Ok, let's adress your concerns. Citizenship, (as I said in previous posts) belonged to the states prior to Reconstruction. By giving letting the States decide Citizenship, you are only returning it to the rightfull owners. This what the Founders set up, not me. That does not mean you need a pasport to cross from one state to the next. We are United, I grant that.
Well, at one point all this belonged to the Native Americans and citizenship in the colonies was under british control... why not go back to those
rightful owners?
There is no good reason to have 55 versions of citizenship for one country... unless you are attempting to deny something from someone.
In the past, if someone came to live here, they came here and had to pay taxes and live in that state for seven years or whatever and you had to be productive in that state. You had to prove your loyalty essentially. Then you were granted Ciizenship of that stae and therefore a Citizen of the US.
So I'd have to have proven I was productive in Minnesota for seven years before I could be considered a citizen of Minnesota? And if I failed that arbitrary test... what, I'd be deported back to California?
What if you lost your citizenship in California after not being a resident for three years... would that mean I lose my US citizenship altogether?
Did you have to go through this
bullshit to become a citizen? Why (if you are already a citizen) do you care to make it harder for others? Who (exactly) are you attempting to gear these conditions against... and why?
And what has it gotten us? What is so bad that you feel this need to change things? Who would you have kept from having citizenship that currently has it?
It sure sounds like you have someone (or a group) in mind that you would like to disenfranchise.
As I said before, this is an inclusive country... not exclusive.
The politicians in Washington came from places like Arizona and Maryland... they represent us, all of us. Our borders are a national resource, not a state resource. They are also a national concern, not a state concern.
So if Mexico decides to invade Arizona, should the rest of the US sit back and enjoy the show? Should people like you in Maryland sit back and say
it isn't my problem?
No, it isn't.
Jefferson lived in a 5 mile an hour world. States needed sovereignty because they were effectively isolated. Moving from state to state took a long time, communication between states took a long time... communication with a centralized federal government took a long time.
Consider this thread... how long would it have taken in Jefferson's day for everyone who has participated in it to have communicated their thoughts/replies on this matter from where they respectively live?
This is a very different world.
Again, you seem really concerned with what other people are doing... why? Where is this coming from? Who are you trying to stop from voting?
There are already rules for who qualifies to vote... why do you have this strong impulse to ratchet those requirements up even higher?
In the past this was done to disenfranchise elements of the population from their rights to votes... what is
your motivation?
As far as decentralization goes, yes I would undo Reconstruction and return the country to the Republic it used to be. It was working up until 1860, the North wanted to indistrialize, the South didn't. The North began to use high tariffs on the South, the didn't like that and seceeded.
So in your mind the Civil War was mainly over
tariffs?
I believe the first state to secede was South Carolina, and they didn't talk about tariffs in their declaration. In fact, reading the first paragraph, one gets the distinct idea that it was slavery that was the principle cause (in their minds)...
The people of the State of South Carolina, in Convention assembled, on the 26th day of April, A.D., 1852, declared that the frequent violations of the Constitution of the United States, by the Federal Government, and its encroachments upon the reserved rights of the States, fully justified this State in then withdrawing from the Federal Union; but in deference to the opinions and wishes of the other slaveholding States, she forbore at that time to exercise this right. Since that time, these encroachments have continued to increase, and further forbearance ceases to be a virtue.
As I said before... these are some really bad ideas, and I have to question what would motivate someone to propose them. Because it seems like you don't like the freedoms and liberties we have and would like to dial them back for some people that you seem to think are not worthy of them.
Unless you can show me otherwise, that is what it looks like from where I sit. But the revisionist version of the secession of the South at least explains why you long for the worst elements of our countries history. After all, there is nothing today as bad as the South in 1860.
Maybe i'm in the minority in thinking that this country is Fracked.
If you long for the South of 1860, I sure hope you are the smallest minority possible.