How the Freedom Caucus Rose to Power in Wyoming | A Freedom Caucus bloc has never won control of a state legislative chamber — until now. | Newly ascendant conservatives want to “burn it all down.”
Their agenda, known as the Five and Dime Plan, aims to immediately tighten election rules, invalidate drivers’ licenses issued to undocumented immigrants by other states, prohibit college diversity initiatives, prohibit the state from considering environmental concerns when making investment decisions and reduce property taxes.
Do they have a college? Are they trying to be the next Wesr Virginia?
They can do all they want to maintain an uneducated exploited population where businesses are free to exploit natural resources and inflict the cost on the public and their future, but there is the Constitution
We should make them merge with Montana, South Dakota and North Dakota. Then import just enough normal Americans into places like Boseman to turn it blue.
I'm sure even more would be needed in my hypothetical scenario. Bozeman (Montana) has around only 58,459 total, and so yeah, the kind of strain on infrastructure to suddenly add huge numbers to a place like that would be incredibly disruptive.
In all seriousness, during the peak of the pandemic, I entertained the notion (mostly in my head, some of it shared with my family, but not too serious about it) of moving to Bozeman or maybe the surrounding area and working from there. Or maybe buying/renting a very small place and spending part of the time there.
But it seems like the cost of living went up there a lot during that time, too, and places like public parks were overrun, because many others had similar ideas. Also, the cost of living was already above average. I was under the impression it was fairly low, but that was very wrong. So yeah, in all honesty, not that this would ever happen anyway, but people would have to be spread around between the 4 states.
Even combining several of these states together would be a huge win, even if they stay deeply red. It would curtail the over-representation that qons and rural interests get. Throw Nebraska, Kansas, and Idaho in there, too, maybe.