Georgia, Oklahoma, and South Dakota: Perry's Got Nothing On Us
The jaw dropper of the day has been Texas Governor Rick Perry's announcement--and refusal to disavow--that he may be contemplating secession (or a similar process) for the Lone Star State. But members of the Georgia Senate, the South Dakota House, and both chambers of the Oklahoma legislature must be wondering what all the fuss is about.
On April 1 of this year, the Georgia Senate passed a resolution affirming their belief that the U.S. government is on the verge of nullifying the Constitution--that, for instance if Congress passes any "[f]urther infringements on the right to keep and bear arms," that'll be it, in their eyes, for the olll' U.S. of A:
all powers previously delegated to the United States of America by the Constitution for the United States shall revert to the several States individually. Any future government of the United States of America shall require ratification of three quarters of the States seeking to form a government of the United States of America and shall not be binding upon any State not seeking to form such a government.
The vote was 43-1. Jay Bookman of the (perhaps ironically named) Atlanta Journal Constitution offered a couple caveats, though:
the resolution passed because it was snuck unnoticed onto the Senate resolution calendar on the 39th day of the 40-day legislative session, when senators were trying to handle dozens of bills and scores of amendments. Most did not have an opportunity to read the six-page resolution, which in its description claimed to merely affirm "states' rights based on Jeffersonian principles."However, those who introduced and sponsored the measure have no such excuse. Presumably they read and understood what they asked their fellow senators to endorse. And those sponsors include some of the most prominent members of the Senate --- Senate Majority Leader Chip Rogers of Woodstock, Senate President Pro Tem Tommie Williams, Transportation Committee Chairman Jeff Mullis of Chickamauga, and Chief Deputy Whip John Wiles of Cobb County, among others.
Lest you think this might be a complete fluke, though, the similar South Dakota House resolution passed 51-18, and the Oklahoma version passed 83-13 in the House, and 25 to 17 in the Senate.
These resolutions have their roots in the sort of radical right wing movement the Department of Homeland Security has warned law enforcement officials about. And though they have no binding force, they aren't meaningless either. Bookman writes that the Georgia resolution "has been hailed by, among others, those fighting the conspiracy to create a single North American country, by the Confederate States Militia, by the John Birch Society, and the League of the South, which still pines for the cause of an 'independent South' and believes that 'Southern society is radically different from the society impressed upon it by an alien occupier.'"
Good times. At least we know this isn't astroturf, though. If it was, they would've timed these stunts to fall on Tea Party Day.




















why did we have to go and put so many of the nukes in the red states?
April 16, 2009 7:34 PM | Reply | Permalink
LOVE the homepage picture!
http://www.confederatestatesmilitia.com/news.php
April 16, 2009 7:40 PM | Reply | Permalink
and let us not forget the Palin's relationship with the alaskan independence party.
April 16, 2009 7:52 PM | Reply | Permalink
The takeaway I get from all this is that the modern Republican Party is a bunch of pissypant sore-losers.
April 16, 2009 10:18 PM | Reply | Permalink
I don't know. They've moved beyond the fact-free nonsense we've derided for many years, and started pushing the war metaphors, calling for revolution, talking a lot about their guns (OK, they've always done that), and some even brought their concealed handguns to the tea parties, judging by some video I saw. It seems they've gotten more extreme and more serious. When they decide their numbers are too diminished to win elections, what will they resort to?
April 17, 2009 12:50 AM | Reply | Permalink
They're caught in their own trap. Everything they did to encircle and diminish Democrats politically has come back and bit them, and they can't stand it.
April 17, 2009 4:34 AM | Reply | Permalink
I still think these loons are trying to pick a fight with the Obama administration to entice them to react so they can sidetrack their agenda when they are forced to deal with these states trying to gain their independence.
April 16, 2009 10:53 PM | Reply | Permalink
Leonard Cohen never went where Bob Dylan went or did what Bob Dylan did.
Not even close.
April 16, 2009 11:24 PM | Reply | Permalink
When all is said and done, it will fall back to Obama's intent to include repuglicans in the process of legislating. His attempt to hand them an olive branch turns out to have embolden them to fight back instead of cooperating. They believe Obama's action of inclusion is a sign of weakness and they are intent on exploiting it. The repuglicans only understand one concept of governing - one party rule. For the political party that has been so anti-communist since the days of McCarthy, I find it odd they would embrace such a governing principle.
April 17, 2009 4:44 AM | Reply | Permalink
The Republicans are embracing the radical wing of the party because Obama is the first black president. And at the same time they are stirring up the fringe element with their anti-American statements, they are blaming the Democrats for destroying the country.
April 17, 2009 9:23 AM | Reply | Permalink
Where did you get the information about the Oklahoma lege? I checked its web site and found nothing, which doesn't mean anything and called the Tulsa World and they didn't know anything about it either.
April 17, 2009 2:29 PM | Reply | Permalink