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NEWS AND VIEWS THAT IMPACT LIMITED CONSTITUTIONAL GOVERNMENT

"There is danger from all men. The only maxim of a free government ought to be to trust no man living with
power to endanger the public liberty." - - - - John Adams

Monday, June 12, 2017

Bankrupt Puerto Rico Votes to Become a State



Statehood - Yea or Nay?

  • I come down as a no. We cannot bring in a state where Spanish is the language of 95% of the population.
  • Puerto Rico has had over 100 years to adopt English as the primary language and they have either failed or refused to do so.


(RT News)  -  With a record low turnout of 23 percent, Puerto Ricans have voted to join the US as the Union's 51 State. The US Congress will now have to decide whether it wants to expand the nation’s borders and accept the poverty stricken Caribbean island into the Union.
Some 97.18 percent of the people who voted in Sunday’s non-binding referendum said they want to become part of the United States, the State Elections Commission (CEE) commission announced.
Only 1.5 percent of voters said they would choose independence, while 1.32 percent said they want to remain a self-governing territory within the US commonwealth.
But despite the clear ‘Yes’ vote to join the US, the plebiscite only registered a 23 percent turnout of 2.25 million eligible voters. Sunday’s referendum was boycotted by opposition parties, including those which support independence.



“Today, sadly, this [election] process leads this country to present to the world that democracy failed, the call to participate in democracy failed,” Delgado said.
“What we have seen here is the result of manipulation, the predetermined action of not seeking consensus on the core issues of the country,” he added.
The final decision on whether or not to accept Puerto Rico as the 51st state lies with the US Congress. Article IV, Section 3 of the American Constitution grants the US Congress authority to grant statehood.
It is believed that Republicans, who now control the majority of seats, would be reluctant to support statehood for a territory that is likely to lean Democrat. It would also mean more federal spending on what would become the poorest state in the US.
Puerto Rico is suffering from a large deficit, public service cutbacks, and a 12 percent unemployment rate and public services 64 percent more expensive than in the US mainland. The crisis has led to half a million Puerto Ricans migrating to the mainland over the last decade.
Puerto Rico has been under the control of the US since 1898 when it was taken in the Spanish-American war. Despite gaining US citizenship in 1917, the island has been stuck in a legal limbo between being a colony and a full-on state.
Read More . . . .

On the other hand Puerto Rico is a beautiful
place with so much to offer America.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

well ...
on Puerto Rico we are all in , for Statehood status ... even if as in Hawaii , they found a chinese PRC judge to rule out the so call muslim ban ...
aupa aupa Puerto Rico EEstado U Unidense E, hail hail Puerto Rico USA

Anonymous said...

yea , yea , yea ...
who would they fit in ?
Cuba ?