Anonymous wrote:And the "New Colombia" name is the lamest.
Anonymous wrote:
If DC received statehood, in addition to representation in Congress, what else would happen?
Governor Barry - with the power to pardon criminals.
The creation of two layers (state and local) bureaucracy for many functions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:jsteele wrote:Anonymous wrote:
That’s all well and good but it’s beside the point. It was the ‘no taxation without representation’ founding fathers who made DC a district and not a State. It would take a Constitutional amendment to change that, right? I simply offer that is not likely to happen (for a variety of reasons, conservatives may not want to provide liberals two more senate seats and liberals may not want DC to implode in debt which likely would). Anyway I offer per the founding fathers if this is unsatisfactory, federalism offers a way out (figuratively and literally, hmmm, I made a pun), people can vote with their feet and head not too far north or south.
You're a aware that DC has a large surplus, right? What are you blathering about?
Anonymous wrote:The eventual solution is for most of DC to retrocede to Maryland. DC would keep its municipal government, but MD would provide state services. DC would get one voting representative, and vote with other Maryland citizens for US Senate. MD is basically a blue state anyway, so it wouldn't upset the balance of power on Capitol Hill. DC would also get delegates in the MD general assembly. There's precedent, when the former VA piece of DC rejoined Maryland. I know that the die-hard DC politicos wouldn't like it, with their dreams of further power and patronage, but it's the best and most workable solution for voting rights. And it could be done by simple legislation, not through approval by the states or constitutional amendment.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If DC received statehood, in addition to representation in Congress, what else would happen?
The US flag would need and extra star and would look really dumb. So it will never happen.
Anonymous wrote:
Look, everyone knew the rules for DC when it was created, people who lived there did so electively. I mean you could say slaves didn't have a choice, but they did upon emancipation. Injustice? Oh the hyperbole...
jsteele wrote:Anonymous wrote:jsteele wrote:Anonymous wrote:Isn't DC a district because its defined as such in the Constitution?? Not to offer sour grapes but in today's partisan world I don't see this changing. Since DC residents electively choose to live there, if they are unsatisfied there is always the option to electively choose not to.
This country was founded on the idea of "no taxation without representation." That idea is really central to our independence. Acting like it is not important is like acting that private property is not important to capitalism. The founding fathers didn't expect the capital district to become a metropolis or even a full-time seat of government. Their experience, largely based on the English experience, was that legislators lived at home and only attended periodic legislative sessions. They would find a situation in which a population larger than two states was taxed without representation unfathomable. The fact that people can move away from this injustice does nothing to resolve the injustice. Those colonists who didn't like paying British taxes were not being held prisoner. They also could have moved.
Also, keep in mind that the founding fathers' idea of "representation" was not comparable to ours. They generally limited it to male property owners. The right to vote for a representative government has expanded significantly over the years. There is no reason such expansion shouldn't extend to DC.
That’s all well and good but it’s beside the point. It was the ‘no taxation without representation’ founding fathers who made DC a district and not a State. It would take a Constitutional amendment to change that, right? I simply offer that is not likely to happen (for a variety of reasons, conservatives may not want to provide liberals two more senate seats and liberals may not want DC to implode in debt which likely would). Anyway I offer per the founding fathers if this is unsatisfactory, federalism offers a way out (figuratively and literally, hmmm, I made a pun), people can vote with their feet and head not too far north or south.
Well, that is also beside the point. Running from injustice does nothing to eliminate injustice. That's sort of like conservatives who think sexual orientation is a lifestyle choice and one should simply choose differently to get marriage rights. The fact that something is hard or is unlikely to be immediately achieved doesn't mean that you shouldn't still try to do it. If we try to get statehood, we might get it. If we don't try, we certainly won't.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If DC received statehood, in addition to representation in Congress, what else would happen?
The US flag would need and extra star and would look really dumb. So it will never happen.
Anonymous wrote:If DC received statehood, in addition to representation in Congress, what else would happen?
