Author Topic: So I might not be a part of California anymore; and I'm not moving.  (Read 4139 times)

If this happens Florida must be nuked for these reasons.
1. Keep the states at 50
2. Old people are a burden on the economy
3. They tend to make every election complicated
4. Cubans
5. forget the Miami Heat
6. Stupid Cubans
7. Those creepy swamp people that practice inbreeding and think fighting alligators is smart
 

because violence is always the answer
it is when it comes to hawaii, just ask the japs

How about we just nuke everyone and call it a day?!  Sounds like a great way to kill the entire human population.

Washington is best state

I don't like Jefferson.  It's the name of like 30 counties across the US (including mine) and is way overused.  I think some Navajo name (or whoever natives used to live there) would suffice.
Navajo live in Arizona, Utah, and Nevada

These are the tribes of Oregeon, and California.

Also send all the hippies, stoners, modern artists, rappers, and ultraliberals to San Fransisco and have towed out to sea and California will be 50 times better than what it was.
« Last Edit: January 27, 2014, 11:17:50 PM by Harm94 »


Pretty much this.
well, only pretty much seattle though
even though thats like already like 50% of the state's population soooo

Local governments can vote as much as they want it'll never happen. If I remember correctly it is in the constitution that you can't split up a state after it's been created.

well, only pretty much seattle though
even though thats like already like 50% of the state's population soooo
I really want to go to Seattle, especially if it really rains as much as people say it does there. :P

well, only pretty much seattle though
even though thats like already like 50% of the state's population soooo
Seattle is ehh. The forests and mountains are where it is at.

Seattle is ehh. The forests and mountains are where it is at.
well, let me change that statement to "puget sound"
since everything else east of the mountains is just...farmland

Local governments can vote as much as they want it'll never happen. If I remember correctly it is in the constitution that you can't split up a state after it's been created.
I believe Texas was broken up 40 years after years of it being established as a state as part of agreement.

Local governments can vote as much as they want it'll never happen. If I remember correctly it is in the constitution that you can't split up a state after it's been created.
West Virginia used to be part of Virginia.

Local governments can vote as much as they want it'll never happen. If I remember correctly it is in the constitution that you can't split up a state after it's been created.
Georgia was split up into 3 states(Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi) after the yazoo land fraud, by the government.

Local governments can vote as much as they want it'll never happen. If I remember correctly it is in the constitution that you can't split up a state after it's been created.
Article IV, section 3:

New States may be admitted by the Congress into this Union; but no new State shall be formed or erected within the Jurisdiction of any other State; nor any State be formed by the Junction of two or more States, or Parts of States, without the Consent of the Legislatures of the States concerned as well as of the Congress.

Basically, the parent state and Congress must approve.