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this is basically the issue people think "california leaves haha they dont decide dumb social policy for the us anymore" what do people think the united states even is (apparently most dont) lets go back to the early days of the trump administrationhttps://twitter.com/StuartdeStael/status/1272245700726861833 …
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i cant find an article on the event, but at one point mattis and tillerson and some third guy basically dragged trump into a room and deliberately walked him through the global deployment of us troops and trade and economic agreements that currently exist
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the point of it essentially is that you can see the existing stability in the world as being built on a web of diplomacy and arms of which the united states is the guarantor and lynchpin
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trade and peace dont just "happen", they occur within and atop a metasystem of treaties, finance, and military integrations if you perturbate that system a bit, smaller economies collapse and minor wars break out if you remove the core?
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if your a liberal, you built this system and its maintenance is in your best interest if your a conservative, i suggest you think about chestertons fence for three seconds if your a leftist, you might consider your terminal values and try a consequentialist mode for a moment
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probably everyone in the US would be better off if more policy were determined at the state and local level, and i see a trend in that direction regardless what is an extremely bad idea is dramatically and erratically destroying us capacity to maintain the international system
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the united states is not just about the united states anymore and while in some ways this is bad for people in the united states (I think it is a net good) pretending this is not true and kicking out the stops is insane and puerile that is all
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Thanks. Twitter will use this to make your timeline better. UndoUndo
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"The Supreme Court ruled [...] in 1869 that no state can unilaterally leave the Union. Secession would require a US Constitutional amendment approved by two-thirds majorities in the US House of Representatives and Senate, then ratification by 38 state legislatures." from Wiki
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I'd wondered whether that was resolved! Well then
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