald Trump's been making about
the United States Supreme Court since that 7-2 loss and the Alien Enemies Act case, and
then the oral argument.
If we can just pull up any of the comments that Donald Trump's made. The Supreme Court won't allow us to get criminals out of our country.
And again, that's not what the Supreme Court ruled at all.
We all agree that we want criminals out of our country.
And we also all agree that criminals should be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the
law. And whether that means they're serving in the highest maximum security prisons in
the United States like El Chapo and El Chapo's kid,
or people who have been extradited by the Trump regime and other people into the
United States to be tried in the United States,
or whether that means to deport people. Um, you know, we live in a country that has due process.
As you saw in the Supreme Court ruling, they say there is a Fifth Amendment right to due process for people,
for people in this country. That's what our country stands for.
It's not a debate. It's not a debate. Should there be due process or should there not be due process?
There's no debate. You there be due process or should there not be due process? There's
no debate. You should be entitled to due process. That's all we're fighting for. That's what
this country is about. Because what you don't want to do is you don't want to take innocent
people and send them to concentration camps. You don't want to do that. That's not what
America stands for. Okay. Or you shouldn't want to send anybody, frankly, to concentration
camps. I mean, it's a cruel and unusual punishment. Let's take a look here at Trump's other post.
The Supreme Court has just ruled that the worst murderers,
drug dealers, gang members,
and even those who are mentally insane,
who came into our country illegally,
are not allowed to be forced out
without going through a long protracted
and expensive
legal process. One that will take possibly many years for each person and
one that will allow these people to commit many crimes before they even see
the inside of a courthouse. And once again, I can go on to read the rest of
it, but oh and then he thanks Justice Alito and he thanks Justice Thomas by
name. First, I can go on to read the rest of it, but oh, and then he thanks Justice Alito and he thanks Justice Thomas by name. First, I can go and read the rest of it, but I'm not going to because you
get the point. Let me just first explain that this is not normal behavior to have a United
States president make social media posts like this, thanking certain justices and attacking
others. Everything that's saying here is false. We went over
what the ruling said. It was actually a fairly narrow ruling, as you know, which basically
said some due process is necessary. We're going to remand or send the case back to the
Fifth Circuit to determine what that process is. In the meantime, this next group of migrants should not go to the concentration camp in El Salvador until
This case is further briefing until it gets back up to the Supreme Court
There's been no determination that these individuals are the quote
Worst murderers drug dealers and gang members. I can tell you beyond a dispute
drug dealers and gang members. I can tell you beyond a dispute Trump has extradited the worst murderers, drug dealers and gang members into the
United States. We've showed you before press conferences from Attorney General
Pam Bondi bringing in bad drug dealers into the United States from foreign
countries to be tried in the United States.
By the way, that's happened before because we have a great deal of confidence in our
jury system and in our justice system and in the security of our prison system that
it's actually safer. That's ultimately why the United States wanted to extradite El Chapo
into the United States and try him here.
No, I remember seeing that hearing this week.
You may have seen it also Popeye where Congress member Eric Swalwell was cross
examining dog killer Homeland Security Secretary Christine about the letters.
M.S. 113 that were Photoshopped on to Bray go Garcia's hands.
She refused to admit that they were photoshopped
because Donald Trump claims it real,
claims it's real, and she couldn't defy dear leader.
I did lots of takes on that,
but what stood out to me was Congress member Swallow saying,
I used to be a federal prosecutor,
so I didn't have to cosplay the way you're doing your outfits
and dressing up and doing all that.
I prosecuted drug dealers who kill
people. I sent people to jail for life. I brought them through our jury system. They were prosecuted.
They were tried. They were sentenced to jail. And I did it with evidence and with due process.
That's our system. So when Trump just says, you're a gang member, I don't like the way you look,
you're a gang member, you're bad. And we know From all of the data that's out there and from you know, what what we've been covering sweat and what there's a great 60 minutes report
75% to 80% of this group of people who were sent to El Salvador's concentration camp
And no criminal history at all here or you know here or from where they originally came from. And you know,
if they had a tattoo or if they looked a certain way or they were wearing a
Chicago bulls hat or they were wearing a certain color,
that would be enough for them to be.
The gay hairdresser with mom and dad tattooed on his arms,
which is a part of his hometown. By the way, you left, uh,
I'm sure you did not take center, but Swalwell, and dad tattooed on his arms, which is a part of his hometown. By the way, you left.
I'm sure you did hot takes on it.
But Swalwell, my favorite part of Swalwell
is when he put up the MS-13 photo,
the fake photo, the fingers.
And she kept, because she's an automaton,
and she kept repeating the same script over and over again
and would not admit what obviously her eyes could tell her.
He said, OK, OK, can I just tell you,
I have three children, three, six, and nine, and I have a bullshit-ometer.
That's what he actually said to Christie Noem
as a member of Congress.
I love that, because sometimes you just gotta get down
to street level and tell the truth to the American people.
And what is the common takeaway from every time you put up, and I put up a posting of
Donald Trump on social media, is that he consistently looks the American people in the eye and he
lies to them.
