SCOTUS came within 2 votes of allowing the president to effectively overturn the 14th Amendment. Anything less than 9-0 on birthright citizenship would have been a scandal in earlier period. A significant decision today, but far, far too close a vote.
The reason boomers are now making a big hubbub about property tax is twofold:
1. The primary cause is inflation.
Because they are largely retired, they're living off a fixed income that has rapidly lost purchasing power. The income (social security and retirement funds) is low enough that income tax isn't a big hit, so property tax is the one tax they really feel. A big chunk of their available funds is going toward a tax that has suddenly skyrocketed (thanks to COVID retardation, which took some years to trickle down to taxes).
2. The second cause is universal; property taxes are inherently chafing.
It takes half a second to think about it; you're paying rent on something you own. "Why should I have to do that? I own it already!" In a lot of places, the property tax you're paying is infinitely more than the services you're getting out of it (roads, sewers, fire dept, etc). This is the reason they're being humored at all.
That said, they should not be humored. Property tax is possibly the ONLY constructive form of taxation. It ensures that the market can price people out of a property they were lucky enough to purchase in a much better market. Without them, a single poor 80yr old couple can indefinitely sit on a house meant for an extended family.
Reducing or eliminating property tax would RAISE property values, as any reduction will be absorbed by more competition with the leverage of mortgages (today's $2000 mortgage with $200 tax would be tomorrow's $2200 mortgage) and the reduction of supply (boomers clinging to mansions).
It's not as simple as republican and democratic.
He wouldn't have to have these conversations if the President had any standards and operated as a decent man.
This makes intuitive sense to a lot of people. But whenever we put it to a rigorous test, it turns out to be wrong. Most kids learn more when they read paper books, not listen to them or read on a screen. Most kids need the connection that comes from a real teacher in real life.