Somewhat opinionated, but clearer explanation: https://jacobin.com/2024/06/supreme-court-corruption-thomas-...
Perhaps somebody finds a better overview.
Congress is free to fix the law.
Until then, the ancestor poster's interpretation of "Don't worry, it's now legal for the judge and everyone else involved to get a nice present from Boeing, as long as it happens afterwards!" is more or less correct AFAICT (though I'd appreciate more educated opinions).
What people like you don’t understand is that slowness is a feature, not a bug!
The first COVID relief bill was passed in less than a month. Because it had broad support and was urgent!
Laws that have broad support are passed quickly. Laws that lack broad support are passed slowly or not at all.
That how lawmaking should work!
1) state laws can be unfair, slanted, and make voting difficult, meaning that voters may not be adequately able to collectively vote in their best interests
2) courts generally have continued to limit any laws on the books to counter this, saying that congress can clarify and strengthen if this is the case
So it looks to me like the ability to actually vote to hold congress accountable is being forever eroded with no accountability for anyone?