Unfortunately #6 is the killer. No state can pay their portion of the national debt. It is mathematically impossible to pay it off without massive inflation of the dollar. If inflated, congress will continue to spend massively to counter any attempt. The only way to secede is to do it anyway and leave the debt behind. Declare bankruptcy. it works for everybody else.
NO. Look at any 'true' vote map. The Republic is MOST of America. The Only problem is 'DC', NY City, a small part of New England and the 3 western states. Isolate (starve) THEM and the liberal sheep will dispose of their own 'leaders'.
Last year I would have been entirely against secession, being from a landlocked state (Ohio). However, seeing how the economy is going and how the government is getting worse and worse, it may be more beneficial to live in an independent country of Ohio.
The State's portion of the federal debt should be directly proportionate to the population of the state as of the last census. The state will begin with that amount of national debt. States such as Texas and Florida, with booming economies, wouldn't suffer, and any state that deals with the debt responsibly should have no issue recovering.
Secession would end up being beneficial in the long run anyway, since with the imminent collapse of the UN and other world government orgs, nobody can say that country isn't independent because only the de facto would apply.
Several years ago, I was experimenting with secession theory and figured out that any state with a GDP per capita of more than 10,000 should be quite stable long term, and any state with more than 5,000 GDP per capita, if governed by fiscally responsible patriots, should be an economic powerhouse in no time.
Secession and disintegration of nations is something I have always been interested in. The concept is both blasphemous to a nation-state and the epitome of liberty. Such an event has not happened since 2011 when South Sudan was internationally recognized as a sovereign nation. I am too young, however, to remember that, and I'm sure the news didn't cover it much anyway.
I will not support the disintegration of our republic.
Me either. This is 💩tee idea!
You don't save a country by splitting it into pieces.
Shills gonna divide.
Unfortunately #6 is the killer. No state can pay their portion of the national debt. It is mathematically impossible to pay it off without massive inflation of the dollar. If inflated, congress will continue to spend massively to counter any attempt. The only way to secede is to do it anyway and leave the debt behind. Declare bankruptcy. it works for everybody else.
My state seceded in 1861 but rejoined in 1870, time to secede again because we deserve so much better.
Step 3 ends pretty much everything. Plus, this is a board for Patriots, not Separatist.
NO. Look at any 'true' vote map. The Republic is MOST of America. The Only problem is 'DC', NY City, a small part of New England and the 3 western states. Isolate (starve) THEM and the liberal sheep will dispose of their own 'leaders'.
Is step 4, allowing immigration or emmigration grace period, specified in the Constitution or an assumption?
Last year I would have been entirely against secession, being from a landlocked state (Ohio). However, seeing how the economy is going and how the government is getting worse and worse, it may be more beneficial to live in an independent country of Ohio.
The State's portion of the federal debt should be directly proportionate to the population of the state as of the last census. The state will begin with that amount of national debt. States such as Texas and Florida, with booming economies, wouldn't suffer, and any state that deals with the debt responsibly should have no issue recovering.
Secession would end up being beneficial in the long run anyway, since with the imminent collapse of the UN and other world government orgs, nobody can say that country isn't independent because only the de facto would apply.
Several years ago, I was experimenting with secession theory and figured out that any state with a GDP per capita of more than 10,000 should be quite stable long term, and any state with more than 5,000 GDP per capita, if governed by fiscally responsible patriots, should be an economic powerhouse in no time.
Secession and disintegration of nations is something I have always been interested in. The concept is both blasphemous to a nation-state and the epitome of liberty. Such an event has not happened since 2011 when South Sudan was internationally recognized as a sovereign nation. I am too young, however, to remember that, and I'm sure the news didn't cover it much anyway.