• jordanlund@lemmy.worldM
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    They would have 40 electoral college votes in 2024.

    If they secede, that would also mean losing 2 Senators and 38 Representatives, changing the balance of power in the House and Senate.

    Don’t threaten me with a good time!

    Edit I also want to see Ted Cruz’s face when he learns he’s not a Senator anymore because Texas seceded.

    • Ensign_Crab@lemmy.world
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      Oh no. Democrats would need to find two additional no votes to block anything progressive.

    • dhork@lemmy.world
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      If they secede, that would also mean losing 2 Senators and 38 Representatives, changing the balance of power in the House and Senate.

      Losing 2 Senators, yes, but the loss of 38 Reps would be temporary. The size of Congress is permanently fixed by legislation to 435, and in the hypothetical case where a state simply goes poof, and 38 Representatives disappear, those seats would be reapportioned to other states after the next Census.

      There is precedent for this, when Alaska and Hawaii were added as States, they were each given 1 Representative right away, temporarily increasing the size of Congress to 437, until 2 seats were removed in the next apportionment.

      While there is no guarantee on where Texas’ seats would go – it would depend on the next Census after secession – it is plausible that the new seats would be from less conservative districts than their current makeup.

      • SCB@lemmy.world
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        The size of Congress is permanently fixed by legislation to 435

        Speaking of which, we should absolutely do away with that. That is specifically capped just to help Republicans.

    • Rakonat@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Rafeal Cruz. We must respect this man’s choice to only recognize the name on the birth certificate

  • chaogomu@kbin.social
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    So nowhere in the article is it mentioned that the supposed “Texas right to secede” is actually bullshit, and a complete misunderstanding of the actual right that they have, which is to be broken up into five separate states.

    Except even that is bullshit, because it was talking about the Texas Territory, which was larger than modern day Texas.

    The constitution clearly says that;

    New States may be admitted by the Congress into this Union; but no new States shall be formed or erected within the Jurisdiction of any other State; nor any State be formed by the Junction of two or more States, or parts of States, without the Consent of the Legislatures of the States concerned as well as of the Congress.

    So yes, Texas could request to be broken up, but congress still needs to okay it.


    Now, as to the “right to secede”, that bullshit was settled with the Civil War, States do not have the right to secede, not even Texas.

    Republicans like to pretend the Civil War never happened, and want a repeat, I guess.

      • catsarebadpeople@sh.itjust.works
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        That’s not a counterpoint. The EU is not a country. The EU is an economic and financial understanding between many different countries in order to collaborate on things like currency, trade, tariffs etc. Even if the EU was a country which, I can’t stress this enough, it isn’t, the EU agreement has clear rules for leaving it. Unlike the US Constitution, which isn’t like the EU agreement in very many ways at all.

      • KumaLumaJuma@feddit.uk
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        Having no mechanism and being specifically legislated against are two different things. Brexit is the former, this sounds like the latter.

      • surewhynotlem@lemmy.world
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        There’s a difference between having no official mechanism, and having the largest military in the world knock on your door to tell you that you can’t do something.

        If Texas really truly tried to leave the United States, it would be war, and they would not win.

        • foyrkopp@lemmy.world
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          To clarify:

          Even if an unambiguous majority of Texas would say “we’d like to turn Texas into an independent country”, you’d rather force them to stay by force of arms?

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            You don’t get to steal hundreds of thousands of miles of land from a country and wander off. War would happen. Would I like it? No, war is terrible.

            Plus, they wouldn’t survive. Let’s say we didn’t retake our land. The inevitable embargo would destroy them. War is war. Financial war is also kinda war.

      • captainlezbian@lemmy.world
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        And you can smoke pot and get abortions in texas because they’re legal in Illinois. No the US actually has been tested on whether or not states have the right to secede and the answer is no, we had a civil war over it

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      It would also reduce the number needed to win.

      538 EC votes / 2 = 269. 50%+1 for the win so 270.

      Texas drops out, so now it goes from 538 to 498. / 2 = 249. 50%+1=250 to win.

      And suddenly 270towin.com needs a new CNAME.

      Just playing around with what something like that might look like:

      • PugJesus@kbin.social
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        Yeah, Texas is a reliable GOP vote. Which means losing it would be a massive blow to GOP electoral chances.

        • netburnr@lemmy.world
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          Not all of us, just need more of y’all to move here and water down their vote. Problem is the germandering makes populated places less impacting than the uneducated rural areas.

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            There’s enough of us here to do it already, we just need to actually go out and vote and we can win the state-wide and presidential elections here. In 2020 Biden received more votes in Texas than in New York. The metro area populations of Houston, Austin, Dallas, and San Antonio are more than half the state population. If Harris County’s efforts to expand mail-in voting (by sending mail-in ballots to all ~2.4M registered voters in the county) Biden may have won the state, as he only lost by ~620k.

            • netburnr@lemmy.world
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              I vote every time and post in the Austin community as much as I dare to encourage others. That’s about all I can do.

