What A Day - SCOTUS Checks In
Episode Date: June 24, 2021The Supreme Court ruled that President Biden had the authority to remove the head of the Federal Housing Finance Agency, who was appointed by the former Trump administration. Other SCOTUS rulings from... yesterday protected a high school cheerleader's free speech on Snapchat, barred a union from organizing workers at their worksites, and banned police from entering homes without a warrant to arrest misdemeanor suspects.The Delta variant now accounts for one-fifth of recent COVID cases in the U.S., predominantly in unvaccinated areas. If the variant persists, it could cause another COVID surge this fall or winter.And in headlines: Nikole Hannah-Jones refuses to join UNC without tenure, Hong Kong’s last pro-democracy publication shuts down, and no tuna DNA found in Subway’s tuna sandwich.Show Notes:Slate: "The Supreme Court’s Latest Union-Busting Decision Goes Far Beyond California Farmworkers" – https://bit.ly/3zRlPIcFor a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/whataday
Transcript
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it's thursday june 24th i'm akilah hughes and i'm getting interesting and this is what a day
where we support critical race theory being taught in pre-k yeah let's radicalize them
kids with just the truth about this country see what happens maybe they'll not tear down the
capital yeah that would be what we want it's the first lesson in pre-K. Do not tear down the Capitol.
Do not do a white supremacist insurrectionist march, please.
There you go.
On today's show, the dangerous Delta variant spreads in the U.S.,
posing a risk to unvaccinated people.
Then we'll have some headlines, but first, the latest.
It was a big day for the Supreme Court right before it wrapped up the term for the summer. There were a bunch of different SCOTUS
rulings yesterday with some cases that we've mentioned before on our show and others that we
have not. So we're going to go ahead and dive in and give an overview of these big cases and what
precedent they may or may not set going forward. All right. So first up is a case that could have
implications for housing affordability.
So what happened there? Yeah, so this one's a little bit wonky, but the case involves the Federal Housing Finance Agency, which oversees the mortgage companies Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.
Drag cigarette have not heard those names in years, dear Lord. The Supreme Court determined
that President Biden had the authority to remove the head of this agency who was a holdover from the Trump administration. Yeah, so the prior head has now been dismissed and we are waiting to see who the
replacement is going to be. Now, this could end up being a bigger deal soon when it comes to the
administration's priorities for housing. We've discussed this kind of burgeoning housing crisis
that has been accelerated by the pandemic. And of course, the federal eviction moratorium is set to
end next week as well. Although there is some reporting out there that Biden wants to extend it for an additional
month. But I talked with Mark Joseph Stern, who covers the courts for Slate, and he noticed
something interesting about how the court was deciding these kinds of cases recently. He said
last year, the court ruled that the head of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau could be
fired as well. And so I do wonder if the conservative justices are like a little bit
angry about the fact that they finally achieved this long held conservative, like wet dream of
just totally abolishing independent agencies and creating a unitary executive. And the guy who
benefits from it most immediately is Joseph Robinette Biden. We love to hear the hard R Robinette.
Then there's a case we've talked about before,
a high schooler who was mad about not making Varsity's cheer squad.
Yeah, that's right.
So as a reminder here, this case pertained to Brandy Levy,
who back in 2017 was a high school student in Pennsylvania.
At the time, she was in a local convenience store, i.e. not on school grounds,
when she sent a Snapchat that said,
quote, F school, F softball, F cheer, F everything.
That is my best impression of high school
with a pic of her and a friend
with their middle fingers up.
This was because she did not make the varsity squad.
Relatable.
So then another student screenshotted it
and showed it to her mom, who was a coach.
Real lack of solidarity there.
And then the school suspended Levy
from the JV cheer squad for a year. I mean, solidarity there. And then the school suspended Levy from
the JV cheer squad for a year. I mean, that's wild. I wonder if she had posted something nicer.
