Messin’ with Texas

Texas Prepares Military Tanks For Southern Border After Governor Abbott Declares Invasion [More]

Feds to obtain an injunction in 3…2…1…

Then the question becomes what will happen if Texas does it anyway?

[Via bondmen]

Author: admin

David Codrea is a long-time gun owner rights advocate who defiantly challenges the folly of citizen disarmament.

4 thoughts on “Messin’ with Texas”

  1. On a side note…what would they do if individuals ID’d CnC of the mule trains and neutralized them???? Lots of remote sections of the border with many good hide sites. Suppressed 30 would wreak havoc on them. I’d be curious how quick.the repercussions would.be from.south of the border.

    1. Well-deployed snipers would be FAR more effective in the big picture, AND be far harder to oppose. Two guys riding mules in the no-man’s-land of the boundary territory could pick off a dozen a day, mount up and move on, lather rnse repeat. After a week of half the deployed coyotes failing to return, things would, uhm, “slow down”? Perhaps some assistance from some well managed drones could help identify “hot zones” and track the whereabouts of the wandering headless snakes. Perhaps even deploy a cadre of “replacement coyotes” who would lead the now-leaderless invaders back into Mexican territory again. Straightly constrain them to not utter a word cncerning how their venture played out, This would assure a full and complete account of that “mission” be made back in sunny ol’ Méjico. A month of that, the crooked business if “coyoteing” would be all but done.

  2. “Then the question becomes what will happen if Texas does it anyway?”

    Just imagining possible answers reminded me of the “Young Sheldon” episode where Missy Cooper eased back in her church pew with a full blown smirk and said “This is gonna be good.”

    My understanding is that the documents that admitted the Republic of Texas into the union as the State of Texas included the proviso that Texas could split itself into 5 separate states, each with two senators.

    “We’ll see your State of Columbia and your State of Puerto Rico, and raise you The States of Texas #3, #4, and #5.”

    Some claim that Texas would need congressional approval to do so. What if Congress said “no”? What if Texas did it anyway?

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