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  #16 (permalink)  
Old 04-03-2007
Captain Trips Captain Trips is offline
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Re: The Future Republic of Vermont?

Quote:
Originally Posted by Samantha View Post
Vermont is right. More states should threaten to leave if the Federal Government does not embrace the kind of government our founding fathers had invisioned for us. It's a disgrace what is happening in our government today.
Very very weird.

Here, captain trips and samantha agree on something. Probably for different REASONS, but we agree.

This is a REAL humdinger.

Our Govt. is SERIOUSLY out of control.

The people have let themselves become like herd animals and become "we the sheeple".

We now "do everything big mother" TELLS us to do.

I beleive it's our own fault for letting this happen.
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  #17 (permalink)  
Old 04-03-2007
O'Sullivan Bere's Avatar
O'Sullivan Bere O'Sullivan Bere is offline
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Re: The Future Republic of Vermont?

Quote:
Originally Posted by Speakeasy View Post
I personally wouldn't mind if they left. Whenever I fill out an online form and have to choose my state from a drop down box, I hit the "v" button to quickly access my state, only to be brutally reminded that I still have to skip past that god damn Vermont. If they left the US, I would save 0.1 seconds on each online form. It may not seem like much, but it all adds up. Wasting 2 seconds of my precious life every year for Vermont is certainly not worth it.

If they changed their name to "Virmont", I think I'd be okay.
Some people just aren't worth two seconds of your time.
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Around 200,000 Irish immigrants served in the Union and Confederate armies in the American Civil War, often forming their own regiments and, at times, fought each other. At Fredericksburg, the Union’s Irish Brigade faced the Irish McMillan's Guards of Cobb's 24th Georgia entrenched in a sunken road behind a stone wall. Ordered to make a suicidal charge, it became one of the most famous events of the Civil War. The re-enactment portrayed in the movie Gods and Generals:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7qVCxEupPag
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  #18 (permalink)  
Old 04-03-2007
Evil_inKarlate's Avatar
Evil_inKarlate Evil_inKarlate is offline
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Re: The Future Republic of Vermont?

Quote:
Quote:
""What exactly will change if we separate?" The answer although few like to admit it, is absolutely nothing positive.
If Vermont left the United States, it would be merely to 'stick it' to the Federal government at the detriment of it's citizens.
This is unfortunately true. Any secession will need to be done by a state having more established economic clout, and by a net 'payer' that sends more money to DC than they get back by a significant margin. (Don't know if Vermont fits that latter or not.)

Quote:
There are much more productive ways to solve these issues other than to just quit.
That depends on whether the issues show any potential for resolution. From what I understand of the VT seccessionist movement, the issues not only show no potential progress, but are getting worse. In that case, quitting probably Is the most productive resolution. (Assuming avoiding the current hardships warrants incurring the implied hardships of the previous paragraph.)

Quote:
secession was a piece of political heresy that was settled in 1865 as being verboten
If the Confederacy hadn't been impatient and attacked Fort Sumter, the Civil War would've been Unconstitutional (and might be anyway). Because secession isn't mentioned in the Constitution, that right, by default, falls to the individual states. Lincoln justified forced reunification based on prior ratification of the Articles of Confederation, which, as I understand it, disallowed secession. If some state far enough west to have not been invovled with the AoC were to secede, there would be no legal justification for US aggression. (As opposed to flimsy legal justification.)
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Last edited by Evil_inKarlate; 04-03-2007 at 12:03 PM.
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  #19 (permalink)  
Old 04-03-2007
O'Sullivan Bere's Avatar
O'Sullivan Bere O'Sullivan Bere is offline
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Re: The Future Republic of Vermont?

Quote:
Originally Posted by Evil_inKarlate View Post
. . . If the Confederacy hadn't been impatient and attacked Fort Sumter, the Civil War would've been Unconstitutional (and might be anyway). Because secession isn't mentioned in the Constitution, that right, by default, falls to the individual states. Lincoln justified forced reunification based on prior ratification of the Articles of Confederation, which, as I understand it, disallowed secession. If some state far enough west to have not been invovled with the AoC were to secede, there would be no legal justification for US aggression. (As opposed to flimsy legal justification.)
Secession makes no sense from a legal and constitutional perspective. A revolutionary one, yes, but not a legal one under the Constitutional instrument. If anything the Constitution shows the contract between parties, and parties cannot legally breach contracts. What is not included in an agreement is deemed excluded by contract concepts, and the right or ability to secede is not included in the agreement. Instead, they agree to unity and obligations to each other via a federal system, the documents contains things such as supremacy clauses, etc. It also makes no sense to form 'a more perfect union' by making it weaker than the Articles of Confederation that had already expressly disallowed secession as you mentioned by making the confederation 'perpetual.' Nothing could make a new nation/union more weak than no glue to bind it, and it stands to reason that there was no longer any need to state the obvious on the perpetual nature of the union. Moreover, a good number of the states were formed out of federal property afterwards--property that was purchased with federal funds in many cases--and to think that these federal creations are somehow superior in standing to the entity that owned and created them stands on its head.
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Around 200,000 Irish immigrants served in the Union and Confederate armies in the American Civil War, often forming their own regiments and, at times, fought each other. At Fredericksburg, the Union’s Irish Brigade faced the Irish McMillan's Guards of Cobb's 24th Georgia entrenched in a sunken road behind a stone wall. Ordered to make a suicidal charge, it became one of the most famous events of the Civil War. The re-enactment portrayed in the movie Gods and Generals:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7qVCxEupPag

Last edited by O'Sullivan Bere; 04-03-2007 at 05:44 PM.
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  #20 (permalink)  
Old 04-03-2007
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BDaileyPLS3060 BDaileyPLS3060 is offline
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Re: The Future Republic of Vermont?