She could have just gotten back on the team. I don't know. It's possible. She sued the school
district, though. And in an eight to one ruling yesterday, the Supreme Court determined that the
district had actually violated her First Amendment rights. There is a caveat here, though. That
doesn't mean all things that students post or say while off campus is free from regulation. Justice Breyer said that the same rules, for
instance, don't necessarily apply in cases like bullying, harassment, threats, and more. And
Levy's case was special because her post wasn't directed at any specific person. Here's Stern
again. The court didn't try to establish like a grand unified theory of free speech at school or off campus. It just said, look, this kind of speech is clearly protected by the First Amendment and will deal with the ramifications of our decision some other day.
Right. And next on the docket, the court ruled on a big case that affects unionization that stems from a California farm. Yeah, so quick context here. The United Farm Workers,
led by Cesar Chavez and Dolores Huerta, organized over 50 years ago to basically push for better
rights for agricultural workers in California. And since then, the state has allowed union
organizers to meet with workers on a limited basis at their work sites, for instance, during lunch
breaks. But one company, the Cedar Point Nursery in Northern California, sued state officials in 2016 because it didn't like that an organizing effort was happening on
its own property. And so yesterday, in a 6-3 ruling with the liberals all dissenting,
the Supreme Court sided with that company. The justices equated union organizing on the property
with, quote, taking it and said that the state's law violates the Fifth Amendment, which prevents
the taking of private property, quote, without just compensation. When I talked to Mark Joseph Stern, he said this
goes way beyond this particular place of work. He wrote this really, really good piece we can link
to about how this could actually have ramifications for other unionization efforts in the country.
So for instance, think about what a company like Amazon may or may not do now.
We know that union representatives and union organizers
do often get access to the workplaces
they're trying to organize or bargain for.
And I think we're now going to see employers,
including Amazon, try to argue that every time
a union organizer takes a step on their property,
if the state allows it, then that's a taking
and the government's going to have to pay Amazon
for the pleasure of
simply allowing unions to basically exist on their property. Yeah, if there's one thing Amazon needs,
it's more money. And one last final ruling to go over. What did the Supreme Court have to say
about the powers of the police? Yeah, so the court basically determined that police officers can't
always enter the home of a suspect without a warrant if the person is suspected of a misdemeanor.
And this came from a 2016 incident in which a guy in California was apparently in his car playing loud music and honking his horn, generally vibing, I guess, as one does.
Officers pursued him for violating a noise ordinance.
So then the guy goes home claiming that he didn't really know he was being pursued. And a cop basically forces the guy's garage door open with his foot. The officer did
not have a warrant and then ended up arresting the guy on the DUI after smelling alcohol on his
breath, mind you, in his own home. Crazy. So the justices ended up sending this one back down to
the lower courts in light of this ruling. So that's a quick overview of the full Supreme Court press yesterday. And I really do encourage everyone to read Stern's
writing and check out more on the cases. But turning to the pandemic now, we've been talking
and hearing quite a lot about the Delta variant spread, including here in the US. So Akilah,
what is new on that front? All right, so the Delta variant first ravaged India in recent months,
and it accounts for more than 90% of COVID cases in India and the UK and has been found in over 80 countries.
But in America, it now accounts for a fifth of recent COVID cases, according to a CDC report
yesterday. And according to their research, both the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines work well against
the strain. And while they expect the J&J single shot to work well, too, they still have to study its effectiveness.
Yeah, hopefully everybody that is vaccinated is protected.
So one fifth of U.S. cases are now this more transmissible variant.
Where are those actually popping up?
All right. So unsurprisingly, it's mostly happening where people aren't vaccinated.
Again, if you can, please get vaccinated. But for example, Missouri is now leading the country in new infections. And that surge is happening in the politically conservative farming region,
where in one county, vaccination rates are as low as 13 percent. The chief administrative officer
at Mercy Hospital in Springfield told the Associated Press that he hopes the rest of
the country can learn from their plight, saying, quote, we will be the canary. He was obviously
talking about a coal mine and not like a sanctuary. It's really bad. And I think Republicans honestly should feel bad about politicizing the vaccine
because a lot of these deaths are preventable and it is their own constituents that are getting sick.
