Trump's new cabinet

I seriously believe that under any administration that the federal government could prohibit water fluoridation because I’m aware of how poorly these idiots understand science.

I’m pretty sure the 10th amendment leaves that power up to the states.

It was reported in several outlets that Aileen Cannon is supposed to be on his shortlist for Attorney General.

My understanding is that it does (referencing @Smapti 's most recent post), but the Tenth Amendment only means something to Trump when it’s an issue he doesn’t want to get involved with (abortion being returned to the states, for example). Otherwise, it seems to me that he believes that he’s in charge of everything.

Pardon me for asking, but what “federal oversight of education”? It seems to me that the last two attempts (No Child Left Behind, and Race to the Top) crashed and burned.

I thought Trump was in the “give everyone vouchers” camp (and never mind that this is a states’ decision).

I’m thinking I’m glad I never bought a Tesla car because I expect that Musk may quash any serious investigation by NHTSA or other government agencies into flaws in its cars.

JFK Jr is dead, actually.

Trump is largely surrounded by opportunistic assholes, not lunatics. Elon Musk, Vivek Ramaswamy, JD Vance and the like - or background actors like Peter Thiel - aren’t crazy at all, they’re just plutocrats and fascists who want power and influence, and they’re the ones who’ll be running the show now. Kennedy, however, is legitimately a nut.

If Kennedy gets sidelined there is some hope Trump won’t be terribly interested in what happens with that file. That’s the best one can hope for - that his uninterest minimizes damage. And I’d say the chances of his being sidelined are pretty high, since, as you point out, Trump has never shown much interest in Kennedy’s pet issues or science woo, nor do those things interest Trump’s puppet masters. He used Kennedy to win the election, so Kennedy is now irrelevant. I’ll bet good money that within six months Trump won’t even be willing to speak to him. It was stupid of Kennedy to trust Trump, but then that’s what happens when you have worms in your brain.

My idiot uncle was part of the team of morons that got Windsor to take fluoride out of its water supply. Within a few years serious tooth decay among children had gone up 51 percent.

As to whether Kennedy can get Trump to do this it’s not really a federal matter anyway. Even Kennedy has quietly admitted this by saying he’ll get Trump to “recommend” it be stopped. That’s basically all Washington can do.

Was your “idiot uncle” on the payroll of the local dental society?

RFK Jr and Musk will be given “Special Advisor” roles. For two reasons: 1) they don’t have to be approved by the Senate and 2) they can be ignored when they say something stupid.

ETA: And in Musks’s case because he (in theory at least) has at least a few real jobs to do.

From that same website:
“In connection with totally refocusing schools on succeeding in the world of work, President Trump pledges to close the Department of Education in Washington, D.C. and to send all education work and needs back to the States.”

Right. Which is incompatible with the rest of the agenda about how the federal government will force schools to do X, Y, and Z. He cannot dictate how schools are to be run AND shut down the branch of the government that dictates how schools are to be run. He may as well decree that he can grab women by the pussy as much as he wants and order Ronny Jackson to saw his arms off.

Well, there is one way he can force states to do things: by threatening to cut off funding. This is how the federal government managed to mandate a drinking age of 21 nationwide.

Which required an act of Congress, which means 60 votes in the Senate, which they don’t have.

The only reason that they need 60 votes is that the filibuster/cloture rule still stands, and which, to date, neither the GOP nor Democratic majorities in the Senate have chosen to repeal. If the new GOP majority (which is, true, not 60+) chose to use the “nuclear option,” they could get rid of the filibuster if they so chose, without 60 votes.

Which they could’ve done in 2017 but didn’t, even though Trump told them to and the Senate has no agency of its own and exists only to do whatever Trump decrees.

And they won’t this time either, because they’re gonna want it when 2027 rolls around and they’re in the minority again. Or are we still assuming that Trump has the power to abolish all elections forever?

Unless their plan is to change things to ensure that they’re never in the minority again.

That was also their plan in 2001 and 2017.

How’d that work out?

Republicans have taken control of many state legislatures and gubernatorial positions, which has allowed them to gerrymander many states.

You can’t gerrymander the Senate.