In the aftermath of last week's presidential election,
residents in at least nineteen states have put up petitions on the
government's "We the People" petitioning website seeking the right to secede from the rest of the country.
While the petitions themselves may not be significant, the reaction could be.
Petitions for secession filed from Louisiana and Texas
have already received well over 10,000 signatures. Per the website's
own rules, petitions that garner 25,000 signatures or more within 30
days require a response from the Obama administration.
Similar petitions from Alabama, Tennessee, and, interestingly, Oregon, are also gaining traction, with each receiving thousands of supporters over the weekend alone.
Other states in which residents have expressed an interest in going their own way include Kentucky, Montana, North Dakota, Mississippi, North Carolina, Florida, Georgia, New York, New Jersey, Colorado, Arkansas, South Carolina, and Missouri.
As unilateral secession was ruled unconstitutional
by the Supreme Court, it remains to be seen if this movement is more
than a toothless temper tantrum thrown by armchair revolutionaries.
In just a few short hours, the petition
asking the Obama administration to "peacefully grant" Texas secession
has gained over 10,000 signatures, surpassing the 25,000 necessary to
elicit a response from the government.
Louisiana, meanwhile, is still nearly 9,000 signatories short of being taken seriously.
2 comments:
The Supreme Court has a long history of pulling Its decisions out of Its ass.
Interestingly, that's one of the main things that makes secession attractive. The fact that the federal government continually flouts its founding charter and sole source of legitimacy.
Well, not the sole source. Some of you may remember that the South's "right to secession" was overridden by the North's "right of conquest". You won't find that in the constitution either but that's what we went with.
I vote YES on Texas' secession. Get the fuck out of my country. We don't need you and don't want your politics.
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