Supreme Court Issues Terrible Takings Decision in Pung v. Isabella County
The Court ruled that local goverments may pay compensation far below fair market value for property seized in tax foreclosures.

Understanding the stakes of Landor v. Louisiana Department of Corrections.
The Court ruled that local goverments may pay compensation far below fair market value for property seized in tax foreclosures.
The Pung family of Isabella County, Michigan, maintained they were entitled to fair market value. The high court disagreed, but with a twist.
An Army sergeant was sentenced to life in a military prison Tuesday for shootings last summer that wounded five people at a base in Georgia.
The Senate on Tuesday approved a House-passed war powers resolution to limit Trump's action in Iran in a 50 to 48 vote. The post BREAKING: Senate Approves House-Passed War Powers Resolution to Limit Trump’s Action in Iran – Four Republicans Join the Democrats appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.
Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson dissented, saying the ruling contained a “parade of horribles” that created bad precedent.
A "disturbing" Supreme Court ruling will allow border officials to subject green-card holders to a "Kafkaesque nightmare," per a Slate analysis.According to the analysis by legal reporter Mark Joseph Stern, the 6-3 Supreme Court vote along usual partisan lines in the case Blanche v. Lau established that border officials don't need "clear and convincing evidence" that green-card holders committed a "crime of moral turpitude" to deny them entry.The case originates from a lawful permanent resident named Muk Choi Lau, who lost his green card and was paroled into the U.S. after he was accused of selling designer-style shorts with a counterfeit trademark, Stern wrote. Lau argued that the border official shouldn't be able to take his green card and have so much discretion.Although a lower court agreed with Lau, the Supreme Court tossed that decision with a ruling that Stern described as "egregiously wrong."Lau was allowed into the United States on parole, but that status puts an immigrant in "legal limbo" and makes them "far more vulnerable to deportation."Stern brought up Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson's dissenting opinion and echoed her point that by taking a legal permanent resident's green card, it can make it harder for them "to work, open bank accounts, secure housing, obtain health insurance, and enroll in school."Meanwhile, Stern called out Justice Clarence Thomas's opinion, saying it "blesses one part of the Trump administration's multipronged attack against green-card holders, validating its campaign to revoke these individuals' rights on a whim," and highlighted that Thomas "expressly declined to say what, if any, burden the government bears at the border."
Robby Soave and Amber Duke discuss the recent online feud between Rep. Ro Khanna and Elon Musk.
"Balance of Power: Late Edition" focuses on the intersection of politics and global business. On today's show, Democratic Senator Angela Alsobrooks of Maryland says the 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act shows Congress can still work in a bipartisan fashion to tackle affordability, arguing there are "many more opportunities" for lawmakers to do so. Republican Senator Roger Marshall of Kansas says the SAVE America Act is the one bill he would choose to pass if he could pass only one more in his Senate career, as President Trump presses Congress to advance the measure. Democratic Representative Sydney Kamlager-Dove of California says she is not prepared to support additional Pentagon funding without more answers from Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth on Iran and depleted munitions stockpiles. (Source: Bloomberg)