The calls for Texas to defend itself and defy the federal government have set fire to a long-simmering fight over states’ rights, emboldening right-wing figures.

Daniel Miller felt encouraged last week, as fears of a new civil war trended online and a coalition of powerful Republicans coalesced behind Gov. Greg Abbott’s standoff with the Biden administration.

As the longtime leader of Texas’ unlikely secessionist movement, Miller has for decades argued that the state is in a stranglehold by the federal government that, eventually, would prompt enough popular support for a vote to leave the union. The past week only reinforced that belief.

"It validates and confirms the position we’ve had all along, which is that if Texas ever wants to truly secure its border … the only way we’re going to do it is as an independent and self-governing nation,” Miller said in an interview.

At issue is the 47-acre Shelby Park in Eagle Pass, where Texas has for months been laying concertina wire along the Rio Grande to prevent migrants from crossing. In a 5-4 decision early last week, the U.S. Supreme Court sided with the Biden administration, allowing U.S. Border Patrol agents to cut the wire to apprehend people who had crossed the river.

The narrowly written decision — which didn’t speak to whether the state had to stop laying new concertina wire — has emboldened Abbott, who vowed to continue his fight against the high court and federal government, citing Texas’ right to defend itself from what he claims is an “invasion” of migrants.

By week’s end — and as the Texas National Guard and state troopers continued to roll out wire and stifle federal agents’ access to much of the park — Abbott’s defiant calls were backed by 25 Republican governors, former President Donald Trump, U.S. House Speaker Mike Johnson and nearly all of Texas’ congressional delegation.

    • @acceptable_pumpkin
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      6210 months ago

      No, Texas is part of the US. Instead, we should execute any of these secessionists as the treasonous people that they are.

      • @GhostFence
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        2010 months ago

        Let them go and the white nationalists forever lose electoral power in what remains of America. As a black man… I support this reduction in threats to my life and my family’s life.

    • @[email protected]
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      10 months ago

      I don’t think they’ve ever filed the paperwork - like they keep loudly saying how they so badly want to go, but then they never follow through, can you imagine that?

      Wanna fight me bro, we can go outside RIGHT NOW.

      Okay.

      Oh uh… I have somewhere I need to be right now…

      • Baron Von J
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        1210 months ago

        They tried to get secession on the GOP primary ballot this year, actually. A petition with like 100k signatures. The party officials rejected it, so the secessionists asked the state supreme court to intervene. The court declined.

        • FuglyDuck
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          10 months ago

          All of three point-three percent of their population. Give or take. (edit to correct math)

          • @GhostFence
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            310 months ago

            #III% delusion brigade has entered the chat

            • FuglyDuck
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              10 months ago

              huh? okay. you got me to look it up. Texas has a population of 30.5 million (that’s where I go the 3.3 percent figure. 100k actually comes out to 3.2% .32%.)

              The petition had 139k votes. so it actually comes out to 4.5% .45% It’s still… essentially…uh… nobody.

              (edit to correct the math…)

              • @Got_Bent
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                310 months ago

                Your decimal place is off by one. It’s 0.45%.

                • FuglyDuck
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                  310 months ago

                  erg. Math is hard. sorry for the typo.

                  • @Got_Bent
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                    210 months ago

                    Eh. The correction strengthens your point, so all good.

                • 【J】【u】【s】【t】【Z】
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                  10 months ago

                  Oh man I did that the other week only was talking about potentially a genocide. Not a good time to forget to carry the decimal.

    • @[email protected]
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      1510 months ago

      Can we realistically move everybody who wishes to remain a US citizen? Who pays for their move?

      What about all of the federal government employees, including military, who currently live and work in the state?

      This kind of thing would probably take months just for physical moving of households and I wonder if we even have the throughput to get this accomplished before whatever arbitrary succession date.

      No matter figuring out what happens to everybody paying into federal services such as social security and Medicare. The fed will laugh in the face of anybody trying to claim back 20 years of taxes because they aren’t using a system they paid into. 20 million or so taxpayers who decide to secede will have to just give up what they’ve invested.

      • edric
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        1310 months ago

        All the 5 major cities of Texas, where most people live, are blue. Moving everyone would probably mean only the rural folk will remain.

        • @[email protected]
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          810 months ago

          Texas will not cede its land. Those cities will remain under the care of Texas. That means the people who don’t wish to remain Texans must move.

          There’s no way that Texas will allow independent or US-aligned havens within its borders. Have you read what their legislators have said about sanctuary cities?

      • @SendMePhotos
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        610 months ago

        Whoever moves would pay for themselves.

        The government would pull out and relocate offices.

        Texas would no longer receive imports like foods and supplies.

        This is fucking stupid. Fuck around and find out. It will end in Texas crawling back and apologizing.

        • @[email protected]
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          610 months ago

          Let’s say you have 100k federal and military employees in Texas. Are you suggesting that they just up and move on their own dime, when joint travel regulations and US code do not allow for this?

          Again, the government would pull out and not pay for their move?

          It largely is not the place for the federal government to micromanage trade outside of certain “national security” line items and some sanctions. It’s a lot harder to sell sanctions on your former neighbors to the international community, let alone your own legislators.

          I get the zeal, but a clean secession sucks for everybody and in no way does anybody come out on top. This is without accounting for any violence or armed conflict over disputed items like military bases, national guard posts, defense contractors like Boeing and Lockheed, and energy production facilities.

          • @SendMePhotos
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            110 months ago

            Yes

            No, government people usually get paid for relocation AFAIK.

            You are correct.

            You are correct.

    • @nexguy
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      410 months ago

      What about the 45% of the state that doesn’t support the Republicans?

    • @ghostdoggtv
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      410 months ago

      Nope, they have to fight their way out.