What's the historical reason it wasn't included in one of the other states?
When Texas sought to enter the Union in 1845 as a slave state, federal law in the United States, based on the Missouri Compromise, prohibited slavery north of 36°30' parallel north. Under the Compromise of 1850, Texas surrendered its lands north of 36°30' latitude.
Marge scares me. She looks neolithic. Boob is just a dumb parrot doing what she's told by her handlers, but Marge appears to believe what she's spewing.
Didn't Marge have an affair with her workout trainer? If that's true we know for a fact she works out. Boob looks like if she works out at all, it's purely cardio
I've never posted beyond comments, but I have read it is possible to change the title of a post on Lemmy. I also know for a fact that mods can and do edit your posts if you say something they don't like. That means we have to keep a close eye on our own post history to ensure we aren't having our posts edited by a malicious party to say things we never said.
I sold my accounts after I deleted 99% of my comments manually. Got $1400 for 3 accounts that were 10+ years old with 20,000 or so karma. Even lurker accounts are worth money if they're old enough
Perhaps not Mexico specifically, but N+S American trade was bound to increase dramatically once China started making demands on the US. China's play with Cuba will be met with even more push to stop buying Chinese goods. China is a manufacturing powerhouse, but S and Central American land and labor is cheaper.
That saw an overnight 50% drop in activity. People were kinda pissed to find out that Meta created them a Threads handle from their Facebook/Instagram and immediately deactivated their Threads accounts. I don't know what it means, but I like it
I got banned for quoting a subreddit rule to a mod (as a reason the mod was out of line) after they posted why they banned someone. I may not be good at sports or computers, but I'm part of the team now!
What's the historical reason it wasn't included in one of the other states?
When Texas sought to enter the Union in 1845 as a slave state, federal law in the United States, based on the Missouri Compromise, prohibited slavery north of 36°30' parallel north. Under the Compromise of 1850, Texas surrendered its lands north of 36°30' latitude.