
Seriously? The red states don't have any industry? Please. There is a ton of heavy industry left in red america: oil and gas production, petrochemicals, agriculture, mining, auto assembly (you don't think the Honda and Toyota plants in red-state Alabama and Tennessee beat the pants off of the fossils in the upper midwest?) |
Can you point to your source on that? Because I am looking at the GDP data on the BEA site and it looks like the only red states that are above average are Texas, Alaska, Colorado, and Wyoming, and of course half of those are built on oil. |
Blue states already massively subsidize oil and coal production. We'd simply be getting resources on the open market. The New Confederate States of America would be the equivalent of Venezuela. It's pretty comical that some think Toyota and Honda would keep their rural factories running should there be a political split. Not going to happen. Those factories would be in Mexico because they're even better at repressing their labor force than Red State America. Those factories are in rural america because they're exploiting a loophole in our trade regime by siting them in America, but in the most third-world part of America. |
The BEA data is by state, not per capita. Use the census data to get the population percentages from each state and align it to the GDP. |
Extractive industry, and exploitation of cheap labor by foreign corporations. Don't worry, I'm sure Blue State America will also be building cheap fabrication plants down there as soon as the Great Split happens. Of course, all the corporate HQs, the intellectual capital, and the good jobs will stay here in the First World. |
Dear lord. I wish you were trolling, but I sense you actually think that. The economy of Texas will simply dry up and blow away without the support of blue america? That's delusional. |
A shame we won't get to run the experiment and find out. |
The economy of Texas--much like any other political entity with little intellectual capital and a decent source of natural resources--would of course not collapse. Heck, Mexico does pretty well too. As a political society, it's not really my cup of tea, but some folks like that model: great disparities of wealth, miniscule middle-class, almost-nonexistent regulations, etc, etc... Heck, we might come vacation on South Padre Island and spend some hard currency. Probably still be cheaper than going to the more upscale Mexican resorts. |
You do realize you just described the bluest of the blue states, NY and CA, don't you? Guessing not. The blue states are absolutely no model of income distribution. And if you look at University of Texas, it scores quite well on the college rankings. |
That's because--as a general rule--the richest people choose to live in Blue States. This makes sense, I mean, if you had unlimited means, who wouldn't rather live in a cosmopolitan world capital, versus a dust-swept 'compound" outside of Waco? (Don't answer that.)
And ironically, because of the misguided voting patterns of Red State Americans, those richest Americans have accrued a greater share of America's wealth than at any other time in our nation's history--largely due to tax policy. Impoverished and uneducated Red Staters are voting to concentrate every cent of the nation's wealth in the hands of wealthy Blue Staters. Weird but true. |
Obviously, the assumption is that, after the Great Split, Bluestatia will be reverting to a more sane tax schedule like every other developed country in the world. And Redlandia will continue on it's current destructive path. |
Sure, but Austin's essentially the equivalent of West Berlin. If you think there won't be an immediate stream of refugees post-split you're fooling yourself. |
I love the fact that a thread I started to discuss how to cure divisiveness has turned into a celebration of the idea of splitting the country. I apologize for thinking that divisiveness is a bad thing. |
I went to UT so I know exactly what it is like. It is a typical liberal college town and state capitol. 86% of the students are Texas residents... and therefore representative of all of Texas, not just liberal Austin. |
What's the "cure" do you think? There's a fundamental disagreement on the core responsibilities of government: What it means to ensure domestic tranquility and promote the general welfare." One half the country seems to prefer a Hobbsian sort of state where the strong do what they will and the weak suffer what they must. The other half prefers policies more in line with every other first world country. The first half also has a monomania for limited federal government. So obviously, the solution is to rein in the federal government, and build loose political confederations of states. The only problem there is that usually the Red State's political beliefs often don't line up with it's actions, so we're likely to see a continued push to extract wealth from the Blue States even in the event where a political decoupling occurs. In other words, "Shrink that Federal government, but keep those ruinously high military and factory-farm subsidies coming." |