Poll

Do You Consider Yourself A US citizen Or A Citizen Of Your State?

I identify more with National Citizenship86%86% - 33
I identify more with State/local Citizenship13%13% - 5
Total: 38
Mekstizzle
WALKER
+3,611|6906|London, England
at the end of the day your states don't have any real history, there's no reason why two entities like for example New York and New Jersey exist apart from being there for the sake of it, I know this is me being ignorant, but hear me out. When you compare it to another federation like India or Russia where the individual states all have unique linguistic/ethnic groups which define the state from another, whereas in the US it's all rather artificial and done for the sake of governing the land mass easily.

If you get what I mean. The US is a young country, relatively speaking. Ethnically and linguistically homogeneous in terms of states and such. There wasn't really much of a reason outside of convenience for having so many states, surely.







canada too


Well actually, not Canada. Quebec exists because of the Frenchies, that's an example of a state within a country making sense.

Just look at the map of the US states, practically squares because they just wanted to divide the land for the sake of it.

Last edited by Mekstizzle (2010-05-28 12:18:16)

eleven bravo
Member
+1,399|5544|foggy bottom
it would be more than a bit.  california alone supplies much of the country and the world with food.
Tu Stultus Es
rdx-fx
...
+955|6876

DesertFox- wrote:

"Nationalism will bring us victory!" -Chinese voice in Command & Conquer: Generals

SEREMAKER wrote:

American then Southerner
Bloody Southerners!
You think Southerners are ..distinctive?

Come visit Montana or Wyoming.  We still have a cowboy culture here.

Alaska is pretty much the same, but we don't affect the cowboy hats and costume, and we traded in our horses for bush planes around 1946
rdx-fx
...
+955|6876

eleven bravo wrote:

it would be more than a bit.  california alone supplies much of the country and the world with food.
We've had this discussion before, a couple years ago as I recall.

Fine.  We'll sell off urban wasteland southern California, and keep the productive northern California.

Just call it Southern Oregon, as was suggested above.

And, from a bit of quick google-fu, it's estimated that California is just 13% of US GDP.  I could live with that loss, if it meant the rest of the country was self-sufficient.

Last edited by rdx-fx (2010-05-28 12:25:41)

13rin
Member
+977|6764

eleven bravo wrote:

my mom told me the reason she left miami when i was 6 months old was because of that humidity
Some days its so bad it might as well be raining.  Medicated gold power on the jewels.
I stood in line for four hours. They better give me a Wal-Mart gift card, or something.  - Rodney Booker, Job Fair attendee.
Jay
Bork! Bork! Bork!
+2,006|5643|London, England

Mekstizzle wrote:

at the end of the day your states don't have any real history, there's no reason why two entities like for example New York and New Jersey exist apart from being there for the sake of it, I know this is me being ignorant, but hear me out. When you compare it to another federation like India or Russia where the individual states all have unique linguistic/ethnic groups which define the state from another, whereas in the US it's all rather artificial and done for the sake of governing the land mass easily.

If you get what I mean. The US is a young country, relatively speaking. Ethnically and linguistically homogeneous in terms of states and such. There wasn't really much of a reason outside of convenience for having so many states, surely.







canada too


Well actually, not Canada. Quebec exists because of the Frenchies, that's an example of a state within a country making sense.

Just look at the map of the US states, practically squares because they just wanted to divide the land for the sake of it.
That's sillily superficial. While the differences may appear small to an outsider, there are cultural differences between the states. New Yorkers dislike people from New Jersey, we consider them to be second class and dirty Then there are regional accents and dialects. What you see on TV is 'generic American accent' that many actors have to train to master in speech schools. There's no mistaking someone from New York City compared to someone from Texas or someone from California. We have different mannerisms, different accents, different attitudes.

