Are you aware that if the Federal Government shuts down for more than 21 days, by state law Texas can secede from the United States!
What say you? Good/bad idea.
If we do secede, should we "relax" laws for ASPs ???
Are you aware that if the Federal Government shuts down for more than 21 days, by state law Texas can secede from the United States!If true? Make prostitution legal and a tax exempt industry.
What say you? Good/bad idea.
If we do secede, should we "relax" laws for ASPs ??? Originally Posted by theincredibleshrinkingman
Are you aware that if the Federal Government shuts down for more than 21 days, by state law Texas can secede from the United States!A couple of questions. First, where is this written? Second, you do realize that most of the government is open, don't you? Only a few departments are shut down.
What say you? Good/bad idea.
If we do secede, should we "relax" laws for ASPs ??? Originally Posted by theincredibleshrinkingman
Current Supreme Court precedent, in Texas v. White in 1869, holds that the states cannot secede from the union by an act of the state. The Union's victory set a precedent that states could not legally secede. ... In contrast, the U.S. Constitution contains procedures for admitting new states into the nation, but none for a state to leave. Yet the myth that Texas can easily secede persists, in part, because of the state's history of independence. More recently, Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia stated, "If there was any constitutional issue resolved by the Civil War, it is that there is no right to secede."
Are you aware that if the Federal Government shuts down for more than 21 days, by state law Texas can secede from the United States!One is reluctant to ever say something with certainty without carefully researching it, but I strongly suspect you are gravely mistaken about yiuassertion in what the law is, even apart from White v. Texas. Do you have any reference to the law in question?
What say you? Good/bad idea.
If we do secede, should we "relax" laws for ASPs ??? Originally Posted by theincredibleshrinkingman
One is reluctant to ever say something with certainty without carefully researching it, but I strongly suspect you are gravely mistaken about yiuassertion in what the law is, even apart from White v. Texas. Do you have any reference to the law in question? Originally Posted by TexTushHogOf course he or she doesn't. Secession is the single most
Texas was admitted to the union under a joint resolution in 1845. That resolution allowed a future subdivision to allow up to four more states - nothing about secession.
https://www.tsl.texas.gov/ref/aboutt...march1845.html Originally Posted by mtabsw