The act allowed the National Marine Fisheries Service to require herring boats, relatively small vessels that normally carry only five to six people, to also carry federal monitors to enforce of its regulations.
As a next step, however, and without any express statutory authorization, the NMFS decided to require Loper Bright and Relentless to also pay the salaries of these monitors, estimated by the NMFS to be $710 per day, an amount that can exceed the profits from a day’s fishing.
Imagine getting paid $710 a day to make no product or provide no service and you mathematically know you're going to ruin the business. Clown world is destroying itself.
[ - ] LawFag 1 point 1.3 yearsJan 15, 2024 17:06:40 ago (+1/-0)
It doesn't end the delegation doctrine, just chevron deference which basically allows agencies to fill in the cracks in legislation. Blatantly unconstitutional, but so is the entire body of modern commerce clause jurisprudence. Chevron is small potatoes, but it's as good a place to start as any I guess.
[ + ] we_kill_creativity
[ - ] we_kill_creativity 5 points 1.3 yearsJan 15, 2024 13:23:45 ago (+5/-0)
This stands out to me:
Imagine getting paid $710 a day to make no product or provide no service and you mathematically know you're going to ruin the business. Clown world is destroying itself.
[ + ] Aze
[ - ] Aze 4 points 1.3 yearsJan 15, 2024 13:36:08 ago (+4/-0)
[ + ] we_kill_creativity
[ - ] we_kill_creativity 5 points 1.3 yearsJan 15, 2024 13:37:11 ago (+5/-0)
[ + ] LawFag
[ - ] LawFag 1 point 1.3 yearsJan 15, 2024 17:06:40 ago (+1/-0)