Charles Gaba, a health care policy data analyst, has been charting the numbers of vaccinated people
by county based on who they voted for in the 2020 election. And without exception, the lowest
vaccine rates countrywide are in major
Trump territory. The Delta variant doesn't care about our politics, so it's very maddening that
it's gotten so bad. Yeah, and if this stays out there and spreads, there's always a possibility
for something worse that can arise. And so cases are on the rise again in Arkansas, Nevada, and
Utah as well, where less than half of the eligible population has had at least one vaccine dose, right?
That's right. And experts believe that if this variant persists and vaccine rates remain low, it's possible those areas will be in for another surge this fall or winter.
I really don't want to go back. So please, if you know people who can get vaccinated and have it, talk to them.
We'll let you know how things shake out over the next few months.
But that's the latest for now.
It's Thursday, WOD Squad.
And for today's Temp Check,
we are discussing new frontiers in reality dating shows.
Yesterday, Netflix released a trailer for a show called Sexy Beast, good God,
which will send contestants on first dates while wearing deeply unsettling facial prosthetics
that make them look like dolphins.
That one was the worst.
Foxes, scarecrows, aliens, and other creatures that will burrow in your brain
and appear in your nightmares when you least expect it.
The idea is that the contestants have to fall in love based on personality alone,
which I don't know that that's all that is.
Like, I think you have to really fall in love with a lot of things.
Like the little nubbin on the head of the dolphin.
Anyway, Netflix described the show as Love is Blind meets The Masked Singer.
It comes out next month.
So Giddydy my question for
you did you see the trailer and are you gonna be watching i saw the trailer and i saw enough um
that's my uh personal perspective on this um listen i think that they have done an amazing job
getting people to pay attention to this and talk about it um and you know i'm sure uh we will all
be talking about a clip of, you know, a dolphin
finding love with a fox at some point down the road. And perhaps it will be beautiful and we'll
think of it in different terms than we do now. But I have personally seen enough at this particular
stage. How about you? Yeah, I gotta say, you know, this one's a miss for me. You already know,
I don't watch a lot of reality TV. No shade to anyone who does. I just have a hard time being invested in people I don't know and will never know and don't respect because I don't know and whatever else.
True.
But I definitely think adding a layer of prosthetics makes that worse for me.
Like, now they're not even people I'm supposed to care about.
Unscripted dolphin hybrid humans, a woodchuck, whatever.
There were all kinds of scary things happening
in that. I didn't like the teeth. I didn't like the eyes. They had those blinky eyelashes,
like scary baby dolls. It just, it was too much for me on a visceral level.
Those kinds of things I can handle. Like the, I think the furthest I can go with talking animals
is Rocket Raccoon from Guardians of the Galaxy or like cartoons of animals talking. That's it.
So that was my long-winded way of saying, hell no, I'm not seeing that.
Yeah.
I mean, I think, you know, if we want to see charming animals, we have Pixar.
We have Fantastic Mr. Fox.
Like our bases are covered, quite frankly.
Right.
I talk my dog all the time.
I just pretend that I know what his voice sounds like and I talk him.
And that's great.
Like that's better.
And you know that he's not going to take makeup off.
And there's a human underneath.
So that's a plus. Oh, my God.
If that happened, I would literally move to the sun.
And just like that, we have checked our tips.
Stay safe.
Make sure your dog's not a person.
And we'll be back with some headlines.
Headlines.
The last pro-democracy newspaper in Hong Kong published their final edition today. Wow.
Apple Daily started
off as a celebrity gossip tabloid in the mid-90s, but it later grew into an outlet for criticism of
mainland China and Hong Kong's governments. The Chinese government began their crackdown on the
paper last week, freezing over $2 million of its assets and arresting several top editors and
executives. It was the first time the government used its controversial national security law to
target journalists for something they had published. Speaking of that law, the first
person to be tried under it pleaded not guilty yesterday to charges of terrorism for riding
through police lines with his motorcycle. So far, over 100 people have been arrested under the law,
which continues to silence many pro-democracy voices in Hong Kong.
Pulitzer Prize winning journalist and New York Times correspondent Nicole Hannah
Jones has announced her refusal to join the faculty at the University of North Carolina
unless she is granted tenure. Her appointment as the chair in race and investigative journalism
drew a lot of opposition from conservatives because of her role in the 1619 Project,
an essay series that reframed American history through the lens of slavery.
