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After the presidential election, political stability in the U.S. is nowhere in sight. The events of the past week can radically change the course
of the American history. The population of 35 states declared their intentions to separate from the U.S. They began an active campaign to
collect signatures through the government resources. Each separatist petition must get at least 25,000 votes to guarantee that a request
for voluntary separation is considered by the administration of President Barack Obama.
To date, seven U.S. states have collected the required number of votes. Mostly they are the states that voted for Romney in the last election.
Most signatures (over 100,000) were collected in Texas. The required number of signatures was collected in Louisiana, North Carolina, Georgia,
Alabama, Florida and Tennessee. These states demand separation.
Out of the 35 states at least 10 have a real chance to secede from the United States. If this does not happen, the conflict between the
"socialist" government and conservative separatists could drag on for a long time, leading to mass protests and other sad events.
The most problematic state, as mentioned above, is Republican Texas. Over 100 thousand people support its petition for independence.
The second problem for Obama is Louisiana (35 thousand signatures have been collected). The petition stated they wanted to peacefully secede
from the United States, creating their own government as Louisiana wanted independence, prosperity, and happiness for every citizen.
Meanwhile, liberals proposed to President Obama to take tough measures against "separatist-conspirators" and denounce them for treason,
strip them of the U.S. citizenship and deport them from the country. Barack Obama will have a difficult choice: either allow the American
people to live by the Constitution, or start rapid democratization in the country.
After the presidential election, political stability in the U.S. is nowhere in sight. The events of the past week can radically change the course
of the American history. The population of 35 states declared their intentions to separate from the U.S. They began an active campaign to
collect signatures through the government resources. Each separatist petition must get at least 25,000 votes to guarantee that a request
for voluntary separation is considered by the administration of President Barack Obama.
To date, seven U.S. states have collected the required number of votes. Mostly they are the states that voted for Romney in the last election.
Most signatures (over 100,000) were collected in Texas. The required number of signatures was collected in Louisiana, North Carolina, Georgia,
Alabama, Florida and Tennessee. These states demand separation.
Out of the 35 states at least 10 have a real chance to secede from the United States. If this does not happen, the conflict between the
"socialist" government and conservative separatists could drag on for a long time, leading to mass protests and other sad events.
The most problematic state, as mentioned above, is Republican Texas. Over 100 thousand people support its petition for independence.
The second problem for Obama is Louisiana (35 thousand signatures have been collected). The petition stated they wanted to peacefully secede
from the United States, creating their own government as Louisiana wanted independence, prosperity, and happiness for every citizen.
Meanwhile, liberals proposed to President Obama to take tough measures against "separatist-conspirators" and denounce them for treason,
strip them of the U.S. citizenship and deport them from the country. Barack Obama will have a difficult choice: either allow the American
people to live by the Constitution, or start rapid democratization in the country.