Launch a small website and commit a felony in 7 states and 13 countries.
I wouldn't have known about the Mississippi bill unless I'd read this. How are we have to know?
Launch a small website and commit a felony in 7 states and 13 countries.
I wouldn't have known about the Mississippi bill unless I'd read this. How are we have to know?
The US doesn’t have 50 different cultures with totally different values, but probably has like… 7.
Yes! Make a union of states! How should we call that? States Union... Union of States... United States! Yeah, that should work.
I think it's going to happen one way or another and the most peaceful way to do it would be sooner rather than later.
At some point it makes more sense to pass such a law at the federal level since we end up there eventually either way.
Expecting laws to instead propagate from neighbor to neighbor as I accidentally suggested—this wasn’t what I meant to suggest, but in defense of the idea:
> At some point it makes more sense to pass such a law at the federal level since we end up there eventually either way.
I do think there still could be some value. Laws could propagate across states that are more receptive to them, and then people can see if they work or not. Porting Masshealth to the whole country at once seems to have been a little bumpy. If it has instead been rolled out to the rest of New England, NY, then down to Pennsylvania… might have gone a little smoother.
Sounds more like a... Confederation? of states. Or maybe... a Confederacy?
More like: look at the EU, extrapolate how it would look after a little more unification, and then take advantage of the fact that we’re made up of small states already that can group ourselves up as fits. Germany and France seem all-right, so we should organize ourselves into Germany and France size units.
You’ve come up with more reasons not to split up the country, by pointing out some ways the other parts of the country might have trouble.
I think (correct me if I’m wrong) you disagree with the partisan jab at the end, not the actual line of argument.
I wasn't thinking carefully enough because I've grown accustomed to such lines of argument being simultaneously partisan and irrelevant.