Everything that you didn't read or read in that posting is a lie.
Just to be clear, so when you debate this in the streets, you can have a fair fight
with facts anyway. We're talking about due process
that's guaranteed by the constitution whether you are an American citizen or not if you're
in the United States at the time something adverse happens to you a crime has been charged against
you an immigration law violation has been charged against you whatever it is you because this is the
America that we want to live in,
are entitled to due process. It is defined by statutes and by case law and by the United States Supreme Court ultimately. Whether you call it a writ of habeas corpus process or you call it
just a fifth amendment due process process, you are entitled to a process. And they have their
hallmark of proper process is notice that you're given notice of what your charges are
against you, time, that you're given sufficient time
to find a lawyer and that the notice is in the language
that you can understand, that you are told of your rights
and that you're brought before somebody in a black robe.
Could be an administrative law judge whose immigration,
could be an Article III judge that's federal,
but you are brought before a judge
in an adversarial process to determine your guilt
or innocence or whether you violated or didn't violate.
That is the common denominator.
And you are, and while you're going through that process,
you will most likely remain in custody,
in detention in America,
which is where you're supposed to be for that.
You're not gonna be going home at night with your wife and your kids. That's clear. you're supposed to be, for that you're not going to be going home at night
with your wife and your kids. That's clear.
You're not going to be released on the streets
like Donald Trump says. They're going to be released
to the wild so they can commit other crimes.
We don't even know if they committed these crimes,
let alone they're going to commit.
But to Donald Trump, he wants to put a murderous,
undocumented migrant under everyone's bed,
because that's the boogeyman he then uses
to try to rile up his base. One last thing, Ben, I saw this new polling that came out and it was both heartening and disheartening at the same time. It was heartening, that's a word, because 39 to 40 percent is his total approval rating. Worst in modern history, 15, 16 points lower than any other president. But when you go state by state, and, you know, this sort of gets
into the electoral chances, when you go state by state,
in 23 states he's above water in his approval rating.
In a couple of states he's in the 60s and 70%.
Now, in other states, he's in big states, he's in the 30%
and 40%, and we end up at 39 to 41.
But there is a fair amount of Americans that look at what he's doing
and look at what he's saying and believe the propaganda
and spew it back out in their own life, in their own social media.
And that's why we're here. And not just us talking to each other.
That's why we're here with the fellowship that we put together on the Midas such network
at Legal AF.
Because we have to bound together as like-minded people
in order to be, if we're gonna have any chance
to run the bastards out on a rail
come the midterms and beyond,
we've got to link together now
and be a channel of action, and we are.
You know, authoritarians realize this to link together now and be a channel of action, and we are.
You know, authoritarians realize this
kind of seemingly counterintuitive point that you raise, that the shittier you treat people
and the more you screw with them
and the more you take away and beat them down
and take away their education,
you can psychologically torture a group of people enough
where they'll accept peanuts.
And when you otherize some other group
and say that that's the reason you're going through that,
you both hand out breadcrumbs to your base
and then you rile them up based on the other.
It's authoritarianism 101,
and it's why though also in a lot of these very
impoverished countries where you have these
authoritarians living these like lavish lifestyles,
you think to yourself, well like why is it that people are
like, are they okay with this?
Like what the heck is going on?
I mean just think about it here, Popak,
and I'll go and look at that poll,
but you think about devastating, devastating storms, right?
Just took hold in the United States yet again.
A lot of forecasters are no longer having their jobs
due to the doge cuts and we're
seeing horrible, horrible deaths in states like Kentucky and elsewhere.
At least as of our recording right now, Donald Trump made no statement about these horrible
storms. Like you're not even, I think it was 16 people dead
after tornado spawning storms across central United States.
We're talking about Missouri, Kentucky, Illinois,
Indiana, Indiana, Missouri, Kentucky, at least,
Ruby red states.
And Trump wants to gut FEMA.
I mean, he's he's he's doing it.
He's gutting FEMA so that there can't be emergency aid that's given to the states.
He says the states will take hold of his.
He's taking away their Medicaid.
He's taking away their health care.
He's taking away, you know, the reason that they're living paycheck to paycheck is
because of him and billionaires like him. I think that's that's what's actually happening out there
But when you pick a scapegoat when you say it's the migrants who are doing it when you say it's this group or that group
That's doing it
And you combine it with destroying people's education when you combine it with
You know taking away people's resources, when you combine it with, you know, taking away people's resources
for whatever reason, Popex psychologically, you know, that works. And you know, what I've
always been saying, whether it's to Democrats or just to anybody who wants to step into
the space is, you know, you've got to go. And before talking about policy and all these
things, you got to go and you got to
look at people and you got to say, Hey, I care about you. I'm here to fight for you.
I understand what you're going through and you have to not do it from a phony place,
but from a real place. And then you have to point out who's doing it to them. And you
have to otherize the real other,
which is Trump and the oligarchs who are the ones doing it.
But just think about all the distractions
that we'll leave on this from this past week.