In the last 10 years Vermont has been in a positive cash flow situation with the federal govt. Between $1.03 and $1.13 returned for every dollar collected by the IRS in that state.

So the first result of this plan would be a decrease in the states standard of living. Followed closely, I'd guess, by a tax increase by the new national govt to replace the loss.

Oh well. What does that comedian say? "You can't fix stupid" or something to that effect.
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  #21 (permalink)  
Old 04-03-2007
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partofme partofme is offline
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Re: The Future Republic of Vermont?

Quote:
Originally Posted by Dilettante View Post
I'm pretty sure the Civil War settled the question of whether or not states were allowed to just pick up and leave the Union.

And I can't actually believe this is a serious measure in Vermont. At least not without seeing some argument on things like food production, import/export ratios, public funding and so forth that implies that Vermont could sustain anything like its current prosperity if it were not only seperate from but also competeing against the States around it.
Maybe they could be self-sufficient; but I doubt it.
A new civil war? I'm not betting on Vermont.
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  #22 (permalink)  
Old 04-04-2007
Evil_inKarlate's Avatar
Evil_inKarlate Evil_inKarlate is offline
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Re: The Future Republic of Vermont?

Quote:
Secession makes no sense from a legal and constitutional perspective. A revolutionary one, yes
Revolution and secession are different things. The Civil War wasn't a civil war. (And no, I'm not just using the wrong definition of 'civil.') If VT wanted to raid DC and have a coup, That would be a revolution.

Quote:
the Constitution shows the contract between parties, and parties cannot legally breach contracts.
True, but if one party is in significant breach, isn't the other party allowed to declare the contract null and void?

Quote:
What is not included in an agreement is deemed excluded by contract concepts, and the right or ability to secede is not included in the agreement.
But what if the contract includes a rider covering how one should handle such non-included items? Say something to the effect of: The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people? Given that secession is not specifically delegated to the US, nor explicitly prohibited to the individual states, I'd go out on a limb and posit that perhaps it's reserved to the states.

Quote:
It also makes no sense to form 'a more perfect union' by making it weaker than the Articles of Confederation that had already expressly disallowed secession ... Nothing could make a new nation/union more weak than no glue to bind it
I don't know why it was left out. Perhaps the benefits of operating as a more cohesive group under a 'new improved contract' was considered a carrot to replace the AoC's stick. Or maybe they considered the non-secession aspect of the AoC to be one of its faults. In any case, it's not there.

Quote:
it stands to reason that there was no longer any need to state the obvious on the perpetual nature of the union.
But it Was needed to state what many considered to be the obvious nature of the items listed in the Bill of Rights? That's not very consistent.

Quote:
a good number of the states were formed out of federal property afterwards--property that was purchased with federal funds in many cases--and to think that these federal creations are somehow superior in standing to the entity that owned and created them stands on its head.
You may have a point here - It's always good to find something where you know you're going to learn something from the ensuing discussion!

The Constitution is a contract between parties. Not unlike a legal firm. Like a legal firm, it can associate with 'lesser parties' such as employees or territories. There are procedures for raising such lesser parties to equal status of full partner, or of recognized State. Once a full partner, they retain full rights under the initial partnership contract, including appropriate rights and procedures for leaving the partnership. Once the US recognized, say, Louisiana as a State, it gained the various rights and powers allowed by the Constitution, including the implicit right to secede. I agree that doesn't seem fair to the US as a whole, especially given the cost of the Louisiana Purchase, but that's the way the contract was worded, which is hardly Louisiana's fault.


Quote:
In the last 10 years Vermont has been in a positive cash flow situation with the federal govt. Between $1.03 and $1.13 returned for every dollar collected ... the first result of this plan would be a decrease in the states standard of living.
Given the small margin of difference, and that it only applies to whatever portion of their GSP (Gross State Product) is a result of Federal spending, I'd venture that whatever they lose in net cash flow they would probably recoup in increased efficiency of not having to deal with national bureaucracies.

The standard of living would probably still go down due to general upheaval and the earlier-mentioned difficulties of having a large portion of their commerce now being considered 'international', but the federal spending aspect shouldn't be significant.
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Tomorrow's forecast: 100% chance of more 'politics as usual'

Maybe it's finally time to vote Libertarian

Last edited by Evil_inKarlate; 04-04-2007 at 10:42 AM.
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  #23 (permalink)  
Old 04-04-2007
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SamInTheSouth SamInTheSouth is offline
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Re: The Future Republic of Vermont?

Quote:
Originally Posted by O'Sullivan Bere View Post
Secession makes no sense from a legal and constitutional perspective. A revolutionary one, yes, but not a legal one under the Constitutional instrument. If anything the Constitution shows the contract between parties, and parties cannot legally breach contracts. What is not included in an agreement is deemed excluded by contract concepts, and the right or ability to secede is not included in the agreement. Instead, they agree to unity and obligations to each other via a federal system
I believe their argument is that it's the Federal government that is no longer abiding by that contract and system.
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