WND
Exclusive
Texas
Preps for Going it Alone
Proposal considers collapse of U.S.
and how Lone Star state would survive
by Bob Unruh
Texas
was its own nation before
joining the United States, and many jokes have been made about some
Texans
still not recognizing that “other government” with which it now is
affiliated.
But
lawmakers there are drawing
attention by considering a law that would have Texas review how it
would
respond should the U.S. government no longer be there to send federal
tax
revenue back to the state.
The
proposal would set up a
committee to study what the state gets from Washington, “the effects on
the
state budget if federal fiscal policy necessitates a significant
reduction in
or elimination of federal funding” and “a plan to address the loss of
federal
money.”
The
plan, HB 568, has been
introduced by Rep. James White, who said in a statement Texas
Self-Sufficiency
Act “creates a select committee to evaluate the effects of a possible
reduction
in or elimination of federal funding on the state budget due to federal
fiscal
policy.”
“Due
to the fiscal dysfunction of
Washington, D.C., and the fact that more than a third of our state’s
budget
revenue comes from the federal government, Texas needs to study what it
would
mean if the federal government couldn’t meet its obligations,” he said.
The
plan directs the governor,
lieutenant governor and other officials to assemble a committee “to
analyze not
only our state’s dependence on federal funds, but the impact of federal
funding
on Texas’ economy.”
Said
White: “My district in South
East Texas, for example, has a higher proportion of seniors compared to
the
state overall percentage. What would happen in the event the federal
government
eliminated the funds normally allocated to them? In the current
economic
climate, exacerbated by out of control spending in Washington, Texas
needs to
study possible responses to federal financial turmoil, and our
readiness to
adjust to such an event. Texans must govern Texas and Texans need to be
concerned about Texas.”
On
the website for the state GOP,
David Bellow blogged about the idea.
“State
Rep. James White has
proposed a bill that will require the leaders of Texas to start
crunching the
numbers and figure out what Texas would look like if it had to be self
sufficient … limited or no federal support … OUR OWN COUNTRY…. oops, I
am
getting a little ahead of myself, haha. Hey, I didn’t say secession but
that
certainly comes to mind when thinking about the federal government
having a financial
meltdown and cutting off most or all support to the states.”
Bellow
asked: “What would Texas do
in the event that the United States of America defaulted? It is a very
real
possibility that one day the massive U.S. debt will become so large and
unsustainable
that it causes a financial meltdown. Texas, and pretty much everyone
else,
would all of a sudden be faced with no more federal funds (which is
really just
Texas tax dollars given to the feds which is then given back to Texas).
Yes,
Texas is already a sovereign state, but what would we do if faced with
complete
sovereignty and no federal money?”
He
explained: “State Representative
James White is thinking ahead. He does not want to have to wait until
Texas
gets cut off from the federal government to determine how Texas will
manage on
our own. White wants to start planning now.”
WND
previously reported the
response of hundreds of thousands of Americans when Obama was
re-elected in
November.
They
launched petitions expressing
their desire to have their states secede from the U.S.
The
move began with a petition on
the White House website from Louisianans anxious to properly withdraw
their
state from the union. In just days, residents of all 50 states had
launched
similar petitions, gathering hundreds of thousands of signatures.
The
petitions were ignored by the
White House until Jon Carson, director of the White House Office of
Public
Engagement, replied.
“As
much as we value a healthy
debate,” he wrote, “we don’t let that debate tear us apart.”
WND
was first to report when a
Louisiana man began a petition on the White House’s “We the People”
website,
asking permission for his state to peacefully secede.
The
Louisiana petition quoted from
the Declaration of Independence: “‘Governments are instituted among
Men,
deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed, that
whenever any
Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right
of the
People to alter or abolish it, and institute new Government.’”
According
to the guidelines of the
“We the People” website, when a petition reaches 25,000 signatures, the
White
House must put the petition in a queue for response.
Louisiana’s
petition quickly
reached that threshold and was followed by similar petitions from all
50
states, several of which also topped the 25,000 mark. Texas’ petition
got the
signatures of tens of thousands.
“Our
founding fathers established
the Constitution of the United States ‘in order to form a more perfect
union’
through the hard and frustrating but necessary work of
self-government,” the
White House said. “They enshrined in that document the right to change
our
national government through the power of the ballot – a right that
generations
of Americans have fought to secure for all. But they did not provide a
right to
walk away from it.
“As
President Abraham Lincoln
explained in his first inaugural address in 1861, ‘in contemplation of
universal law and of the Constitution the Union of these States is
perpetual,’”
the response continued. “In the years that followed, more than 600,000
Americans died in a long and bloody civil war that vindicated the
principle
that the Constitution establishes a permanent union between the States.
And
shortly after the Civil War ended, the Supreme Court confirmed that
‘[t]he
Constitution, in all its provisions, looks to an indestructible Union
composed
of indestructible States.’”
However,
WND columnists Walter E.
Williams and Alan Keyes have both argued secession is constitutional. A
column
by Williams cites historical evidence from both the Founding Fathers
and the
Civil War era. Keyes’ argues God-given rights cannot be trumped by
man-made
law, Supreme Court decisions or civil war.
An
online Texas history recounts
Texas’ rebellion and separation from Mexico to form its own nation,
with its
own president, secretary of state and foreign policy, before ultimately
joining
the U.S.
“In
a ceremony [in 1846] in front
of the Capitol, President Jones gave a valedictory address, the flag of
the
republic was lowered, and the flag of the United States was raised.”
Read
this and other articles at
Mail Magazine 24
|