jimboston wrote:I already answered all these.
I'm 100% cool if they wanted to secede under the guidelines I stated.
Would the Fed. Gov't let them go? I think so... but we won't know for sure till some state has a referendum and tries.
Do I think that it's a smart idea to secede for Hawaii? or Texas?
No. I think it's a dumb idea.
However, I support their right to do so as I stated in my first post.
Well, you might want to take your argument to the Supreme Court then, who has already ruled that secession is illegal. Once admitted, it is illegal for any state to secede from the Union. According to the Supreme Court, the Union is "an indestructible Union, composed of indestructible states".
In more recent the Alaskan Supreme court in 2006 held that secession was illegal.
A state's residents can vote to secede but if the federal government says "nope, you can't secede" then that's that, according to the Supreme court states can only secede if allowed to by the federal government.
jimboston wrote:I support their right to do so as I stated in my first post.
Something can't be considered a "right" if government gets to decide if you can exercise that right or not as is the case in secession. Citizens can vote to secede, and if is truly a right, then the federal government would have zero say at that point, which isn't the case as far as the SCOTUS goes.
The SCOTUS says that if, say, Hawaii wanted to secede, they'd have to vote of course. Then if Hawaii actually voted to secede then Hawaii would have to get approval from all the other states
and then also get permission from the federal government. Now if Hawaiians had a "right" to secede, then why would it be needed to get the other state's permission and the federal government's permission?
The very act of secession is an application of force, political at first, but after that then it becomes applying force to maintain the secession. Force of a more...kinetic nature as well as the application of Will.
Which would be very hard, few people view themselves in identity to a state but rather to a nation. I.E. no one looks at themselves as a Virginian first and an American second. We look at our selves as Americans first. In general.
I don't know why you'd think the federal government would let them go either. You can't base that opinion on past experience because the last time such a thing came up we fought one hell of a war over it.
The only territory that has ever successfully gained their independence from the US was the Philippines and they'd never have gotten that independence if they hadn't fought a war with the US in which the Philippines had tens of thousands killed. A necessary sacrifice in the end to gain independence it seems.
So it would be that much worse for an actual US state to secede. Such a state would only gain their independence after fighting a war. One they wouldn't have to necessarily win at the time.
It's like dealing with a bully in a way. You tell a bully to stop but he won't. You punch the bully in the mouth, he kicks the shit out of you, but after that he'll leave you alone because you'll be too much trouble to mess with.
So it is with a state that wants to secede, it had best be prepared to fight for the right you talk about, because violence is how rights are first founded, on the battlefield.
I'm just musing a bit here is all, the OP is a troll post and I don't take the OP seriously, ever. I was just intrigued by this supposed "right" of secession when everything in history and the courts says otherwise.