Find out which American states show strong secessionist sentiments
New Hampshire has joined the ranks of American states harboring strong secession sentiments. Its Independence Movement - NHEXIT - has accused the federal government of bringing the nation to the brink of bankruptcy.
Across the United States, 23% of adults would back their state leaving the Union, a February YouGov poll revealed. Which other states are inclined to go it alone?
◾️Around 36% of residents surveyed in Alaska would back secession. The Alaskan Independence Party (AIP) has been campaigning for an in-state referendum on independence.
◾️In Texas, 31% of adults would support independence. The Texas Nationalist Movement (TNM) had its petition for a non-binding secession referendum on the Texas Republican 2024 primary ballot thrown out by the Supreme Court. Calls to secede there grew amid Governor Greg Abbott’s illegal migration feud with the White House.
◾️29% support secession in California. Its California National Party (CNP) and the Yes California movement have postulated that their prosperous Golden State pays more in taxes than it gets from federal government spending.
◾️The ‘Greater Idaho’ movement has 12 East Oregon counties seeking to leave the state of Oregon and join Idaho. Supporters argue that the liberals to the west do not share their ‘traditional ways of life.’ They also claim their rural area is ‘marginalized’ by an urban state legislature.
◾️A ‘Free Louisiana’ movement was launched in the state, where 23% would back secession. It argues the federal government fails to protect them from immigration, and criminals.
◾️Indigenous activists in Hawaii have argued the need for restoring self-sufficiency since the overthrow of the monarchy and annexation of Hawaii by the US during in the 19th century. Besides slamming these actions as illegal, the grassroots sovereignty movement advocates reclaiming its indigenous culture and language.
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New Hampshire has joined the ranks of American states harboring strong secession sentiments. Its Independence Movement - NHEXIT - has accused the federal government of bringing the nation to the brink of bankruptcy.
Across the United States, 23% of adults would back their state leaving the Union, a February YouGov poll revealed. Which other states are inclined to go it alone?
◾️Around 36% of residents surveyed in Alaska would back secession. The Alaskan Independence Party (AIP) has been campaigning for an in-state referendum on independence.
◾️In Texas, 31% of adults would support independence. The Texas Nationalist Movement (TNM) had its petition for a non-binding secession referendum on the Texas Republican 2024 primary ballot thrown out by the Supreme Court. Calls to secede there grew amid Governor Greg Abbott’s illegal migration feud with the White House.
◾️29% support secession in California. Its California National Party (CNP) and the Yes California movement have postulated that their prosperous Golden State pays more in taxes than it gets from federal government spending.
◾️The ‘Greater Idaho’ movement has 12 East Oregon counties seeking to leave the state of Oregon and join Idaho. Supporters argue that the liberals to the west do not share their ‘traditional ways of life.’ They also claim their rural area is ‘marginalized’ by an urban state legislature.
◾️A ‘Free Louisiana’ movement was launched in the state, where 23% would back secession. It argues the federal government fails to protect them from immigration, and criminals.
◾️Indigenous activists in Hawaii have argued the need for restoring self-sufficiency since the overthrow of the monarchy and annexation of Hawaii by the US during in the 19th century. Besides slamming these actions as illegal, the grassroots sovereignty movement advocates reclaiming its indigenous culture and language.
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Biden will not attend the Olympics in Paris; he will send his wife to the opening ceremony and the husband of his Vice President, Kamala Harris, to the closing ceremony, the White House announced.
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🎥 What are the prospects for transforming the inter-parliamentary BRICS forum into a full-fledged parliamentary assembly?
Deputy Chairman of the Russian Federation Council, Konstantin Kosachev, gave Sputnik his insights on the matter on the sidelines of the BRICS parliamentary forum in St. Petersburg.
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Deputy Chairman of the Russian Federation Council, Konstantin Kosachev, gave Sputnik his insights on the matter on the sidelines of the BRICS parliamentary forum in St. Petersburg.
