See our new gallery of mapped data to get a feel for what a federation of red states would be like, and how it would differ from the US: https://redstatesecession.org/how-a-federation-of-red-states-would-differ-from-the-us
Greater Indiana” law signed by Governor of Indiana last week
The new law creates an Indiana-Illinois Boundary Adjustment Commission to analyze and propose action. It can do this without waiting for Illinois to act.
Although Illinois officials dismissed this law this year, a debt crisis could force Illinois to reconsider the option, as relocating state lines could provide an immediate influx of cash for paying off maturing state bonds. Moving the state line could provide that influx because even if Indiana isn’t willing to pay anything for these counties, still it makes sense for these counties to bring part of Illinois’ debt with them. Because if you divide the Indiana state debt by the number of Hoosiers you get a certain amount. If Illinois counties took that amount of debt per person into Indiana, it wouldn’t change the debt per Hoosier, but it would be a sudden influx of money for northern Illinois.
This blog, Red-State Secession, was the first to propose relocating this state line, and the first to publish an analysis of it and popularize it on social media. The passage of this law is a testament to how the work of a tiny team can influence state politics.
Read more at our press release about the Indiana Senate passing it.
Louisiana sovereignty bills that might ease the transition to independence
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No, because they don't matter. The elite run the empire. Vote all you want, not happening until you have an actual economic breakdown and civil strife on a much larger scale that actually empowers a rival elite class.
That divorce will be long and painful, but necessary.