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We should never hope for a “civil war;” the outcome during and after will cause at least half the nation to suffer for years. The greatness of state rights given to us by ther constitution is that we in each individual “state” have the right to lead ourselves away from the central oppressive federal government.
As a state, we must and should handle all our business, including protecting our borders, when the federal government and our elected politicians decide they won’t. This seems strange because one of the primary duties of the federal government is to protect our borders. We have watched both political parties over the years do nothing at all about the borders and have watched (maybe elected)President Biden spend trillion dollars on bringing millions of illegals into the nation. Is there a way to stop it before the nation fails? What reason has it been allowed to go on for many years? We have the same politicians devouring our wealth daily as they invite millions into the country, spending deficit money to have them come, be housed, and paid as citizens to live. (how insane).We have uncontrolled crime in the large cities( spilling now everywhere), so do we allow more criminals across the border? We don’t enforce our laws and now want more criminals to prey upon our citizens; we are “nuts.” I have asked myself why we, the people of the nation and especially the states that border Mexico, allow this invasion. Civil war may not be the answer, but sitting back and watching the politicians spend money from trillions of dollar deficits and, at the same time, paying billions and trillion dollars to illegal aliens is insane.
The elected politicians in Washington, DC, will never solve our negative spending and illegal immigration problems until they fail. Then, as with Rome, it will be plain to see by all. Why do these politicians, some of whom I know personally, follow this obviously failed direction for the nation? For most of my life, I believed we had the smartest of smarts being our elected officials. After meeting and dealing with them, I think differently now.
“We all dream of stories with happy endings. We know that, by their nature, “ending” and “happy” never make good roommates. But we force ourselves to believe it anyway. That hope, that naïveté, that is our greatest strength as humans. Stories don’t end happily. The best we can do is hope that they leave a good taste in our mouth… licking our lips one last time before leaving the table wouldn’t be that bad, right?”
― Zidrou, The Adoption