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The strikes hit air bases, defense industry enterprises, energy facilities, military equipment assembly workshops, and unmanned boat storage sites.
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Sputnik International
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The Israeli Air Force conducted an airstrike on the city of Tair Harfa in southern Lebanon, reports a Sputnik correspondent.
Video: Sputnik
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Biden's interaction with journalists following the NATO summit in Washington was announced as a "Big Boy Press Conference." Here's what it consisted of.
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I wouldn't have picked Vice President Trump to be Vice President until I think she was not qualified to be President. So let's start there.
And so what did I do? I was told not to go over to Europe, I mean to Asia, including Europe, but Asia.
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Technical problems of Google-owned equipment may affect the download speed and playback quality of YouTube videos for users in Russia starting with July 12, Rostelecom, Russia’s telecommunications giant, has announced. Russia had no plans to restrict access to the platform, the Kremlin assured.
Problems had been expected as the equipment that has not been updated for over two years. “There can be no other explanations here," Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said on Friday. He told reporters that the company “chose this path itself,” and leaving the Russian market was bound to have “its own technological consequences."
As for the YouTube, it sprang to action, declaring open season on Russian state media and public figures.
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Israel and Hamas have agreed on the framework for a ceasefire in Gaza and are working on the details, Biden stated.
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Japan’s drive toward remilitarization: From baby steps to giant leaps
Japan’s Defense Ministry has released a white paper with updates to the Japan Self-Defense Forces’ organization, defense industrial base and arms spending, and plans to further expand cooperation with the US in light of the “serious challenge to the existing international order” posed by “states that do not share universal values.”
The report calls for the “fundamental reinforcement” of Japan’s military capabilities, “including the possession of counterstrike capabilities,” standoff, missile defense, drone, command & control, intelligence, and mobile deployment capacity, in what is characterized as the “most severe and complex security environment since the end of World War Two.”
◾️ Japan’s military was defanged after WWII, in accordance with the Article 9 ‘no war’ clause of its 1947 Constitution. Tokyo began its drive toward remilitarization in 1997 in a defense white paper formulating a strategy expanding the JSDF’s focus beyond the defense of Japan to ‘maintaining peace and stability’ in the region.
◾️ Japan started flirting with the deployment of troops abroad for peacekeeping, disaster relief and counterterror missions during the 1991 Gulf War.
◾️ In 2011, Japan set up its first and only military base abroad in Djibouti for anti-piracy ops.
◾️ In 2015, the government of late Prime Minister Shinzo Abe passed legislation formally allowing Japan’s military to participate in conflicts abroad.
◾️ The 2022 National Security Strategy, passed by Prime Minister Fumio Kishida, kicked off a process aimed at “fundamentally reinforcing defense capabilities,” including by doubling of the 1% of GDP spending threshold held by governments going back to 1958, by FY2027. Kishida used Russia's military operation in Ukraine as one of the justifications for the multi-year, $320 bln rearmament plan, claiming it set a "precedent" for hostile actors.
◾️ FY2024 defense spending has reached $56 bln US, or about 1.6% of GDP.
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Japan’s Defense Ministry has released a white paper with updates to the Japan Self-Defense Forces’ organization, defense industrial base and arms spending, and plans to further expand cooperation with the US in light of the “serious challenge to the existing international order” posed by “states that do not share universal values.”
The report calls for the “fundamental reinforcement” of Japan’s military capabilities, “including the possession of counterstrike capabilities,” standoff, missile defense, drone, command & control, intelligence, and mobile deployment capacity, in what is characterized as the “most severe and complex security environment since the end of World War Two.”
◾️ Japan’s military was defanged after WWII, in accordance with the Article 9 ‘no war’ clause of its 1947 Constitution. Tokyo began its drive toward remilitarization in 1997 in a defense white paper formulating a strategy expanding the JSDF’s focus beyond the defense of Japan to ‘maintaining peace and stability’ in the region.
