• @UnderpantsWeevil
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      2110 months ago

      Democratic lawmakers introduced the Connect the Grid Act last week, aimed at ensuring the state’s power grid does not fail again like it did during 2021’s Winter Storm Uri, which left millions without power for days and claimed hundreds of lives. Rep. Greg Casar of Texas said by requiring the Electric Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT) to connect to neighboring grids, Texas would be able to avoid similar tragedies in the future. ERCOT serves most of the state’s 30 million residents.

      It’s a bill by a House Democratic that will never see a floor vote much less a trip to the Senate or the Governor’s desk.

      Texas residential housing getting energy bills that jump from $15/MW to $3000/MW isn’t a bug, its a feature. If connecting to the grid dilutes the leverage that local gas power plants have in gouging electricity prices, there’s no way this is going to pass.

    • Treczoks
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      fedilink
      810 months ago

      They’d be stupid enough to try it. It would be like Brexit, just a thousand times worse.

      • @Passerby6497
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        510 months ago

        Brexit didn’t involve the central government bringing in armed forces to quash the rebellion, so this will definitely be a thousand times worse at the least. Texit would be the start of a civil war because the government won’t let them leave, and I’m sure some other idiot governor would try to send their local guard detachment to ‘help’.

        • @Desistance
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          110 months ago

          That’s how the first one started. They had many more states and still lost. This one against the modern U.S. Military would be over in a week.

        • @stoly
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          10 months ago

          Reminder that slavery is still legal under the US Constitution’s 13th amendment.