ProPublica released a new report on Friday detailing Justice Clarence Thomas’ close relationship with the Koch brothers with previously undisclosed and extraordinarily damning new details.

According to ProPublica, the justice developed a friendship with the Kochs as they were funneling hundreds of millions of dollars into right-wing causes, many of which ended up before the Supreme Court. The brothers then used Thomas to raise money for their sprawling network, inviting him to speak at “donor events” that brought in millions of dollars.

He disclosed none of these activities on his annual disclosure forms, an obvious violation of federal ethics law.

  • themeatbridge@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    So before, we could only assume from the preponderance of evidence that Thomas is corrupt as shit. Now we know it for a fact. And still, nothing will change because the Koch brothers own more than some SCOTUS justices. They also own most of congress.

    End legalized bribery now.

    • psycho_driver@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      And still, nothing will change because the Koch brothers own more than some SCOTUS justices.

      It’s just the Koch brother now. Happily one of the wretched fucks died a few years ago.

      • assassin_aragorn@lemmy.world
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        If I recall right there’s 3 brothers. Two were right wing scumbags, but I think the third wanted absolutely nothing to do with any of it

    • treefrog@lemm.ee
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      It’s actually not legal to bribe a government official and charging the Kochs and others would be an excellent start (since going after a SC Justice is apparently difficult)

      • DragonAce@lemmy.world
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        It’s actually not legal to bribe a government official

        Well of course not, thats why they’re not called “bribes”, they’re called “campaign donations”.

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        Problem is the people who are taking the bribery also get to determine the legality of it. SCOTUS could say that bribing a justice is totally legal and the only recourse would be a new amendment. Even then, I’m not sure what would stop them from ignoring the new amendment in their rulings.

        The problem with the court granting itself judicial review was that it didn’t come with checks and balances like the rest of the government functions.

  • matchphoenix@feddit.uk
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    At minimum, it’s time to investigate Clarence Thomas. When the Democrats retake the house (hopefully in 2024 after the Republicans shutdown the government over nothing), they need to begin impeachment hearings in the House. I don’t care if the Senate will never remove him.

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      That’s right. You don’t skip your responsibilities because you think another link down the chain won’t fulfill their duties. You do your job and make whoever skips out on their responsibility to put their name to it. Doesn’t matter if nothing practical comes of it. Integrity and faith in “the system” demands no less.

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    We shouldn’t be talking about impeachment at this point. We should be talking about prison. Injustice Thomas needs to go to prison.

    • Viking_Hippie@lemmy.world
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      First impeachment, then a criminal trial ending in significant prison time.

      Edit: scratch that. Caging humans doesn’t decrease crime or otherwise benefit society. Give him several years of community service and permanently take away his licence to practice law in any way, shape or form.

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        You’re right about incarceration. But there needs to be a further penalty. Monetary. Make him pay back all the dirty money. And maybe make him clean up dog shit for the community service.

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        No. Let him keep the license but only so he can serve as a public defender in New Your City as part of a 10 year term of community service working 40 hours per week with one week of vacation per year. Then reduce the sentence for one day for each successfully defended case.

      • Gamey@feddit.de
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        1 year ago

        Im not an American but if people I know are put in a cage for fucking Weed I certainly want shitbags like him to go there too, it may not be helpful but certainly what he deserves!

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      The problem is I doubt anything he is doing is illegal. If it is though that is a much more realistic option than impeachment

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          This needs more attention. Far easier to go after the people doing the bribing and if we do, it will get a lot of money out of politics.

          And thus make it easier to hold people like Clarence accountable.

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              For sure we should.

              But the bribers don’t have to be impeached and can be charged directly.

              If we can hold Trump accountable, we can hold the Koch family accountable too.

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    He and is going to take every dime they can hustle and sign off on any “Supreme Court decision” that Koch’s lawyers hand to him.

    And he’s not even going to pretend to feel bad about it because there’s not a god-danged anyone is going to do to stop it. He’s a whore, bought and paid for.

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    I love the USA, but I’m surprised at how passive the average American has become. Thomas is actively making your lives worse in exchange for bribes. Where are the mass protests? SCOTUS will do nothing about it, and neither will Congress, if you don’t protest.

      • figaro@lemdro.id
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        This sounds like a joke but it actually isn’t.

        About 30% are openly in some kind of weird suicide pact, and the other 20% will vote for the same people as them, just while furrowing their eyebrows sometimes

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      This is why the police force in America is equipped like an army, to quickly and violently suppress any protests. Then when you have a prison stay on your record, no more voting, struggling to get a job or even survive.

