The amount of craziness in the USA these days actually makes me begin to think the chemtrail CT or the fluoride-is-a-plot CT might have something to them.
Something is making Americans insane en masse. We just haven’t identified what it is.
Actually we have: it’s social media mostly populated with homegrown grifters & hostile foreign government bots.
But it’s more fun to consider it might be chemtrails or fluoride or ???
Nah, crackpottery has always been with us, the crackpots simply didn’t have the ability to form online communities previously. ETA: except when they formed their own religious communities, a common 19th-century American phenomenon.
Case in point: The Shaver Mystery. A series of pulp science-fiction stories presented as a CT of evil aliens secretly manipulating mankind drew vast numbers of replies from mentally ill people who insisted that they had encountered the same evil aliens.
Sure, but the reason why that was added to the Constitution in the first place was for the very reason I cited; people would be wary of going from one state to another if they had to be concerned with things like suddenly being unable to legally drive, or no longer being considered legally married. (Not that they had drivers’ licenses or even cars in the 1780s, obviously, but interstate trade and travel in those days was made difficult prior to the US Constitution.)
Prior to the US Constitution, the US was a confederacy and it was a horrible mess. States had protectionist trade barriers between them, laws were totally out of sync with each other from state to state, and there was very literal cooperation between them due to the lack of a strong central government. Massachusetts was such a mess in particular that people started rebelling. That prompted them to try to form a stronger central government, to make it one nation instead of a bunch of what were effectively small allied independent nations, and so they made sure that the new government avoided those mistakes.
Before Loving_v._Virginia, did states that outlawed interracial marriage merely penalize the marriage while acknowledging for legal purposes (inheritance, etc.) that a marriage contract was issued by another state; or did they flat-out refuse to accept them as legitimate?
As for driver’s licenses I don’t think it’s so much that states are bound by the constitutional provision so much as bodies like the Uniform Law Commission work to hammer out reciprocal agreements, plus the federal Commerce department setting standards that afaik all states adhere to for certifying drivers.
My theory is that Covid and long Covid are causing more deleterious brain changes than previously discovered. The proudly unvaccinated seem to be more unhinged than ever since the pandemic began.
Sov cit beliefs, chemtrail lunacy, conspiracy theories in general - it’d be interesting to compile research into whether lack of critical thinking capacity correlates with severe/repeated Covid infections, and whether there are markers to help us understand the problem.
With the legal notion for most of their existence being that DL’s are “a privilege not a right”, there used to be much larger divergence in standards and no duty of one state to comply with the standards of another, which was why there had to be explicit reciprocity laws passed rather than it just being assumed. The same is the case with many other state-issued licenses such as for professions or businesses. Heck even for “bearing arms” the states are not bound to recognize one another’s carry permits.
In practice almost from the start the states allowed driving licenses from other states to be used for “passing through” purposes, with the understanding that if you were moving in you’d change license and registration within (X) days. The reciprocity agreements were more for the purposes of that when you move to another state already bearing a valid DL you would not have to test again.
It’s since been pulled from YouTube but a 1941 Warner cartoon “Porky’s Snooze Reel” featured among other oddities a tax protestor insisting “you’re a sap to pay taxes!”; only for a camera pullback to reveal:
Just for a change of pace, this is not a sovcit but in a way kinda the opposite, where one feels sympathy instead of scorn. Objectively, this is a drunk driver who got what she deserved, but, maybe it’s the old softie in me, but I feel rather sorry of this poor young girl. There’s obviously something very wrong with her and she’s traumatized by this traffic stop. I guess if there’s a message here it’s that a cop’s life is never easy – you never know what you’re gonna run into.