We're not homogenous at all in reality. I bet if Diesel had made a third option which let people identify with a section of the country rather than an individual state, it would've been the winning choice. Midwesterners identify themselves as Midwesterners, Southerners as Southerners, etc.
"Ah, you miserable creatures! You who think that you are so great! You who judge humanity to be so small! You who wish to reform everything! Why don't you reform yourselves? That task would be sufficient enough."
-Frederick Bastiat
SenorToenails
Veritas et Scientia
+444|6415|North Tonawanda, NY

eleven bravo wrote:

SenorToenails wrote:

eleven bravo wrote:

commerce clause has been used to justify federal action since the begining.
Yes, but what about the feds using backdoor methods of pushing crap through, like the minimum drinking age?  Or why are the Feds so worried about abortion?  Medical marijuana?  Gay marriage?
all these things have an effect on interstate commerce, so, according the constitution and rulings by the supreme court, the feds have the right to regulate.
If you look at anything right it could be considered interstate commerce then.  Take the drinking age--how is a bar or liquor store (which can only sell to people in this state) engaging in interstate trade?  If California allows medical marijuana, and all its growing operations occur within that state, how is it interstate?  Same with abortion...how is that interstate?  Strictly speaking, the feds stepping into these issues is contrived at best and at worst it's stomping on state sovereignty.
Jay
Bork! Bork! Bork!
+2,006|5643|London, England

rdx-fx wrote:

eleven bravo wrote:

it would be more than a bit.  california alone supplies much of the country and the world with food.
We've had this discussion before, a couple years ago as I recall.

Fine.  We'll sell off urban wasteland southern California, and keep the productive northern California.

Just call it Southern Oregon, as was suggested above.

And, from a bit of quick google-fu, it's estimated that California is just 13% of US GDP.  I could live with that loss, if it meant the rest of the country was self-sufficient.
https://strangemaps.files.wordpress.com/2007/06/350816052_0a392a0d28_o1.jpg

The states you despise have the most productive economies in the country. Just because we aren't ranchers attending rodeos and pretending we're still cowboys from the 1800s doesn't make us less useful Your view on what drives a country is very, very simplistic.
"Ah, you miserable creatures! You who think that you are so great! You who judge humanity to be so small! You who wish to reform everything! Why don't you reform yourselves? That task would be sufficient enough."
-Frederick Bastiat
rdx-fx
...
+955|6876
Short version:

I don't think we need to be looking at states separating from the union, or state versus federal.

I think we do need to start holding our state representatives in the House and Senate accountable as state representatives.
They view themselves as more of a player in D.C. politics, and not as the enforcer of the state's interests.

If, in extreme circumstances, a state or county no longer agrees with the US constitution as understood by the rest of the country - goodbye.  Remove them from the union. 

California, New York City, Chicago, D.C. - they all need a wake up call.
They are shitting on all of the values of self-reliance, independence, honest work, and pay-your-own-way that made this country.
Mekstizzle
WALKER
+3,611|6906|London, England

JohnG@lt wrote:

Mekstizzle wrote:

at the end of the day your states don't have any real history, there's no reason why two entities like for example New York and New Jersey exist apart from being there for the sake of it, I know this is me being ignorant, but hear me out. When you compare it to another federation like India or Russia where the individual states all have unique linguistic/ethnic groups which define the state from another, whereas in the US it's all rather artificial and done for the sake of governing the land mass easily.

If you get what I mean. The US is a young country, relatively speaking. Ethnically and linguistically homogeneous in terms of states and such. There wasn't really much of a reason outside of convenience for having so many states, surely.







canada too


Well actually, not Canada. Quebec exists because of the Frenchies, that's an example of a state within a country making sense.

Just look at the map of the US states, practically squares because they just wanted to divide the land for the sake of it.
That's sillily superficial. While the differences may appear small to an outsider, there are cultural differences between the states. New Yorkers dislike people from New Jersey, we consider them to be second class and dirty Then there are regional accents and dialects. What you see on TV is 'generic American accent' that many actors have to train to master in speech schools. There's no mistaking someone from New York City compared to someone from Texas or someone from California. We have different mannerisms, different accents, different attitudes.

