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Communist Party of Texas

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Communist Party of Texas
Founded1919 (1919)
HeadquartersHouston
Youth wingYoung Communist League
IdeologyCommunism
Marxism–Leninism
Political positionFar-left
National affiliationCommunist Party USA
Colors  Red
Texas Senate
0 / 31
Texas House of Representatives
0 / 150
Website
cp-texas.org

The Communist Party of Texas is a political party in the U.S. state of Texas. It is a member of the Communist Party USA and operates as a state district.[1] The party is headquartered in Houston.

The Communist Party's aim is the abolition of private ownership and control of capital and the construction of a classless, moneyless, and stateless society thereafter. Its most recent state conference was held in January 2018. The party has city clubs in Austin, Dallas, Houston, Lufkin, and San Antonio.

According to the Texas law, passed in 1954, it is illegal for any public official (elected or otherwise) to be a communist,[2] which makes it difficult for the party to participate in elections.[3] However, the narrow definition of "communist", added in 1993 as Section 557.021, as "a person who commits an act reasonably calculated to further the overthrow of the government, by force or violence or by unlawful or unconstitutional means and replace it with a communist government" at least opened the window for a non-violent, non-criminal communist to run.[2][3][4]

YouTube Encyclopedic

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  • Can Texas Secede from the Union?
  • "Ain't I Right" - American Anti-Communist Song
  • What if USA was communist??? #shorts #usa #communism

Transcription

Can Texas Secede from the Union? America's second most populated and second largest state is always first to remind you that it was once an independent nation: The Republic of Texas. Unlike California's three-week, almost accidental flirt with independence (and a hideous flag) the Republic of Texas was a real country with its own presidents, and laws and currency for a decade from 1836 until 1846 when it joined the Union to become the 28th state, thankfully evening out the number of stars. This happy marriage led pretty much immediately to the Mexican-American war over the question of over how big Texas was. America, as the victor, got to decide the answer: very big. While Texas gave up its complete independence to join The Union, it didn't give up its independent streak -- and filed for divorce, along with several other states, a scant 15 years later. This domestic dispute was settled not with flowers but with force, something that many are still grumbly about today. But History aside in modern times could Texas still be a real country? In other words: could Texas succeed if it secedes? In terms of population, an independent Texas would be the world's 46th largest country with 26 million citizens. And, those citizens would make Texas the 13th largest economy. So the New Texas Republic would be comparable to Australia, except in the size department. But what about the Federal money that goes to Texas? Those interstate highways don't build themselves, you know. For a majority of states, independence would be a financial problem. Mississippi, for example get two dollars from Washington for every one it sends in taxes so an independent Magnolia Republic would be bankrupt almost instantly. But not Texas, which gives more money to the federal government in taxes than it gets back. There's no reason why independent Texas couldn't keep those highways paved *and* give its citizens a small happy-Texapendency-day Tax cut. So from a financial perspective: The New Texas Republic gets a check. Now the question is can Texas legally secede? And the answer is... no... not at all. Despite popular belief, even by politicians who should know better, the Texas constitution does not include a get-out-of-The-Union-free clause no matter how much Texans, or citizens of other states, wish that it did. However, the Texas Constitution does have a weird clause that allows it to divide itself into five states without the approval of congress. So Texas could, any moment, explode into the states perhaps named North Texas, South Texas, East Texas, West Texas and Austin -- which would quintuple its power in the Senate -- but not necessarily help it gain independence because there is no legal process for a state to exit The Union. Though the constitution is mute on the issue, secession has come before the supreme court and, shockingly, the Supreme Court of the United States decided that States can't leave the United States. But the legal question is, weirdly sort of moot. After all, the First Texas Republic didn't pop into existence out of nowhere -- Texas was originally a State of Mexico, which didn't allow Texas to leave, but leave Texas did anyway, though under less than harmonious circumstances. While it's hard to imagine war between the New Texas Republic and the United States it isn't hard to imagine who would win that fight. Texas does have its own military, but seriously, nobody beats America in the war business. So the only way Texas is leaving is if it can convince the United States to change its laws to let it leave. Which only as a chance of being discussed seriously if a majority of Texans want independence, which isn't remotely the case. So while a New Texas Republic is interesting to think about -- particularly for some non-Texans, as of now it's a long way from becoming a reality.

References

  1. ^ Constitution of the CPUSA
  2. ^ a b "Government Title 5, Chapter 557. Sedition, Sabotage, and Communism". Texas Statutes. Retrieved 2021-01-19.
  3. ^ a b Cofer, Cody L. (April 22, 2016). "Commies Beware… Chapter 557 of the Texas Government Code is Here!". CoferLaw. Fort Worth Criminal Defense Lawyers. Archived from the original on 17 May 2016.
  4. ^ Bonewell, Shaffer Allen (2019). Manipulating Fear: The Texas State Government and the Second Red Scare, 1947-1954 (PDF). Masters thesis. Denton, Texas: University of North Texas. p. 107. Archived (PDF) from the original on 15 August 2021.

External links


This page was last edited on 22 December 2023, at 09:41
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