              • SCB@lemmy.world
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                You can volunteer on campaigns! There are roles for people less socially inclined - stuffing mailers and such. Every little bit of help will be welcome.

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            Gerrymandering has a very limited effect on presidential elections, which is what was mentioned.

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              Voter suppression and other unequal access to voting make a big difference. For instance, the “one drop off box per county” bs they schemed up, inadequate in-person facilities in urban areas leading to long lines, and how people don’t get voting day off work. Not to mention the fascist chuds planning to stand around with guns at voting facilities to “monitor”.

            • zkfcfbzr@lemmy.world
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              It still has a big indirect impact. People are less likely to vote if they feel like their vote doesn’t matter as much, and someone in a heavily gerrymandered state does in fact have their vote matter less, at least locally. Turnout would probably be measurably higher if the districts were fair or competitive.

              There are other indirect effects too - there are plenty of states where Republicans are only able to pass voter-suppressing policies because of the legislative edge they hold thanks to gerrymandering.

  • Tedesche@lemmy.world
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    OMFG I hope they do. They could no longer bus immigrants to other states and would have no other choice but to police their border with Mexico entirely on their own without any federal support. Fucking dumbasses.

  • Ibex@lemmy.world
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    One of the top questions asked by Texas residents during their last succession vote was if social security checks were still going to be delivered. I hope they do vote to leave, I want to see the realization sink in and the chaos that ensues.

    • Zoolander@lemmy.world
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      It’s like people don’t learn from history and, in these cases, people don’t pay attention to world history/current politics. This would be “Texit” and it would be called that because it rhymes with another vote where the realization of what was happening sunk in after the fact.

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    A Texas independence would not only violate the Constitution, it would sink the GOP in the remaining states due to the loss of Texas’ electoral votes, thus ensuring a Republican president would never be elected again. This is the biggest reason Texas will never secede, regardless of the state’s conservative nativism.

    • Flying Squid@lemmy.world
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      it would sink the GOP in the remaining states due to the loss of Texas’ electoral votes, thus ensuring a Republican president would never be elected again

      So you’re saying we should forget the constitution just this once?

    • ATDA@lemmy.world
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      I thought this about roe too. Conservatives are really into catching the tire and not knowing what to do afterwards nowadays…

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        I think part of the reason for this is that the old guard GOP that used Roe and similar issues as the “carrot on a stick” or car to chase, used to have the power to keep it from happening, so they could keep campaigning on it. But the “younger” GOP bought the BS for all those years and now they have the power to catch the car, not realizing it was always just a voter motivational tool, never a real plan. They just saw the old guard GOP as “swamp” that wasn’t doing what they campaigned on, and rode the Trump wave into power for themselves, and are there to catch all the carrots.

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      I’m always baffled by how people point out succession as illegal as if it’s expected or common otherwise that bits of a country can break away whenever they feel like it.

      Would an independent Texas care if there was never a Republican president of a country they had left? Or would the see it as just rewards for those that those to stay there?

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        Without ideological allies running the US, Texas would be very isolated, like Britain after Brexit.

    • RememberTheApollo_@lemmy.world
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      But they’re republicans. They’ll demand to vote anyway because of some stupid made-up rule like, “Well, we’re touching the rest of the US, so we get to vote!” A /notheonion statement by Cruz if I ever heard one.

    • fluxion@lemmy.world
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      TIL I support succeeding from the US (as long as I can still move there afterwards)

  • qwertyWarlord@lemmy.world
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    They do this every couple years. It goes nowhere, never will. It’s just for show so shitheads can get support from other shitheads

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    Please, for Christ’s sake, just leave. Have the plebiscite. Take it to Congress. Let them release you on the condition that all Americans in Texas be allowed to emigrate, fully compensated, and all wannabe Texans are allowed to immigrate, fully compensated, for the next 6 months.

    Oh, and we keep the military equipment. I’m sure their ‘well-regulated militia’ will be enough for them.

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      We’ll leave it there for convenience when we invade since they will be an unstable oil rich nation in need of freedom.

      • PugJesus@kbin.social
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        Ugh, no, let them stay out. We don’t need a Resource Trap country to try nation-building on, pretty sure we already tried that one.

        • Osa-Eris-Xero512@kbin.social
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          Not 80s-90s era ‘nation building’, 40s era reconstruction. If nazi germany is salvageable we can probably figure texas out with the correct level of commitment.

    • PugJesus@kbin.social
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      Also we’ll build a wall at the Texas-US borders, but not because we think it’ll be effective, just because it’ll be hilarious

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    ITT: A bunch of people who don’t realize Texas is nearly purple, but gerrymandered to hell. There are millions of us who are blue.

    • krashmo@lemmy.world
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      Are you looking for credit for almost being a state governed by sane politicians? Almost doesn’t count for much against fascism.

      Texas is certainly not the only state with this problem but you’re also not the only state that’s close to giving Republicans the boot. Until it happens the rest of the country has every right to talk trash on the ridiculous bullshit that passes for political discourse there.