We're not homogenous at all in reality. I bet if Diesel had made a third option which let people identify with a section of the country rather than an individual state, it would've been the winning choice. Midwesterners identify themselves as Midwesterners, Southerners as Southerners, etc.
I'm talking historically though, what you described has all developed in a small amount of time and usually after states were made, it's not that New York and New Jersey were created because people really hated each other and so they wanted to live in separate states or something, that's what I'm talking about. I know we could talk the same about ethnic groups and languages developing their own unique identities over time from a single source, but for US states it's a really short time in comparison.

It's why I think it's artificial, the states were just made for the sake of convenience and not anything else. This doesn't go for all of them, but mostly.
SenorToenails
Veritas et Scientia
+444|6415|North Tonawanda, NY

JohnG@lt wrote:

eleven bravo wrote:

there goes any future political career
Secession from New York State, not the country Albany is a cesspool.
Take the city with you!!!
eleven bravo
Member
+1,399|5544|foggy bottom

SenorToenails wrote:

eleven bravo wrote:

SenorToenails wrote:


Yes, but what about the feds using backdoor methods of pushing crap through, like the minimum drinking age?  Or why are the Feds so worried about abortion?  Medical marijuana?  Gay marriage?
all these things have an effect on interstate commerce, so, according the constitution and rulings by the supreme court, the feds have the right to regulate.
If you look at anything right it could be considered interstate commerce then.  Take the drinking age--how is a bar or liquor store (which can only sell to people in this state) engaging in interstate trade?  If California allows medical marijuana, and all its growing operations occur within that state, how is it interstate?  Same with abortion...how is that interstate?  Strictly speaking, the feds stepping into these issues is contrived at best and at worst it's stomping on state sovereignty.
you are correct and that has been the reasoning.


take the your example of a bar.  the way the civil rights act of 1964 was justified was when restaurants didnt wanna serve black people, its a violation of the rights afforded by congress to regulate interstate commerce in that A) the location of the establishment or its advertisement in the vicinity of the interstate high way system and subsequent traffic and B) supplies and ingredients and what not would more than likely be ordered from a number of different sources, out of state being one of them.
Tu Stultus Es
Jay
Bork! Bork! Bork!
+2,006|5643|London, England

SenorToenails wrote:

JohnG@lt wrote:

eleven bravo wrote:

there goes any future political career
Secession from New York State, not the country Albany is a cesspool.
Take the city with you!!!
No way. Bloomberg would try to crown himself Emperor for life a la Napoleon
"Ah, you miserable creatures! You who think that you are so great! You who judge humanity to be so small! You who wish to reform everything! Why don't you reform yourselves? That task would be sufficient enough."
-Frederick Bastiat
SenorToenails
Veritas et Scientia
+444|6415|North Tonawanda, NY

eleven bravo wrote:

you are correct and that has been the reasoning.


take the your example of a bar.  the way the civil rights act of 1964 was justified was when restaurants didnt wanna serve black people, its a violation of the rights afforded by congress to regulate interstate commerce in that A) the location of the establishment or its advertisement in the vicinity of the interstate high way system and subsequent traffic and B) supplies and ingredients and what not would more than likely be ordered from a number of different sources, out of state being one of them.
And that reasoning is horseshit.  Think about it--allowing that means the feds can regulate anything.
eleven bravo
Member
+1,399|5544|foggy bottom
im taking a course in federalism this quarter.  shit is fresh in my mind.
Tu Stultus Es
SenorToenails
Veritas et Scientia
+444|6415|North Tonawanda, NY

JohnG@lt wrote:

SenorToenails wrote:

JohnG@lt wrote:

Secession from New York State, not the country Albany is a cesspool.
Take the city with you!!!
No way. Bloomberg would try to crown himself Emperor for life a la Napoleon
In my view, draw a line continuing from the NY/PA border by Binghamton and make the southern half its own problem.  Leave the rest of the state to manage itself.  That way, we lose Paterson.

eleven bravo wrote:

im taking a course in federalism this quarter.  shit is fresh in my mind.
I'm not disbelieving you--I'm just disagreeing with the way the commerce clause was shoe-horned.

