Texas First. Texas Forever.

Federal Conditioning Fails Texas Currency Independence Reality

Critics of Texas independence deploy a familiar fear tactic: “Texas would need to create its own currency or adopt another, which would be complicated and disruptive.” This objection represents classic conditioning designed to make Texans feel helpless about their own economic capability. The reality demolishes this myth completely.

The conditioning runs deep. Opponents paint nightmarish scenarios of Texans fumbling with unfamiliar money, businesses collapsing under exchange rate volatility, and the economy grinding to a halt while bureaucrats figure out monetary policy. They want you to believe that currency independence requires “jumping over the Grand Canyon” of complexity.

This fear ignores one fundamental fact: Texas operates the 8th largest economy in the world, with a $2.7 trillion GDP that surpasses entire nations like Russia, Canada, and Italy. If smaller countries can manage currency transitions successfully, Texas has exponentially more capacity.

Slovakia transitioned from its own koruna to the euro in 2009 after maintaining an independent currency for 16 years following Czechoslovakia’s peaceful separation. The process involved a dual circulation period from January 1-16, 2009, where both currencies functioned simultaneously. No economic collapse occurred.

Montenegro simply adopted the euro unilaterally without formal agreement, proving that nations can use foreign currencies without permission. Estonia established its own currency within months of Soviet independence. The Czech Republic maintains its independent koruna despite EU pressure to adopt the euro, demonstrating that currency sovereignty remains viable for nations far smaller than Texas.

These examples share a common thread: successful currency management by economies smaller than Texas, often during periods of political upheaval far more dramatic than democratic independence.

Texas doesn’t need to create currency infrastructure from scratch. Multiple systems already function or await implementation:

Option 1: Continue Using US Dollars
International law permits any nation to use foreign currency. Texas could maintain informal dollar usage, just like Panama, Ecuador, and El Salvador use US currency officially. Zero disruption to daily transactions.

Option 2: The Gold Standard (Already Legislated)
Governor Abbott signed House Bill 1056 into law on June 22, 2025, creating the nation’s first practical electronic payment system backed by precious metals. Starting May 1, 2027, Texans can deposit gold or silver in the Texas Bullion Depository and spend it via debit card with real-time conversion to current market values.

This system operates like a bank account denominated in gold weights rather than paper dollars. The infrastructure already exists – Texas just needs to scale it nationally post-independence.

Option 3: Independent Texas Currency
The Texas Treasury Safekeeping Trust Company manages over $125 billion in public funds and could transform into the Bank of Texas. With over 200 state-chartered banks providing regulatory experience, Texas possesses more monetary infrastructure than most independent nations start with.

Consider the scale advantage. Texas GDP of $2.7 trillion exceeds that of most G20 nations. The Texas economy expanded 3.6% in 2024, outpacing national growth. This represents an economic base larger than 190+ countries that successfully manage their own currencies.

The conditioning wants Texans to forget this economic reality. HB 1056 positions Texas as a leader in monetary independence from the federal system, creating practical alternatives to Federal Reserve inflation policies.

Currency independence doesn’t require economic revolution. Texas can implement gradual transition mechanisms that minimize disruption while maximizing sovereignty.

During the transition period, Texas could maintain dual currency systems – accepting both US dollars and Texas currency while markets adjust. The comprehensive precious metals transaction framework already signed into law provides a foundation for this transition.

The federal government currently drains approximately $81 billion annually from Texas through taxation exceeding federal spending returned. This massive sum could fund currency transition infrastructure many times over.

Currency independence represents a normal function of national sovereignty, not an insurmountable challenge. Texas joins a growing movement of states establishing precious metals currency systems, but with economic capacity that dwarfs most precedents.

The “currency creation” myth crumbles under examination. Texas already has multiple viable pathways, from continuing to use dollars to implementing the gold standard system launching in 2027. The comptroller can establish electronic currency transfer systems that function like existing banking infrastructure.

This isn’t about creating something from nothing – it’s about choosing which existing option serves Texas best. The conditioning that portrays currency independence as impossibly complex serves only to maintain dependence on a federal system that consistently drains Texas wealth to subsidize other regions.

Texas doesn’t need permission to manage its own money. It needs the will to stop sending $81 billion annually to Washington and start keeping that wealth at home, where it belongs.

Texian Partisan Staff
Texian Partisan Staffhttps://texianpartisan.com
The Texian Partisan Staff are the dedicated team behind the official news site of the Texas Nationalist Movement. Committed to delivering real news and bold commentary, we focus on advancing Texas culture, history, and the pursuit of self-government. Stay informed and join the conversation with us.

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