Texas Gov talks secession
The governor of Texas is alluding
to
secession.In a state that once was its own nation, a Republican governor who talked about secession without completely dismissing the idea has Democratic lawmakers in an uproar. Gov. Rick Perry, in comments following an anti-tax "tea party" Wednesday, never did advocate Texas breaking away from the United States but suggested that Texans might at some point get so fed up they would want to leave the union.
These
are the same people who come here to Hawaii and talk about conquest and how
Hawaiians should all be glad to be Americans. Now they're out of power 3 months
and they're ready to talk secession
lol.But I find it interesting, in
watching the coverage of this, how vastly different the Hawaiian independence
restoration movement is in character from the secessionist movements in America.
On the surface, to an uninformed observer, they may seem similar, wanting what
most think of as a state to no longer be a state. Historically and legally there
are parallels, but there are important differences (including the fact that in
Hawaii it is not "secession" because there was never a legal cession in the
first place). But from a sort of
political/idealogical perspective, the basic difference is this: In America, it
is a product of the right; in Hawaii, it is much more a product of the left.
Earlier I went
off on this observation in more depth.
Posted: Fri - April 17, 2009 at 12:09 PM