LOL - Your BS (or complete ignorance of history) reaches new heights. Some States specifically declared they could withdraw when they ratified the Constitution and created the union. If there were "no illusions" about "permanence" they would not have done that. They very obviously believed that it was NOT "permanent", and even said so in the documents that included them in the union. Your statement is like most of what you say, a lie.
When New York agreed to ratify the Constitution it specifically stated in it's declaration "That the powers of government may be reassumed by the people, whensoever it shall become necessary to their happiness."
Virginia's declaration included these words: "the powers granted under the Constitution being derived from the People of the United States may be resumed by them whensoever the same shall be perverted to their injury or oppression"
A State's right to reassume the powers it ceded to the Union were very clearly stated when the union was created. The New England states certainly didn't think it was "permanent" or they wouldn't have come within a gnat's hair of seceding themselves a few decades after the Constitution was ratified. (more than once). You have to know this, and yet you still post deceitful lies about history.
Under natural law, not United States law.
You don't know the history.
Walt