https://www.nationalreview.com/2021/...ule-by-decree/
President Biden’s 
sweeping executive order on competition  is a strange beast. It lurches from lofty claims about encouraging  competition to niggling complaints about undisclosed airline checked-bag  fees. The order has the force of law but also tries to direct agencies  that are supposedly independent of presidential control. Most important,  it’s a further step toward presidential usurpation of legislative and  judicial power.
    
  
  Yes, technically everything in the order is already authorized in one  way or another by current law. However, the president is also  constrained on how he directs officials by “rules about rules” such as  the Administrative Procedure Act (APA.) The Trump administration, to its  credit, tried to strengthen rules about rules by issuing what my  colleague Wayne Crews 
calls “final rules on guidance,” or FROGs, that restricted the use of guidance documents to get around the APA. One of Biden’s 
early executive orders  stomped on these FROGs to make it easier for his officials to issue de  facto rules without notice and comment, as required by the APA. The  president is prejudging the results of the rulemaking process. That may  be the least of the problems with this order.
 Indeed, in the case of many actions demanded by President Biden in  this order, the rules proposed have already been through a process of  notice and comment in either or both the Obama and Trump administrations  but were not finalized because objections raised by affected parties  were recognized as substantive enough to stop the rule from being  issued. The president’s rule on airline-fee disclosures is a case in  point. The Obama Department of Transportation admitted that the rule  failed the all-important cost-benefit test, with costs outweighing  benefits, but tried to claim that unquantifiable benefits such as  “goodwill to ticket counter clerks” were enough to tip the balance. Good  sense prevailed, however.
     
  Yet those attempts at rulemaking did not have the force of a  presidential executive order behind them. In some cases, the president  is pushing officials essentially to rewrite the law. A good example is  the requirement to write rules that will force railroad companies to  offer below-market rates to shippers. Known as “reciprocal switching,”  the president’s proposal will empower the Surface Transportation Board  to compel railroads to hand over traffic to competitors, driving rates  for shippers down at the cost of the railroads. This completely upends  the purpose of 1980’s 
Staggers Act,  a deregulatory measure passed under Jimmy Carter thanks in no small  part to the efforts of Senator Ted Kennedy, who realized that the  similar micromanagement of shipping rates by bureaucrats in place then  was killing America’s freight railroads. Reimposing those rules will  reduce investment in freight rail infrastructure and in the end increase  delivery times and costs for end consumers. This is why successive  administrations have refrained from making this mistake. Yet the  president is asking officials to do it.
  
         More in Biden Administration
  
 The president also “urges” officials nominally not under his control  to take certain actions. The Federal Trade Commission, Federal  Communications Commission, Surface Transportation Board, and others are  supposedly independent agencies, which exercise the functions delegated  to them by Congress independent of presidential control. Indeed, the  case that validated the existence of these agencies, 
Humphreys’ Executor  (1935), did so on the basis that the commissions exercised  quasi-judicial and quasi-legislative functions. Yet here we have the  president treating them as if they were arms of the White House, acting  under his authority.
   
                                                     
 
         
         
    
      
 
  
     
  The heads of the various independent agencies would be at liberty to  refuse to act as the president wishes, which is why the order carefully  “urges” them rather than directs them. Yet the chairs of the agencies  have been appointed by this president and have so far shown no signs of  breaking from his administration’s policy. Indeed, the chairman of the  FTC was appointed to the post after being approved by the Senate as a  simple commissioner, in breach of long-standing protocol. The acting  chairwoman of the FCC has already 
welcomed the president’s order.
             
              
 Moreover, as Dan Bosch of the American Action Forum 
points out,  while previous presidents urged independent agencies to take a look at  particular topics, this executive order demands specific policy  outcomes. The FCC, for instance, is asked not examine net-neutrality  issues but specifically to restore the Obama-era rules on the issue,  regardless of what experience has shown (that none of the threats  foreseen by the Obama-era rules manifested once they were rescinded).  This may well call into question the legality of any decisions to go  along with the president’s wishes.
 This executive order appears to have been drafted in a way that  treats the independence of these agencies as something that is purely  nominal. It therefore brings quasi-judicial and quasi-legislative powers  under the de facto if not de jure oversight of the president. This  cannot be what either the Congress or the Supreme Court intended.
     
  America has separation of powers for a very good reason, and part of  that is to avoid monarchical-style rule by decree. With this  overreaching executive order, America has moved one step closer to that  unfortunate state.
Fascist DPST's are doing everything they can get away with to solidify One party communist dictatorial tyranny.  
They are setting up america for a revolt against a DPST facist govenemnt - which will fraudulently  institute their Rule with Voter fraud in elections 2022 - They got away with it in 2020 - and are emboldened to  Institute tyranny i perpetuity  in 2022. 
The radical Communist fiden tyranny  are setting up America for revolt!