Watchdog on Wall Street with Chris Markowski podcast

War Powers Act Meltdown: Following the Constitution Isn’t a Crisis

0:00
4:33
Recuar 15 segundos
Avançar 15 segundos
LISTEN and SUBSCRIBE on:

Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/watchdog-on-wall-street-with-chris-markowski/id570687608 

Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/2PtgPvJvqc2gkpGIkNMR5i 

WATCH and SUBSCRIBE on:

https://www.youtube.com/@WatchdogOnWallstreet/featured  


The political class is in full panic mode over the War Powers Act, with critics losing their minds that some Republican senators dared to side with Democrats to rein in presidential war-making authority. But why the outrage? Requiring Congress to vote before launching military action isn’t radical—it’s the Constitution.
Despite fever dreams of regime change and boots on the ground in Venezuela, that’s not what’s happening. Trump knows a full-scale military occupation would be a political disaster. This is a transactional standoff, not a Jeffersonian democracy export mission. As Thomas Massie bluntly put it, concentrating war powers in one person dissolves liberty—and James Madison called congressional war authority the “crown jewel” for a reason.
Add in years of shifting narratives about Maduro, selective truth-telling, and alarming statements about ignoring international law, and skepticism is more than justified. When leaders cry wolf often enough, trust evaporates. The real question isn’t why Congress is asserting itself—it’s why anyone is shocked that checks and balances still matter.

Mais episódios de "Watchdog on Wall Street with Chris Markowski"