      • LesserAbe@lemmy.world
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        People who say stuff like this don’t understand how anything works. Sure, talk trash about policies, the GOP and politicians. But it’s shitty and counterproductive to say the progressive voters of Texas didn’t try hard enough. Why don’t the people of North Korea raise up and oust the regime? Would you say it’s because North Koreans don’t want it bad enough and so they deserve whatever they get?

        • krashmo@lemmy.world
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          Deserving and being responsible for are not necessarily the same thing. You can dress it up however you like but at the end of the day it is the citizens of Texas, voters and non-voters alike, that decide the political direction of the state. You may not like it but enough of your neighbors do that it doesn’t matter. Deflecting blame and feeling sorry for yourself isn’t going to solve that problem.

          • LesserAbe@lemmy.world
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            All the people cheering for Texas to go ahead and leave and fully become an oppressive state and fail, are ignoring that there are plenty of good people in Texas. We shouldn’t cheer for those people being harmed.

            • krashmo@lemmy.world
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              It seems pretty obvious to me that Republicans aren’t going to stop being idiots until their voters get everything they want and realize that it sucks to live that way. It’s the job of those good people you referenced to stop that from happening either by educating them or by showing up at the polls in greater numbers. They don’t seem to be doing a very good job of either. That is unfortunate for them but it’s not everyone else’s responsibility to fix that problem. We’re not wrong for being annoyed by the consequences of that failure.

              • LesserAbe@lemmy.world
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                Your comment really makes me mad. I urge you to have some compassion for fellow humans. But if that’s not enough, how about thinking about your own self preservation:

                An oppressive state anywhere is a threat to us all, one on our border even more. When the southern states seceded because they wanted to continue owning slaves, the north didn’t say “good riddance, you backward idiots.” They also didn’t say “Guess you good southerners should have voted harder.” They fought a war, because that’s a cancer that won’t stop at the border.

                Now, current Texas isn’t comparable to pre civil war Texas. I don’t advocate violence. But my point in this thread is to consider that sometimes people through no fault of their own live in a place that has dysfunctional/unsustainable/immoral leadership, and maybe they’re not enough of them to seize control, or maybe the system is rigged, or both, and except for luck of birth you could be in the same situation. So maybe worth thinking about how we might help improve those people’s situations, or else we or our descendants could be facing the same problems.

      • Ensign_Crab@lemmy.world
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        Are you looking for credit for almost being a state governed by sane politicians? Almost doesn’t count for much against fascism.

        Democrats care about people, unless those people are in red states.

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          It’s a stretch to twist my words in that way but if it makes you feel better about the shitty people you share a state with you go right ahead.

          • Ensign_Crab@lemmy.world
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            It’s a stretch to twist my words in that way

            Not much of one. Look at how much “just fucking leave” sentiment there is in this thread. Not one bit of consideration for the victims of Republican policy, because the victims have committed the sin of being outnumbered. Yeah, we all deserve the results of Republican policy because our misery exists to give you something to look down on.

            The only time the national party gives a shit about Texas is when a progressive is running against a centrist in the primaries.

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          I think it’s mostly just the fatigue talking. It’s been a long 5/10/20/40 years of almost constant attacks and bullshit. It wears down the compassion.

  • kellyaster@kbin.social
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    Y’know, if Texas secedes, we won’t have to change the flag and remove a star if we make Puerto Rico a state. Just sayin’.

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    I’d love to see that happen.

    Do you think the US would leave it’s army and it’s nukes in a different country just like that? Texas has a fun economy

    Then the Republican party would lose a large red state, we would finally be rid of Republican presidents and houses, no more extremist bullshit to deal with.

    The US would flourish again and go truly MAGA as it no longer had to deal with the Republican shit.

    Texas has shit infrastructure that they don’t manage well enough to keep up, it would be a hoot

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      Texas is home to some of the largest military installations on the planet (Fort Bliss and Fort Cavazos) - the federal economic footprint these (and Lackland, and JSB Carswell and a dozen others) bring to their local economies is massive. Hell, the defense industry footprint in texas is ridiculously large (existing and future helos & fixed wing f22/f35 production) - removing them from Texas would crater their economy.

      I tend to look at this like another grift to skin more funds from the stupids.

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        Yeah, nobody currently in charge would be stoopid enough to do this, but then again each subsequent Republican generation becomes dumber and starts doing the things the previous generation only threatened for money and power. I see them dumb enough to try this 10 years down the road

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        Joint Base San Antonio is essentially three bases that almost surround most of San Antonio.

        As if the feds are just going to walk away from that AND NASA? No way.

  • ATDA@lemmy.world
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    New year new secession bill to fail big whoop.

    These people killed hundreds because they couldn’t keep the lights on. This state would die from people fleeing before the ink dried on the bill even if it passed…

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    The United States absolutely would not allow Texas to secede.

    This is an absurd escalation that is nothing more than theater.

    • Rakonat@lemmy.world
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      The irony being the elected officials would be the strongest opponents. Can you imagine Rafeal Cruz willing giving up his power so his constituents could pay less taxes?