American Eagle
MILITARY PROFESSIONAL
- Joined
- May 25, 2010
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You would have made a good "Confederate" the time of the US Civil War.
The US system of governance, while far from perfect, is about a good as exists worldwide. That of Canada and the UK is equally good, too.
But, the idea of declaring "independence" or "secession" as a state from within a union of staes is fallicious as in mistaken and wrong.
The US as intitally founded after the American Revolution used the Articles of Confederation as our "national government" methodology. This was an absolute disaster as there are key things such as national security, common taxation issues between and among states, numerous practical things that require a unified national government. When or if the people, your or others, feel that the "national government" is not properly addresses your common needs then you in a democracy vote the existing government out and elect people who promise to and who hopefully will then addres to the extent humanly possible your wants and needs.
Life is not simple. Things are complex. But the impact of secession in general is to have a weaker economy thereafter, a smaller tax base to pay for in common needs, a raft of problems you are less not more able to deal with.
Trying to condense a college degree study in political science and history into a few paragraphis is insulting to you, and I do apologize for that.
The US system of governance, while far from perfect, is about a good as exists worldwide. That of Canada and the UK is equally good, too.
But, the idea of declaring "independence" or "secession" as a state from within a union of staes is fallicious as in mistaken and wrong.
The US as intitally founded after the American Revolution used the Articles of Confederation as our "national government" methodology. This was an absolute disaster as there are key things such as national security, common taxation issues between and among states, numerous practical things that require a unified national government. When or if the people, your or others, feel that the "national government" is not properly addresses your common needs then you in a democracy vote the existing government out and elect people who promise to and who hopefully will then addres to the extent humanly possible your wants and needs.
Life is not simple. Things are complex. But the impact of secession in general is to have a weaker economy thereafter, a smaller tax base to pay for in common needs, a raft of problems you are less not more able to deal with.
Trying to condense a college degree study in political science and history into a few paragraphis is insulting to you, and I do apologize for that.