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Beiträge, die mit Bankruptcy getaggt sind
After bit of research, I think this is whats happening:
Step1: #Musk dismantles the #US #bureaucracy (which also happens to run the whole country, but whatever) to get a balanced #budget (which will be really low, because there won't be much revenue - but also not many expenses)
Step2: #Trump declares #bankruptcy for the US (which isn't technically declaring but negotiating and also not called bankruptcy but debt restructuring)
Step3: you my american friends are really fucked (& we a little)
Step1: #Musk dismantles the #US #bureaucracy (which also happens to run the whole country, but whatever) to get a balanced #budget (which will be really low, because there won't be much revenue - but also not many expenses)
Step2: #Trump declares #bankruptcy for the US (which isn't technically declaring but negotiating and also not called bankruptcy but debt restructuring)
Step3: you my american friends are really fucked (& we a little)
Western #lie #fraud #politicians Must Die!
#The Moral Bankruptcy of the West
On 19 December 2024, Human Rights Watch issued a 179-page report detailing Israel’s genocide in Gaza.John J. Mearsheimer (John’s Substack)
A bankruptcy judge has rejected The Onion's bid to buy Alex Jones' Infowars site, ruling that the auction process was unfair. "I don't think it's enough money," Judge Christopher Lopez said after a two-day hearing. "I'm not going to approve the sale." It was not immediately clear whether there will be a new auction in which The Onion can participate. Here's more from @NBCNews.
https://flip.it/SLgOWV
#Media #News #TheOnion #Infowars #AlexJones #USLaw #Bankruptcy
https://flip.it/SLgOWV
#Media #News #TheOnion #Infowars #AlexJones #USLaw #Bankruptcy
Bankruptcy judge rejects The Onion’s bid to buy Alex Jones’ Infowars
A bankruptcy judge on Tuesday rejected a bid by The Onion’s parent company to buy Alex Jones’ far-right media empire, including the website Infowars, ruling that the auction process was unfair.David Ingram (NBC News)
Major OxyContin case headlines December session https://www.scotusblog.com/2023/11/major-oxycontin-case-headlines-december-session/ 'The justices will hear oral argument on Dec. 4 in one of their highest-profile bankruptcy cases in recent memory: Harrington v. Purdue Pharma, a challenge to the approval by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 2nd Circuit of a bankruptcy plan for Purdue Pharma, the maker of OxyContin.
Faced with thousands of lawsuits accusing it of having deceptively marketed the highly addictive drug, Purdue Pharma filed for bankruptcy in 2019. It proposed a reorganization plan that would remake the company as a nonprofit devoted to addressing the public health problems caused by the opioid epidemic. But the plan would also release members of the Sackler family, which owned the company and had taken billions of dollars out of the company in recent years, from any future liability for claims against them.
The U.S. Trustee, the division of the Department of Justice that oversees the administration of bankruptcy cases, came to the Supreme Court over the summer, asking the justices to put the plan on hold. The justices agreed to do so and set the case for oral argument in December.
There are two main questions before the court. The first is whether the U.S. Trustee or the Canadian creditors challenging the plan have a right to do so at all, while the second question is whether the court of appeals was correct to confirm the plan. And more broadly, the case raises questions about whether and when it is appropriate to resolve mass tort cases – that is, lawsuits brought by a group of people who have been harmed in a similar way, such as in a plane crash or by a defective product – through the bankruptcy system.'
#SCOTUS #opioids #bankruptcy #liability #healthlaw
Faced with thousands of lawsuits accusing it of having deceptively marketed the highly addictive drug, Purdue Pharma filed for bankruptcy in 2019. It proposed a reorganization plan that would remake the company as a nonprofit devoted to addressing the public health problems caused by the opioid epidemic. But the plan would also release members of the Sackler family, which owned the company and had taken billions of dollars out of the company in recent years, from any future liability for claims against them.
The U.S. Trustee, the division of the Department of Justice that oversees the administration of bankruptcy cases, came to the Supreme Court over the summer, asking the justices to put the plan on hold. The justices agreed to do so and set the case for oral argument in December.
There are two main questions before the court. The first is whether the U.S. Trustee or the Canadian creditors challenging the plan have a right to do so at all, while the second question is whether the court of appeals was correct to confirm the plan. And more broadly, the case raises questions about whether and when it is appropriate to resolve mass tort cases – that is, lawsuits brought by a group of people who have been harmed in a similar way, such as in a plane crash or by a defective product – through the bankruptcy system.'
#SCOTUS #opioids #bankruptcy #liability #healthlaw
Major OxyContin case headlines December session
The justices will kick off the December argument session on Nov. 27 with oral argument in a pair of consolidated cases, Brown v. United States and Jackson v. United States, involving the Armed Career Criminal Act.amy-howe (SCOTUSblog)