I love the “ For Dummies ” book series. They can teach an old dog new tricks without making the old dog feel stupid, although, I admit, “ Getting Out of Debt For Dummies” ” wasn’t particularly useful. (Turns out one must spend less than one earns; if they had just written that on the cover I’d be $18.

79 closer to my financial goals.) But the series pretty much answers all of life’s questions, from how to stop killing houseplants to understanding the basics of astrophysics . ALSO READ: Marjorie Taylor Greene buys condo in 'crime ridden hell hole' So, naturally, when confronted with last week’s dizzying patchwork from the U.

S. Supreme Court , I turned to “ Critical Thinking for Dummies ” desperate to understand how “federalism” means one thing when the court talks about corruption , but something else entirely when it talks about abortion or guns . Despite nearly 30 years as an attorney prowling the chambers of federal courts, my brain hurts.

Federalism’s new definition of corruption Last week, Republicans on the Supreme Court stripped the executive branch of key power . They also decided that bribing an elected official isn’t bribery if you wait a few days and call it a gratuity instead. In Snyder , six conservative justices agreed that gifts, money or things of value from grateful citizens who simply wish to “thank” public officials for their service is a “gratuity,” not a “bribe,” so the federal bribery statute doesn’t apply.

No do.