a) You don't understand the things you're disputing. It's not "Trump secretly won", it's "Democrats publicly changed all the rules in their favor."Ultimately we know that Trump's claims about he secretly won the election were a bunch of gibberish. No judge has acknowledged that there was a case to be had, no investigation has concluded that Biden magically managed to convince Republican election officials to somehow swing the vote in his favor. Meanwhile its a well established fact that the Republicans fiercely engage in gerrymandering and voter suppression, with a judges directly calling them out on it.
b) Judges are just people, their opinions aren't omniscient.
The majority of people can be wrong about things. You're trying to argue by means of peer pressure.Kinda curious how these um....''accidents'' then go on to conviniently obstruct Democratic voters and minorities while seemingly not doing the same to Republican voters. If you doubt that anyone is targeting racial demographics then you're probably in the minority.
Stop, reread what I wrote, maybe go for a walk, then come back and finish this post....And drinking water is against state or federal policies? If we pretend that this is true then its rather telling that Republicans put more effort in banning those breaks for ''being against federal policies'' than they do trying to amend those policies to allow people their water breaks. Or could ''drinking water being against state or federal polices'' perhaps be a pretext, a technicality that they cling to a technicality in order to ban those breaks so they don't intrude on corporate profit?
Now that you've presumedly returned from your walk, let's try this again. The bill which people claim removes water breaks says nothing about water breaks. What it said is that localities in Texas cannot institute employment policies at different standards than state and federal policies. The inspiration for the bill was cities passing long mandatory minimum paid sick leave requirements. It was not intended to touch water breaks. Opponents of the bill claimed the broad language would undo a local ordinance in Dallas which requires construction sites to have a 10-minute water break every 4 hours... OSHA already requires employers to provide water to employees on demand, and recommends stopping to drink in hot climates every 15-minutes. This water break law didn't overshoot the federal guidelines, it undershot them by like a factor of 10, the bill in Texas would not have touched that water break bill.
But hey, the propaganda works, because by the time it gets to you, all you get out of it is "Republicans want to take away people's water breaks!"