What was the media's main, what were the two big stories
outside of Midas Touch Network this week?
The two big stories this week, right?
Number one, Biden.
That's all the media talked Biden, Biden, Biden, this. Oh, what do people know about
Biden? I interviewed Biden, go look at my interview. I
interviewed the guy for 30 minutes. Okay. Was he old?
Sure. Was he old? Did he have a that he have a stable normal
government where America was leading the world? Absolutely.
Did he surround himself with smart people who ran a
predictable, smart, intelligent economy? Absolutely. Did he surround himself with smart people who ran a predictable, smart, intelligent economy?
Absolutely. And my response to all that crap is why the hell are you even wasting time talking about this?
You've got a hostile takeover of our government, our democracies being threatened.
Trump does 10 to 20 things a day, at least, that concern me more than anything I even saw once. If you want to go cognitive during the Biden and every single day Trump doesn't speak in
sentences.
He is he's non responsive and says the most idiotic dangerous thing.
I mean what he was saying in one of these Middle East bride meetings.
I don't like stealth.
I don't like the way stealth is.
The shapes don't make sense to me.
It's like, well, what? What are we even talking about?
You know, he's like falling asleep and drooling on himself.
But more importantly, the guy's doing the most dangerous
and hateful and harmful things to our country.
Can we focus on that? That was a big story.
What was the other big story, Popak?
Seashells. Seashells, right?
Like, the former FBI Director James Comey did a photo of seashells that
says 8647, which all these Magna Republic to 86 to like get
rid of some, you know, to get banned from something.
Can I just say something? Because I don't know if you
have this in your background. If you had this in your
background, I worked in restaurants when I was a kid.
I worked in Chick-fil-A, thank you,
and I worked in diners when I was studying for the bar, okay?
And 86, the only way I ever knew that
is when we were out of something.
86 to pumpernickel bagel, 86 to coleslaw.
We're out of it, don't sell it anymore.
It means you get rid of something.
It's not 86 your neighbor. It's not a it's not a Don Jr wrote in a social media post.
And of course, he had a misspelling in it. The former FBI director just casually called
for the murder of my father. seashells on the beach, which he thought was it may have
been snarky, might have been in
poor taste for somebody, but it was funny. Does anybody think the six foot six inch Jim
Comey bent down and actually shaped those out for himself? Donald Trump should love
James Comey because even though he hates him for being involved with the Russia collusion
investigation with Mueller, James Comey is probably the single-handed, other than the way that Clinton ran her own campaign.
The reason we had a Trump one is because Comey took to a lectern
as an FBI director and said he was opening
a criminal investigation about Clinton's email servers
just before the election, creating an October surprise.
That's why there's a Trump presidency to even run off of.
He should build a statue to Comey.
But no, we're on the Trump vindication tour,
which of course doesn't help any American person
with his kitchen table politics or pocketbook.
So I'm not gonna, that's the full coverage that gets
in the context of the fact
that there are deep-seated threats to our democracy, as we presented here today on LegalEA.
That's our laser focus. Our North Star is fighting, defending, protecting our democracy and not these corporate media trying to sell their own books or whatever to each other and promoting
just the most unnecessary, bizarre distractions during these very, very kind of existential
and critical times.
So, Popak, great spending this weekend with you.
I want to remind everybody, go to Michael Popak, great spending this weekend with you. I wanna remind everybody,
go to Michael Popak's law firm, check it out.
The Popak firm, they handle catastrophic injury cases,
wrongful death cases, like big trucking accident cases,
or bad car accident cases,
sexual assault, harassment cases.
So, if you have a case like that, don't be shy.
I mean, if you know somebody and they need help,
the consultations are free, go to Michael Popok.
He set up this firm because there were so many people
reaching out to say, can you set up a firm for this?
So this is what we are trying to do.
So reach out to Popok, Popok, where can they find you?
Yeah, thanks, Ben.
www.thepopokfirm.com.
It starts with a free consultation contact form,
which will guide you right through a process immediately.
You can also click through and see the things
that we're handling that Ben described.
And then 1-877-POPOC-AF.
As long as I'm still here, we got it.
There, thank you for that.
We got a new sub stack for Legal AF, which is on fire.
We're posting everything that Ben and I talked about today,
like this filing and that filing,
and the Supreme Court just ruled this and this new opinion.
We are posting it on Legal AF, the sub stack.
We're posting videos.
I do a morning briefing like Ben does.
I call it Morning AF.
We put everything under the AF banner
with our other contributors as well.
Some great writing and articles, all original, on the Legal AF sub stack. Come on over there. Great way to our other contributors as well. Some great writing and articles, all original on the Legal AF Substack.
Come on over there.
Great way to support the show as well.
Thank you everybody for watching Legal AF.
I'm going to, gotta get some rest.
I'm a little tired.
I'm a little tired from this trip.
I'm going to sleep.
It was like 14 hours, like a 14 hour flight back
because there was like a three hour delay on the top,
you know, on the whole thing. Anyway, I'll see everybody next time on Legal AF. Shout
out Legal AF for a shout out minus 20.