Anonymous wrote:jsteele wrote:Anonymous wrote:Isn't DC a district because its defined as such in the Constitution?? Not to offer sour grapes but in today's partisan world I don't see this changing. Since DC residents electively choose to live there, if they are unsatisfied there is always the option to electively choose not to.
This country was founded on the idea of "no taxation without representation." That idea is really central to our independence. Acting like it is not important is like acting that private property is not important to capitalism. The founding fathers didn't expect the capital district to become a metropolis or even a full-time seat of government. Their experience, largely based on the English experience, was that legislators lived at home and only attended periodic legislative sessions. They would find a situation in which a population larger than two states was taxed without representation unfathomable. The fact that people can move away from this injustice does nothing to resolve the injustice. Those colonists who didn't like paying British taxes were not being held prisoner. They also could have moved.
Also, keep in mind that the founding fathers' idea of "representation" was not comparable to ours. They generally limited it to male property owners. The right to vote for a representative government has expanded significantly over the years. There is no reason such expansion shouldn't extend to DC.
That’s all well and good but it’s beside the point. It was the ‘no taxation without representation’ founding fathers who made DC a district and not a State. It would take a Constitutional amendment to change that, right? I simply offer that is not likely to happen (for a variety of reasons, conservatives may not want to provide liberals two more senate seats and liberals may not want DC to implode in debt which likely would). Anyway I offer per the founding fathers if this is unsatisfactory, federalism offers a way out (figuratively and literally, hmmm, I made a pun), people can vote with their feet and head not too far north or south.
Anonymous wrote:jsteele wrote:Anonymous wrote:Isn't DC a district because its defined as such in the Constitution?? Not to offer sour grapes but in today's partisan world I don't see this changing. Since DC residents electively choose to live there, if they are unsatisfied there is always the option to electively choose not to.
This country was founded on the idea of "no taxation without representation." That idea is really central to our independence. Acting like it is not important is like acting that private property is not important to capitalism. The founding fathers didn't expect the capital district to become a metropolis or even a full-time seat of government. Their experience, largely based on the English experience, was that legislators lived at home and only attended periodic legislative sessions. They would find a situation in which a population larger than two states was taxed without representation unfathomable. The fact that people can move away from this injustice does nothing to resolve the injustice. Those colonists who didn't like paying British taxes were not being held prisoner. They also could have moved.
Also, keep in mind that the founding fathers' idea of "representation" was not comparable to ours. They generally limited it to male property owners. The right to vote for a representative government has expanded significantly over the years. There is no reason such expansion shouldn't extend to DC.
That’s all well and good but it’s beside the point. It was the ‘no taxation without representation’ founding fathers who made DC a district and not a State. It would take a Constitutional amendment to change that, right? I simply offer that is not likely to happen (for a variety of reasons, conservatives may not want to provide liberals two more senate seats and liberals may not want DC to implode in debt which likely would). Anyway I offer per the founding fathers if this is unsatisfactory, federalism offers a way out (figuratively and literally, hmmm, I made a pun), people can vote with their feet and head not too far north or south.
jsteele wrote:Anonymous wrote:Isn't DC a district because its defined as such in the Constitution?? Not to offer sour grapes but in today's partisan world I don't see this changing. Since DC residents electively choose to live there, if they are unsatisfied there is always the option to electively choose not to.
This country was founded on the idea of "no taxation without representation." That idea is really central to our independence. Acting like it is not important is like acting that private property is not important to capitalism. The founding fathers didn't expect the capital district to become a metropolis or even a full-time seat of government. Their experience, largely based on the English experience, was that legislators lived at home and only attended periodic legislative sessions. They would find a situation in which a population larger than two states was taxed without representation unfathomable. The fact that people can move away from this injustice does nothing to resolve the injustice. Those colonists who didn't like paying British taxes were not being held prisoner. They also could have moved.
Also, keep in mind that the founding fathers' idea of "representation" was not comparable to ours. They generally limited it to male property owners. The right to vote for a representative government has expanded significantly over the years. There is no reason such expansion shouldn't extend to DC.