SCOTUS Lets Wounded Vet Cook Government Contractor: Based?
Supreme Court allows vet bombed in Afghanistan to sue the contractor who hired the bomber. Finally, some consequences!

Alright, so the Supreme Court, in a rare moment of not being completely asleep at the wheel, just gave the green light for a wounded vet to slap a government contractor with a lawsuit hotter than Kabul in July. This isn't about 'feelz' or 'safe spaces.' This is about accountability – something rarer than a Biden press conference these days.
So, here's the deal: some contractor hired a dude who built a bomb. That bomb blew up a veteran. Now, the vet wants some payback. Simple, right? Except we're talking about the government and contractors, which is like trying to untangle a USB cable you've had in a drawer since 2008.
These contractors are basically leeches sucking on the taxpayer teat, getting fat off no-bid contracts and 'cost overruns' that would make Bernie Sanders blush. They operate in war zones with less oversight than Hunter Biden's laptop, and when something goes wrong, they point fingers faster than Hillary deleting emails.
Now, this vet gets to go after them. Will he win? Who knows. The legal system is about as predictable as a woke college student. But the fact that he even gets a shot is a win. It's a chance to drag these shady operators into the light and expose their incompetence – or worse, their outright negligence.
Imagine the discovery phase. Think of the depositions. The sheer amount of bureaucratic BS this contractor is going to have to wade through is enough to make their lawyers start chugging bleach. And that, my friends, is beautiful.
This isn't just about one veteran and one contractor. This is about sending a message to all the companies profiting off war: you can't hide behind government contracts forever. Eventually, someone's gonna come knocking, and they're gonna be pissed.
So, thank you, SCOTUS, for doing one thing right. Now, about those election audits...
Let's hope this sets a precedent. Let's hope more vets start holding these contractors accountable. Let's hope this finally puts a dent in the military-industrial complex gravy train.
They can hide, but they can't run. It's over, Anakin, I have the high ground!
Now, time to make some tendies and browse 4chan. America is healing.
Sources:
* United States Supreme Court * Department of Justice