◾️ Japan started flirting with the deployment of troops abroad for peacekeeping, disaster relief and counterterror missions during the 1991 Gulf War.
◾️ In 2011, Japan set up its first and only military base abroad in Djibouti for anti-piracy ops.
◾️ In 2015, the government of late Prime Minister Shinzo Abe passed legislation formally allowing Japan’s military to participate in conflicts abroad.
◾️ The 2022 National Security Strategy, passed by Prime Minister Fumio Kishida, kicked off a process aimed at “fundamentally reinforcing defense capabilities,” including by doubling of the 1% of GDP spending threshold held by governments going back to 1958, by FY2027. Kishida used Russia's military operation in Ukraine as one of the justifications for the multi-year, $320 bln rearmament plan, claiming it set a "precedent" for hostile actors.
◾️ FY2024 defense spending has reached $56 bln US, or about 1.6% of GDP.
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Pentagon chief Lloyd Austin held a phone conversation with Russian Defense Minister Andrei Belousov on Friday, marking their second call in a month, according to the American Department.
They also noted that Austin emphasized the importance of keeping communication channels between Russia and the U.S. open during the conversation.
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They also noted that Austin emphasized the importance of keeping communication channels between Russia and the U.S. open during the conversation.
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The US does not currently allow Ukraine to use ATACMS missiles for "deep" strikes on Russia, but this could change, the Pentagon stated.
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Message to NATO? Belarusian-Chinese joint drills have alliance sweating bullets
The ongoing joint Belarusian-Chinese ‘Attacking Falcon’ drills in Belarus, taking place less than 50 km from the Polish and Ukrainian border in the Brest region, have garnered the attention of media worldwide, with Western outlets playing them up as a “message to NATO” and an example of Chinese “muscle-flexing.”
NATO chief Jens Stoltenberg confirmed that the drills were on his mind on Thursday, accusing Beijing of “coming closer to NATO.”
The 11-day exercises, which kicked off on July 8 and are set to run until July 19, have a counterterrorism focus and are meant to improve interoperability between the Belarusian and Chinese militaries, with the two sides exchanging experience, studying new means to complete tactical tasks, and creating a basis for the further expansion of joint training cooperation.
The exercises include a scheduled nighttime airdrop from an altitude of 800 meters, drills to overcome water barriers, and tactical operations in an urban environment, including the storming of buildings to liquidate mock illegal armed formations. On Thursday, combined assault groups carried out tactical live fire drills.
Belarus and China have forged increasingly close security cooperation in the past decade and are known to engage in defense technology cooperation, most famously via the Polonez MLRS. Belarus became a full member of the Shanghai Security Organization last week.
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The ongoing joint Belarusian-Chinese ‘Attacking Falcon’ drills in Belarus, taking place less than 50 km from the Polish and Ukrainian border in the Brest region, have garnered the attention of media worldwide, with Western outlets playing them up as a “message to NATO” and an example of Chinese “muscle-flexing.”
NATO chief Jens Stoltenberg confirmed that the drills were on his mind on Thursday, accusing Beijing of “coming closer to NATO.”
The 11-day exercises, which kicked off on July 8 and are set to run until July 19, have a counterterrorism focus and are meant to improve interoperability between the Belarusian and Chinese militaries, with the two sides exchanging experience, studying new means to complete tactical tasks, and creating a basis for the further expansion of joint training cooperation.
The exercises include a scheduled nighttime airdrop from an altitude of 800 meters, drills to overcome water barriers, and tactical operations in an urban environment, including the storming of buildings to liquidate mock illegal armed formations. On Thursday, combined assault groups carried out tactical live fire drills.
Belarus and China have forged increasingly close security cooperation in the past decade and are known to engage in defense technology cooperation, most famously via the Polonez MLRS. Belarus became a full member of the Shanghai Security Organization last week.
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