Hannah Jones's lawyers implied she was denied tenure because of Walter E. Hussman, a massive UNC donor
who is critical of the 1619 Project and is the Hussman in the Hussman School of Journalism and
Media, where she was set to teach. 1,619 UNC students and alumni signed a petition last month
demanding that Hannah Jones be given tenure. But if the resistance continues, she is considering filing a discrimination suit.
More like Walter E. Sussman to me.
Yeah, he's a sussman.
We tried. We tried.
We tried and we got him.
Guess who formally requested an end to the abusive court-ordered conservatorship that has allowed her dad to control her life for over a decade?
It's Britney, bitch.
That's right.
Every time.
Every time.
Thank you again, Charlotte, for keeping that clip at the ready.
Please never delete it from the hard drive or your soul.
Britney Spears addressed a Los Angeles court yesterday petitioning to end her conservatorship
without the condition of her clearing a health evaluation.
She also requested to have her remarks heard by the public.
And in a heartbreaking testimony,
Ms. Spears said that she had been traumatized
by the binding legal arrangement
that let her father, Jamie Spears,
be the sole conservator of her estate.
She shared a series of abuses by her parents,
including being forced to go on tour in 2018
and being put on lithium against her will
after announcing her hiatus.
Spears told the court that the conservatorship was abusive and that she just wants her life back.
This is the first time that she's spoken in court since her lawyer filed to suspend her father as a conservator last year.
Free Britney, I feel bad. I was at that concert in 2018.
New science has come in that could win the Nobel Prize for destroying my trust in fast food sandwiches.
It's a report published this week in the New York Times that found no tuna DNA in tuna
sandwiches from Subway.
Shut up, Gideon.
We know that I said I like that sandwich and it still tastes good.
Anyway, the groundbreaking work comes on the heels, no, of a class action lawsuit filed
against Subway in California.
That suit alleged that customers have been overpaying for Subway tuna,
seeing as it was made entirely of a quote, non-tuna mixture.
Whatever it was, I like the flavor.
The Times report used a technique called polymerase chain reaction,
or PCR, to analyze the quote, unquote, fish from three Los Angeles subways.
And according to the lab that ran the test,
the result pointed to either tuna that was so processed it couldn't be identified.
I'm betting on that one or no tuna in the sample at all.
Of course, Subway vigorously defends its alleged tuna
and says the PCR isn't the right test for this application.
For what it's worth, a report by Inside Edition did find tuna in Subway tuna earlier this year,
and several experts and Subway sandwich artists interviewed by the Times said the facts just don't add up
to Subway trying to trick us with a tuna bait and switch.
Listen, I will just say everybody can eat their own sandwich except this one.
This is the one that is gross.
That's my first look at tuna or not.
Yeah.
All right. Well, you know, I'm glad that you feel comfortable saying that i think it's i think it's tuna but what do i know i'm
not a scientist and those are the headlines dying on this hill one more thing before we go this week
love it or leave it presents out of the closets Streets, a live pride extravaganza filled with games, comedy sets, and of course, gay news. Yeah, Love It makes its return to the
live stage with an amazing lineup, including Ronan Farrow, Jared Goldstein, Hannah Einbinder,
Ira Madison III, Brendan Scannell, Go Cats Brendan, and more. Out of the Closets Into the
Streets will stream live on June 24th at 4 p.m. Pacific on Crooked Media's YouTube and Twitch pages.
Plus, we'll be fundraising for the Trans Justice Funding Project.
So we really hope you'll join.
That is all for today.
If you like the show, make sure you subscribe, leave a review,
remove your prosthetic dolphin fin, and tell your friends to listen.
Do it for me.
And if you're into reading and not just proof of fish DNA like me, What A Day is also a nightly newsletter. Check it out. Subscribe
at crooked.com slash subscribe. I'm Akilah Hughes. I'm Gideon Resnick. And free Britney Spears.
She deserves everything. She gave us everything. Leave her alone.
What A Day is a production of Crooked Media. It's recorded and mixed by Charlotte Landis, Leave her alone.