Wednesday, June 8, 2016

Vacant And Vermont Rhyme

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This is welcome talk despite what many might say. First of all, it shows how little Americans know about their own history. It clearly notes how there was in the 1800s more talk about secession among New England states than all those hated (then and still now) southern states.

It also shows that a part of the Declaration of Independence left a way for people to declare their own independence. As far as Bernie and Vermont, should they decide to go, we say God speed you and Good Riddance!

During the Vietnam era you had the Right saying controversial things that drew much objection about America and its war critics:" Love It Or Leave it!" How strange history and time are. Now you have the Left saying get on board or we will force you. Accept climate change as a fact of we will punish you.

These are indeed interesting times. The major networks and media outlets need to use whatever influence they have to stop the stop Trump people because if Clinton and Trump are the two that square off later this year the media will get more viewers than 10 Super Bowls and reap more revenue than even their greedy little fists can hold. You won't need Fourth of July.

It should be a nuclear war and most entertaining. And that doesn't include how many spinoff series cable television networks can come up with once the smoke clears. You might want to pick up some media company shares. This should be a no-holds-barred, let-it-all-handout, rock 'em-sock 'em event with no interference. Forget the fake stagings and the phony niceties. Let it rip.

Let's find out who the real liars are, the real fakirs. Make MSM report the truth as it happens, not as they think it happened. Let the American people decide. This could be, if let alone, one of the most healthy events in the history of this nation. Either you believe the American people are strong enough to take the news or not. We're betting they are. We are also betting they're more decent than given credit for. 

Bernie Sanders will not become president of the United States. But he could still become president of Vermont if the Green Mountain State secedes.

It’s not such a far-fetched notion. Vermont was an independent republic from 1777 to 1791, and despite signing the Constitution, Vermont reserved its right to leave the union. New York, Rhode Island and Virginia explicitly did so.

In researching “Free Dakota,” my novel about secession, I discovered that in the early 1800s, talk of secession was more common among the New England states than among the southern states. Few people questioned a state’s right to secede.

Bernie Sanders refuses to concede defeat to Hillary Clinton, vowing to "continue the fight" for the Democratic nomination despite his rival declaring herself the party's flagbearer for the US presidential race. Video provided by AFP
Media: AFP
It is the Pledge of Allegiance that claims the United States is an indivisible nation. And, of course, the Pledge of Allegiance is not a founding document. It was written in 1892 and popularized by the American Legion and other groups in the 20th century.
For its part, the Declaration of Independence clearly recognizes the right to form a new government when “it becomes necessary for one people to dissolve the political bands which have connected them with another.”

sfgate.com/news/article/How-Bernie-Sanders-can-still-become-president-7969545

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