Re: The Trump Curse: Rightists are bleeding this country dry.
From
Ron Carpenter@nusssll@nowhere.com to
sac.politics,alt.fan.rush-limbaugh,alt.atheism on Thu Jan 8 20:45:48 2026
From Newsgroup: alt.atheism
Rightists are bleeding this country dry.
A good idea to make America great again would be to start shooting
rightists.
Red States are dying.
Blue states contribute to the economy while red states are welfare states.
Rightists die younger than leftists as well.
The GOPAs Welfare States Problem: How Red America Drains Blue America
by Richard Gosk | Sep 17, 2025 | Economy
CaliforniaAs economy is larger than the United KingdomAs. New York sits at
the center of global finance. Massachusetts, Washington, Oregon, and other blue states collectively represent over 60% of AmericaAs GDP. In short, the engine that powers the United States economy is overwhelmingly powered by
blue states.
And yet, the states most dependent on federal welfare, subsidies, and tax redistribution are overwhelmingly Republican. These states drain resources from the federal government while exerting disproportionate political influence over how it operates.
Top Three Takeaways from the Article:
Republican-led states are net takers u relying heavily on federal dollars
to run their states that come mostly from blue state taxpayers.
Political representation is skewed u giving resource-draining red states disproportionate power over national policy.
Blue states could push back u through interstate coordination, selective compliance, or even secession threats, forcing a reckoning over who truly sustains America.
Red States as Welfare States
Look at the numbers: states like Mississippi, West Virginia, Alabama, and Kentucky consistently receive far more in federal spending than they contribute in taxes. Mississippi receives about $2.13 in federal money for every $1 it sends to Washington. Meanwhile, states like California and New York send billions more to the federal government than they get back.
This means that the so-called ofiscally conservativeo states are, in
reality, welfare states propped up by the wealth generated in blue states. Without blue state subsidies, many red state governments would collapse
under the weight of their poverty rates, infrastructure needs, and
healthcare costs.
Political Power Without Economic Weight
Despite their dependency, red states hold outsized political power. The
Senate grants WyomingAs 580,000 residents the same representation as CaliforniaAs 39 million. The Electoral College system compounds this imbalance, handing disproportionate influence to rural states that
contribute relatively little to national economic output.
In practice, this means red states that drain federal resources wield veto power over national policy. The states most reliant on federal welfare
dollars are the ones most aggressively blocking climate legislation, healthcare reform, and education funding that the rest of the country desperately needs.
What Blue States Could Do
The imbalance raises a provocative question: what if blue states stopped playing along?
Blue states already experiment with interstate compacts, such as climate agreements formed when Trump pulled the U.S. out of the Paris Accord. But
the options go much further:
Selective compliance with federal laws, much like Northern states
resisted fugitive slave laws in the 1850s.
Irish Democracyustyle passive resistance, where millions quietly stop cooperating with federal overreach.
Economic independence, with state-level initiatives in healthcare, immigration policy, and even currency.
If pushed far enough, some argue that blue states could even explore the possibility of secession, not as political theater but as a credible negotiating tactic. After all, Quebec nearly left Canada twice, and each
time it forced major concessions.
The Harsh Truth
At the heart of the issue lies an uncomfortable reality: the red state
vision of America u one of social conservatism, weak social safety nets,
and corporate dominance u is subsidized by the very blue states they attack
as osocialist.o
The U.S. has two incompatible futures. One is a multi-ethnic democracy with robust public institutions. The other is a regressive, exclusionary system kept afloat only by federal redistribution. The former is paying for the latter u and sooner or later, blue states may decide the cost is too high.
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