apatriot1776
Ramblin' Wreck
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One more step towards being employees…
That’s interesting. I wonder if the similar laws in other states are also unenforceable or if there is something unique to GA that makes this so?I'm not taking a side in this, just sharing what this guy says. He's an attorney who is following the ACC lawsuits closely.
David McKenzie comment on GA NIL order
Also, the thread title misleadingly calls Kemp's executive order a law. Regardless, it may be unenforceable.
That was my thought about it. I can tell my bank that my checking account has $10 billion in it. I could sign a"private party order" to that effect. The bank however would not agree with me. The governor not the President can simply order something with no legal authority to order it.I'm not taking a side in this, just sharing what this guy says. He's an attorney who is following the ACC lawsuits closely.
David McKenzie comment on GA NIL order
Also, the thread title misleadingly calls Kemp's executive order a law. Regardless, it may be unenforceable.
This isn't a law. This is Kemp signing a paper and saying this is how he wants it to be. The is no such law, and no legal authority for him to do this.That’s interesting. I wonder if the similar laws in other states are also unenforceable or if there is something unique to GA that makes this so?
To me, all of them feel like a means to an end… the end being someone somewhere somehow coming up with an enforcement mechanism and some sort of parameters. I don’t see how or when that happens at present.
Well, to be fair, Trump announced about a million and one executive orders but he was smart enough to stack the Supreme Court first.Biden has announced about a million executive orders and some have gone forward though he has no legal authority to do them. We’ll see if this sticks
You’re right and you’re hung up on the wrong part. Many governors / governments in other states have passed similar legislation or exec orders or bills or whatever. They’ve all been reported loosely and a littl differently. I’m just wondering if any are actually legit / enforceable.This isn't a law. This is Kemp signing a paper and saying this is how he wants it to be. The is no such law, and no legal authority for him to do this.
Who knows? Various states have different statutes that could affect executive orders in different ways. Presidents and Governors have broad powers to enact such things, but courts have ruled that executive orders must be supported by existing law, otherwise they can be contested. David McKenzie thinks that Kemp's order does not have such an enabling statute in Georgia. I'm not qualified to say if he is correct or not.You’re right and you’re hung up on the wrong part. Many governors / governments in other states have passed similar legislation or exec orders or bills or whatever. They’ve all been reported loosely and a littl differently. I’m just wondering if any are actually legit / enforceable.
Are they all political pandering or do some of these states actually have enforceable laws / statues / orders?
Come on now. Anyone who has ever followed GT knows the answer to this. I get that we are all in love with JBatt and Cabrera right now, for freeing our football and basketball programs from horrible coaches, and yes, they have opened some resources. But GT has some serious forces working against athletics and those forces will still be here when JBatt and Cabrera are long gone.Theoretically this should make us richer than about anyone. Question is, will GT use the resources we have. Praying that we do
This quote is interesting…AJC article on the NIL executive order.
Georgia governor opens NIL opportunity for UGA, Tech athletics
Georgia Athletic Director Josh Brooks and Tech AD J Batt issued a joint statement expressing appreciation to the governor for his action.www.ajc.com