There’s something about this moment that feels familiar—and unresolved.
I read that New York Post editorial, and strip away the politics, and you’re left with something more uncomfortable: a judiciary that, in certain cases, is being called out not just for its decisions—but for its reach.
And the article doesn’t deal in abstractions. It points directly to James Boasberg.
Not as a symbol.
As an example.
A federal judge whose handling of an immigration-related case drew a sharp rebuke from a higher court—described as an abuse of discretion. That matters. Because when appellate courts use language like that, it’s not disagreement. It’s correction.
And that’s where this stops being theoretical.
Because this isn’t about one ruling—it’s about what that ruling represents. A single district court judge issuing decisions with sweeping, nationwide consequences. The kind of reach that effectively halts executive action across the entire country.
That’s the tension.
And that’s what brings me back—again—to John Roberts.
Roberts tells us to respect the courts.
To trust the process.
To let the appellate system work.
And in principle, he’s right.
But here’s the problem—and it’s the one I’ve raised before:
You can’t demand institutional respect while ignoring institutional overreach.
Because when someone like Boasberg is singled out—not by pundits, but by higher courts—for crossing a line, that’s not politics. That’s the system correcting itself.
And when that correction becomes necessary, repeatedly, across high-impact cases, people notice.
They start asking questions.
Not about ideology—but about boundaries.
Where does a district court’s authority end?
When does interpretation become intervention?
And who is responsible for drawing that line clearly?
That’s where Roberts loses the room.
Not because he’s wrong about protecting the judiciary—but because he hasn’t fully addressed what happens when judges step beyond their lane.
Because telling the public to “respect the courts” without acknowledging moments like this—without confronting them directly—starts to feel incomplete.
It asks for trust without accountability.
And that’s a hard sell.
I’ve seen what happens when trust in a system begins to erode. It doesn’t collapse overnight. It weakens—quietly—until decisions aren’t respected, they’re just endured.
That’s the risk here.
The Post editorial may have its edge, but its use of Boasberg isn’t accidental. It’s pointing to a real fault line inside the judiciary—one that’s becoming harder to ignore.
So no—this isn’t about Donald Trump.
And it’s not just about one judge.
It’s about whether the judiciary, led by Roberts, is willing to confront these moments honestly.
Because if it doesn’t, the calls for respect won’t hold.
And once that respect is gone, getting it back isn’t something even the Chief Justice can order from the bench.
