Horace Porter
First Sergeant
- Joined
- Apr 4, 2009
- Location
- Absoltely Nowhere Now, MA
I'm curious about the tendency of several discussions here, especially those about secession's constitutionality and state sovereignty, to become, if you will, reenactments of the discussions offered during the nineteenth century ... with the same failure of resolution through reason.
If someone definitively proved a constitutional right of secession, and reasonable people accepted that, how would that change anything from 150 years ago?
If someone definitively proved that there was no constitutional right of secession, and reasonable people accepted that, how would that change anything from 150 years ago?
What we know is that people disagreed about these issues at the time. How do we believe that we here are going to resolve an issue that they could not?
Just asking.
If someone definitively proved a constitutional right of secession, and reasonable people accepted that, how would that change anything from 150 years ago?
If someone definitively proved that there was no constitutional right of secession, and reasonable people accepted that, how would that change anything from 150 years ago?
What we know is that people disagreed about these issues at the time. How do we believe that we here are going to resolve an issue that they could not?
Just asking.
