I was busting on a pal of mine at work. She said she was born in D.C., and I immediately made comments about how she wasn’t even born in the States. Which, she wasn’t. Was she? She was born in the United States , but not in A State.
How do you list what state you were born in if you were born in D.C. ? And, was I correct in ( playfully ) saying to her that she wasn’t born in any of the 50 States?
The District of Columbia is exactly that, a Federal District. It is not a state. Therefore, if she was born within the district proper it is true that she was not born in a state. However, as you said, she was born in the United States. Of course.
DC is not a state although a minority of people within it fight for statehood. I believe that this will always be shot down. The founders were wise to realise that the federal goverment seated largely in one state is a bad idea and I tend to concur.
Tell your friend that everyone knows that “nobody is from DC” do that is an impossible statement. Request hospital records.
Also, Congress itself serves as the “state legislature” for DC. We’d need to amend the Constitution to allow DC to become a state. Even if we did that, the State of Columbia would be the smallest and poorest state in the country. The high concentration of government buildings and foreign embassies means that DC has a very limited tax base. They depend on federal subsidies.
I’ve filled out several forms on the web that don’t list that in the drop-down menu where you choose your state, just the 50. Would you just pick a state somewhere around D.C. in that case?
I don’t think so. Were DC to become a state it could no longer be “the seat of government of the United States” but there’s nothing in the Constitution that prohibits the district from becoming a state. Some other state or states would need to cede territory to serve as the new seat of government.
There’s also nothing in the Constitution that says that the capital of the US cannot be physically located within a particular state, since the Constitution pre-dates the existence of the District of Columbia. In Canada, it doesn’t seem too problematic that Ottawa is located in the province of Ontario.
Sounds to me like the U.S. Government can set aside territory for itself for the seat of government, but it doesn’t have to. The Federal Government seemed to do OK in New York and Philadelphia.
Outside of the government, I understand there’s not much going on in Washington. Simply put, there’s no real reason to have a city there. It’s got no trade or marketing advantage… except the government.
Well, the wikipedia article linked earlier says:
‘The term “District of Columbia” is derived from an old poetic name for the United States, Columbia, which has fallen out of common use since the early 20th century.’
Makes sense. It all goes back to Christopher Columbus, doesn’t it?
Somewhat tangentially, DC has no voting representation in Congress. Their license plates have the motto, “Taxation without representation.” I wonder when they’ll start throwing tea into the Potomac.
CookingWithGas, that isn’t tangential at all. It’s the very core of the DC statehood issue. The District has been called “America’s last colony” for this reason. Maybe it’s time to re-examine why anyone thinks it’s a good idea to deny voting representation in Congress to American citizens living within our borders. That’s a GD, of course…