    • AngryCommieKender@lemmy.world
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      Title 18 section 1507 makes it illegal to protest outside a judges home, and they have indicated they will use the same law to prevent protests outside the court.

    • Vodik_VDK@lemmy.world
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      Don’t be surprised.

      Everyone here is either indoctrinated enough to be here for it, powerful enough to be above it, or disassociated enough to endure it.

      It’s just what happens after 22 years of social shock doctrine (I made that term up. I will not elaborate. Ama closed).

  • darq@kbin.social
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    Of course, none of this actually matters in the slightest unless those ethics violations have consequences.

  • TheSaneWriter@lemmy.thesanewriter.com
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    Clarence Thomas is clearly not just a threat to the integrity of the court but to the entire United States. If we are going to have a functional democracy, he needs to be removed from office and imprisoned.

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    1 year ago

    Does a wild bear shit in the woods? Of course he worked for the Kochs. Doesn’t everyone already know this?

    • gamer@lemm.ee
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      I’ve seen this term thrown around on Lemmy in different contexts, so I looked it up and the wikipedia page gives a very specific definition of that term relating to a type of economic situation. I don’t think that particular definition applies in this case, or does it?

      • Jordan Lund@lemmy.one
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        It’s less the economic definition than it is this:

        https://www.dictionary.com/browse/banana-republic

        noun - Usually Disparaging.

        1. a small, poor country, often reliant on a single export or limited resource, governed by an authoritarian regime and characterized by corruption and economic exploitation by foreign corporations conspiring with local government officials.

        2. any exploitative government that functions poorly for its citizenry while disproportionately benefiting a corrupt elite group or individual.

  • just_change_it@lemmy.world
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    It literally doesn’t matter. The republicans don’t care and they’ve gerrymandered control away from the democrats so it can’t change.

    Even if democrats had control it would just be more of the same bullshit with some sugar coated feel good nonsense that still funnels wealth to the real owners of the country while appearing to make a difference.

    What do you do with the democratic process when the same people control the judges, the legislative branch, and the executive branch? The answer is nothing. You just continue on getting f’d like the cows we all are.

    This is not a nation of the people, it’s a nation of the owners.

    • Vodik_VDK@lemmy.world
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      What do you do with the democratic process

      There’s more than one way to run a democracy, and more than one way to tally votes; it just so happens that the way we’re currently doing it —First Past The Post Voting— is utter shit; it’s the lynchpin of the two party system and systemic corruption.

      If we commit grassroots focus to electoral reforms in favor of Ranked Choice Voting then all these insidious actors will find power to be much more slippery.

      • just_change_it@lemmy.world
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        I want this but I don’t see any way of it happening in current republican controlled states. Seems really difficult in democrat ones too.

  • HurlingDurling@lemm.ee
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    I feel like every case justice thomas was a part off and had a vote on the winning rule should be thrown out.

    • spaceghoti@lemmy.one
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      You look at his financial statements. If there’s no record of him paying for the flight then it was necessarily paid by someone else. Propublica wouldn’t necessarily have access to those statements, but an IRS audit would. Assuming Congress would have the balls to look into it.

      So we don’t know right now, but given the corruption that has already been uncovered, I think there’s ample justification for a Congressional inquiry once Democrats take back the House.

    • gamer@lemm.ee
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      but how do you rule out the possibility that Thomas paid for the flight?

      Good point, and I don’t have an answer. However, I think it’d be interesting to see how often he travels in a private jet. Maybe he’s a high roller who jets all the time? Or maybe he decided to treat himself this one time?

  • Jordan Lund@lemmy.one
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    We need to look forward to 2024, take back the House and get a 60 vote majority in the Senate, along with the White House…maybe then, things will change.

    • bogo@sh.itjust.works
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      I don’t see any scenario where Democrats take 60 seats in the Senate. The states have polarized so much, and the system favors the Republican states too much.

      • Jordan Lund@lemmy.one
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        Unlike the House, Senate races are state wide and can’t be gerrymandered.

        It’s going to take a major effort focused on reforming the Supreme Court to flip those seats, but looking at 2020, we flipped BOTH seats in Georgia which is about as red as it gets.

        • bogo@sh.itjust.works
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          The existing boundaries of the states is their built-in gerrymander. One voters opinion in Wyoming counts 50 times a Californian.

          • Jordan Lund@lemmy.one
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            1 year ago

            Yup. I, personally, want 100% vote by mail. We’ve been doing it in my state since 2000, it’s safe, effective, results in high turnout and engagement, really nothing to hate.

            Oh, except Republicans lose when more people vote. ;)