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  • North Colorado?

    As a sign of just how divisive the recently ended Colorado legislative session has been, it may very well result in a literal division of the state.

    As many as eight counties composing the rural, oil and gas-rich northeast corner of the state are pursuing a plan to cut ties with a capital city they no longer feel represents their interests and come together as the 51st state in the country: North Colorado.

    “We’re actually going to pursue it,” said Weld County Commissioner Douglas Rademacher, a farmer whose jurisdiction is spearheading the effort. “Frankly, we’ve been ignored in northeastern Colorado now for the last, going on eight years with the current administration in Denver.”

    “Frankly, we see no option,” he said. “We are going to move forward.”

    Rademacher cited numerous examples of how Denver politicians are out of touch with rural Colorado, from passing tough new gun laws — “that gun legislation really pissed a lot of people off in Weld County,” he said — to trying to clamp down on companies that extract natural gas through fracking.

    But the final straw, he said, was Gov. John Hickenlooper’s signature on Wednesday of Senate Bill 252 requiring rural electrical cooperatives to double to 20 percent the amount of renewable energy in their portfolios by 2020.

    “It’s a death by a thousand cuts, but the straw that finally broke the back was the governor signed 252 yesterday, which puts another huge impact on rural Colorado to meet these unrealistic deadlines and mandates for renewable energy,” he said. “And yet, the major population centers don’t have to abide by it. There’s a hypocrisy going on in Denver that’s just driving us crazy.”

    Rademacher said a theoretical North Colorado could also include counties in neighboring states like Kansas and Nebraska, some of which he said have expressed interest in joining the effort. He said there was also serious talk among the county commissioners about asking a neighboring state to annex their territory — Rademacher said Wyoming would be the obvious choice.

    In the end, it was decided that self-representation was the most appealing course, even though Rademacher admits that forming a new state will be difficult. The last time a state was formed from another was when West Virginia gained sovereignty from Virginia in 1863.

    “Nevertheless, they were all done for the same reason, lack of representation,” he said. “And that’s where we’re at.”

    “Frankly, I think we’re ready to cut and go.”



    Read more: http://dailycaller.com/2013/06/07/ei...#ixzz2VecMUOKW
    I wear a Fez. Fez-es are cool

  • #2
    When's West Illinois going to happen?
    "Self-government won't work without self-discipline." - Paul Harvey

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    • #3
      il and iowa need this for sure as well.

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      • #4
        Texas will stay Texas and we will just refer to Austin as Liberalville.

        Good for North Colorado.
        Fuck you. We're going to Costco.

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        • #5
          It won't happen short of a gunfight. We all know the feds won't let any states go without a fight, and there isn't a state that will let any town or county go without one as well.
          I don't like Republicans, but I really FUCKING hate Democrats.


          Sex with an Asian woman is great, but 30 minutes later you're horny again.

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          • #6
            Originally posted by kbscobravert View Post
            Texas will stay Texas and we will just refer to Austin as Liberalville.

            Good for North Colorado.
            What about Dallas and Houston?
            "Any dog under 50lbs is a cat and cats are pointless." - Ron Swanson

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            • #7
              Originally posted by LANTIRN View Post
              It won't happen short of a gunfight. We all know the feds won't let any states go without a fight, and there isn't a state that will let any town or county go without one as well.
              They are talking about seceding from the nation, just the state. Being the governor and president that allowed this to happen wouldn't look well.

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              • #8
                Originally posted by jdgregory84 View Post
                What about Dallas and Houston?
                You know I love Austin, but Houston looks like a Tea Party haven compared to Austin. Barry barely carried Harris County.

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                • #9
                  Which one still has weed?

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                  • #10
                    Originally posted by Forever_frost View Post
                    “And yet, the major population centers don’t have to abide by it. There’s a hypocrisy going on in Denver that’s just driving us crazy.”

                    There is that liberal double standard again...

                    Stevo
                    Originally posted by SSMAN
                    ...Welcome to the land of "Fuck it". No body cares, and if they do, no body cares.

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                    • #11
                      CA has been grumbling about splitting in half for years, neither is gonna happen.

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                      • #12
                        Shows the "producers" are getting more tired of the "takers"... I'm tired of supporting the losers on the dole...

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                        • #13
                          Talked to a customer of mine in CO and recalls are under way. The president of the Colorado senate, oddly enough from Colorado Springs (El Paso county is like Collin County, just more conservative with several military installations and Yale's favorite Focus on the Family), had well over double the number of signatures required for a recall. It was a fluke he won in the first place.

                          3-4 other recalls are currently active and Hickenlooper has done nothing but piss people off - guns & staying of death penalty - that will spell his end. My contact said that you don't walk around the capital unless you have a weapon or know how to use your hands.

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                          • #14
                            To secede or not to secede from Colorado? That is the question that residents in Weld County will face in November after county commissioners voted unanimously Monday in favor of putting a 51st state initiative on the ballot, the Greeley Tribune reports.

                            The initiative, which calls for the creation of the state of North Colorado, has already made it onto the ballot in Cheyenne, Sedgwick and Yuma Counties. Logan, Phillips, Washington and Kit Carson Counties have also set dates to vote on the initiative.

                            “Si se puede -- yes, we can,” said Weld County Commission Chairman Bill Garcia, echoing one of President Barack Obama's campaign slogans, before commissioners voted on the initiative.

                            Several rural, predominantly Republican counties of north and and northeastern Colorado announced their plan to create a 51st state back in June. Supporters have cited a number of laws -- including gun control measures, an increase in renewable energy standards in rural areas, the curbing of perceived cruel treatment of livestock and expanded regulation of oil and gas production -- that the Democratically-controlled state legislature passed this year, as the impetus for the secession movement.

                            "Rural residents are now a disenfranchised minority of Colorado," Phillips County Administrator Randy Schafer told The Denver Post last month. "National and urban values and needs are trumping rural values and needs."

                            On the ballot, the initiative will read: "Shall the Board of County Commissioners of Weld County, in concert with the county commissioners of other Colorado counties, pursue becoming the 51st state of the United States of America?"

                            The vote, however, has been regarded as largely symbolic, since the new state would have to be approved by the state legislature, the governor and Congress.

                            “We had to do something that would grab Denver’s attention,” said Weld County Commissioner Sean Conway.
                            I wear a Fez. Fez-es are cool

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                            • #15
                              In lots of states the population heavy urban areas drive the politics of the rest of the state leaving the folks in the rural areas at the whim of those who don't really give a shit about anything but a free ride. Illinois is a prime example where Cook County pretty much sets political tone for the rest of the state.
                              2004 Suzuki DL650
                              1996 Hy-Tek Hurricane 103

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