Last edited by SenorToenails (2010-05-28 12:42:23)

eleven bravo
Member
+1,399|5544|foggy bottom

SenorToenails wrote:

eleven bravo wrote:

you are correct and that has been the reasoning.


take the your example of a bar.  the way the civil rights act of 1964 was justified was when restaurants didnt wanna serve black people, its a violation of the rights afforded by congress to regulate interstate commerce in that A) the location of the establishment or its advertisement in the vicinity of the interstate high way system and subsequent traffic and B) supplies and ingredients and what not would more than likely be ordered from a number of different sources, out of state being one of them.
And that reasoning is horseshit.  Think about it--allowing that means the feds can regulate anything.
yes, thats the point.  its constitutionally sound.  ever since the begining. nothing has changed.  i think your idea of what you want this country to be conflicts with what it has been from the inception.
Tu Stultus Es
Flaming_Maniac
prince of insufficient light
+2,490|6992|67.222.138.85

Diesel_dyk wrote:

With the recent talk of red state blue state, Texas secession, rising up, states rights, true/real American versus unAmerican I thought it a current and interesting topic.
Recent? Since when?
Jay
Bork! Bork! Bork!
+2,006|5643|London, England

SenorToenails wrote:

JohnG@lt wrote:

SenorToenails wrote:


Take the city with you!!!
No way. Bloomberg would try to crown himself Emperor for life a la Napoleon
In my view, draw a line continuing from the NY/PA border by Binghamton and make the southern half its own problem.  Leave the rest of the state to manage itself.  That way, we lose Paterson.
You know the primary reason for the LI secession stuff is that we send far more money to Albany than we ever get back right? Far more money goes upstate to you guys than we get back. Retarded stuff like the Buffalo-Albany high speed railroad and cheese museums etc.
"Ah, you miserable creatures! You who think that you are so great! You who judge humanity to be so small! You who wish to reform everything! Why don't you reform yourselves? That task would be sufficient enough."
-Frederick Bastiat
SenorToenails
Veritas et Scientia
+444|6415|North Tonawanda, NY

eleven bravo wrote:

yes, thats the point.  its constitutionally sound.  ever since the begining. nothing has changed.  i think your idea of what you want this country to be conflicts with what it has been from the inception.
Really?  I mean, why bother having states at all if the feds can regulate it all.  That seems to be counter to the idea of federalism (at least as I understand it...).
eleven bravo
Member
+1,399|5544|foggy bottom
the supreme courts decision in Martin V. Hunter's Lessee in 1816 stated the fact that state governments rights, policies and laws, when conflicting with laws and treaties passed by the federal goverment, are not valid. 

Gibbons v Ogden 1824 established limitiations in what one state can charge and charter for use of its water way when those waters are shared by other states. 

Houston, East & West Texas Railway Co. v United States in 1914 kept the state of texas from charging lousianna unreasonable fares for using its rail ways in order to bolster in own in state rail service economy.  it confirmed the establishment of universal rates.  it was reasoned, along with the others that congress is given the authority to make direct laws or vest its power in the executive branch to regulate.
Tu Stultus Es
Turquoise
O Canada
+1,596|6690|North Carolina

Macbeth wrote:

Turquoise wrote:

Macbeth wrote:


excuse me but what the fuck are you talking about?
I think he's referring to how Lincoln changed us from being a voluntary union to being a mandatory one.

Before the Civil War, states could secede much easier than they can now.  This process wasn't really tested until the formation of the Confederacy.  The aftermath of the Civil War resulted in strenghtening what bound states together to form our union.  Technically, a state can still file for secession now, but it requires the approval of the majority of the rest of the union.
But we are still a republic. We can still choose our leaders. If she said Federalism ended with Lincoln then she would have a leg to stand on, but since she doesn't even know the terms she uses or needs how the hell am I supposed to take anything she says seriously?!
Just a side note here, but Diesel is a dude.
SenorToenails
Veritas et Scientia
+444|6415|North Tonawanda, NY

JohnG@lt wrote:

SenorToenails wrote:

JohnG@lt wrote:

No way. Bloomberg would try to crown himself Emperor for life a la Napoleon
In my view, draw a line continuing from the NY/PA border by Binghamton and make the southern half its own problem.  Leave the rest of the state to manage itself.  That way, we lose Paterson.
You know the primary reason for the LI secession stuff is that we send far more money to Albany than we ever get back right? Far more money goes upstate to you guys than we get back. Retarded stuff like the Buffalo-Albany high speed railroad and cheese museums etc.
What high-speed rail?  I haven't heard anything about something like that in a while...  I say to dump everything below that line so that the state can actually properly represent its populations.  Maybe the upper half would have to offer fewer services to its constituents, but at least proper representation could happen.

I know this will never happen, and thus--it's not thought out very well!  A more realistic option would be honest politicians and a change in the way this state actually works.  And you know just how likely that is...
Jay
Bork! Bork! Bork!
+2,006|5643|London, England

eleven bravo wrote:

the supreme courts decision in Martin V. Hunter's Lessee in 1816 stated the fact that state governments rights, policies and laws, when conflicting with laws and treaties passed by the federal goverment, are not valid. 

Gibbons v Ogden 1824 established limitiations in what one state can charge and charter for use of its water way when those waters are shared by other states. 

Houston, East & West Texas Railway Co. v United States in 1914 kept the state of texas from charging lousianna unreasonable fares for using its rail ways in order to bolster in own in state rail service economy.  it confirmed the establishment of universal rates.  it was reasoned, along with the others that congress is given the authority to make direct laws or vest its power in the executive branch to regulate.
Yes, but those two cases explicitly regulate interstate commerce. The Civil Rights Act goes well beyond any reasonable limits that the courts put in place with those two cases.
"Ah, you miserable creatures! You who think that you are so great! You who judge humanity to be so small! You who wish to reform everything! Why don't you reform yourselves? That task would be sufficient enough."
-Frederick Bastiat
rdx-fx
...
+955|6876

JohnG@lt wrote:

The states you despise have the most productive economies in the country. Just because we aren't ranchers attending rodeos and pretending we're still cowboys from the 1800s doesn't make us less useful Your view on what drives a country is very, very simplistic.
Your view seems to be the simplistic one.

How many urban Californians do you know that can hunt, fish, farm, build a house, fix a car, fix a small plane, fix plumbing, work with concrete, accurately shoot a rifle, do general first aid, operate heavy machinery, operate a hand shovel, or ...  do anything but go to work, stare at a computer, and shuffle paperwork.
The vast majority of the people I know, can do all of the above.  Including the 'stare at a computer and shuffle paperwork', when need be.

The cities and states I'm picking on are the bad examples of consumerist excess.  Chicago, California's 'Inland Empire', New York City.  The urban sprawl, the nanny-state laws, the overinflated entitlement programs (always funded by other peoples money, never a pay-as-you-go system) ... None of that is sustainable, unless someone else is footing the bill or you're deep into deficit spending.

The economic problems might be fixable, if it weren't for the deeply ingrained unconstitutional style of government in the above mentioned areas.  The above problem areas, the local government treats the people as subjects rather than citizens - as simpletons to be protected from themselves, rather than as responsible adults to be left alone and respected.

Note that i did not include Denver, Colorado or Seattle, Washington or Milwaukee, Wisconsin in my list of ejectable areas.
Those areas still have a sense of self-reliance, a few people left that wouldn't be absolutely helpless without their credit card and cell phone.

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