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The Case for American Secession: Still a Good Idea (a strange article)
Chronicles magazine ^ | November 2005 | Kirkpatrick Sale

Posted on 04/24/2006 4:48:22 PM PDT by robowombat

The Case for American Secession: Still a Good Idea by Kirkpatrick Sale

There has always been talk about secession in this country by those variously disgruntled on both the right and left, but, since the last presidential election, which revealed deep-seated divisions in American society over a variety of fundamental issues, that talk has grown exponentially. Such talk is not likely to lead to a dissolution of this country into separate states or regions, but that is by no means inconceivable. The issue should be taken seriously and examined carefully.

The first question is whether secession is legal—whether the Constitution can be read, and history cited, as permitting (or at least not forbidding) a state to declare its independence from the Union. Scholars have come down on both sides of this issue, but that fact alone suggests that there is a legitimate argument to be made. To put it simply: The Tenth Amendment reserves powers not delegated to the United States to the states or the people, so states may act unless specifically prohibited. The Constitution in fact says nothing about secession, and, as Southern states were seceding, Congress considered an amendment forbidding secession—a strong indication that secession is permissible. Three of the original thirteen states (Rhode Island, New York, and Virginia) kept an explicit right to secede when they joined the Union, and, since that was never challenged or questioned, it must be a right that all states enjoy. In the 19th century, before South Carolina began the bandwagon of secession in 1860, seven states (Kentucky, Pennsylvania, Georgia, South Carolina, Wisconsin, Massachusetts, and Vermont) enacted acts of nullification—refusing to recognize some or all of the powers of the federal government—without any retaliation by Washington.

Of course, Lincoln’s government acted as if secession were illegal and unconstitutional, and its victory established the practical case that states will be punished if they try to secede, and the Constitution is irrelevant. It did not establish a legal case, however, and the legal (not to mention moral) argument for the right to secede remains strong—so strong that, even if it were denied in the U.S. courts, it would likely be defended in the court of international opinion by many of the world’s nations, including those in the European Union and those that have recently exercised that right (in the former Soviet Union and the former Yugoslavia, for example). And that might make it difficult for the federal government to act against a state that has voted for secession, particularly if there were no overriding moral issues (e.g., slavery) and the state proved agreeable to negotiation over federal property and assets within its boundaries.

A second question arises over whether the U.S. government could allow a state (or a group of states) to secede, if this action threatened its sovereignty and power over the remaining states. The federal government might not want to let California go, for fear that Cascadia (Oregon and Washington) and New England (and who knows how many disgruntled others?) would follow suit. If it still had the military means and the loyalty of the remaining troops, it might be expected to contrive a way (a Gulf of Tonkin or WMD excuse) to justify an invasion.

And yet, it is hard to believe that Washington would actually command its troops to mow down Los Angelenos and San Franciscans the way they do the civilians of Fallujah and Najaf, or withstand the barrage of criticism, domestic and international, if it did. Such an act would more likely propel additional secessions than gain support. It is harder still to think that the troops would actually carry out such an order, killing (ex-)Americans on (ex-)American territory. And if the troops did actually succeed in conquering and occupying an independent state, the population would be virtually uncontrollable: If it is not possible to win the hearts and minds of Vietnamese and Iraqis by invasion, think how much less possible it would be to win over people who had voted for secession with the full knowledge that it might lead to war.

It is not fantastic, then, to imagine that, instead of a futile war, Washington would be willing to negotiate a settlement in the hopes that, by giving concessions on, say, autonomy and self-regulation and by demonstrating the extent of federal dollars lost, it could win a secessionist state back into the Union. In some cases, that might well happen, and, if it failed, it would at least show a government intelligent and confident enough to act as a future ally rather than a marauding warmonger. And as an ally, it might be able to establish diplomatic and trade ties that would allow it to continue using such resources and talents of the new state as it wanted, perhaps even the bases it had previously used—with the additional benefit of no longer having to maintain federal offices, regulators, highways, parks, dams, and such, and even presumably with a negotiated fee in compensation for these lost assets.

There is another strategy that a federal government determined to quash secession might take that involves no troops, no war—nothing but a few phone calls. Washington might put pressure on large chain operations—Wal-Mart, Target, McDonald’s, General Motors, Gannett, etc.—to cease doing business in the secessionist state, lest the feds make things difficult for them in all the others. And, unless the secession is so widespread that more states are out than in (a highly unlikely scenario), the corporations will comply. Would such a threat cut the legs out from under a secessionist state and force it to come crawling back to the Union? I think not, for several reasons.

First, a seceding state would already be working toward self-sufficiency in a great many areas and have developed trading links with other nations for those goods and services it could not provide for locally. Such self-sufficiency would have to be carefully planned for and be seen generally as workable and desirable, but, if the secessionist movement did its homework and selling right, it could make local development out to be a deeply patriotic, and possibly profitable, act. Like Japan historically, and a number of other states more recently, a seceding state would adopt a tactic that Jane Jacobs has called “import replacement”—the building of bicycles at home, recycling the metals and materials from the dumps and by the wayside, instead of buying them from abroad. It would certainly not be able to offer bikes for sale as cheaply as Wal-Mart does, at least at first, but it would put many more people to work per bike and strengthen its economy in ways that would eventually enable its people to buy the more expensive product. Imagine this going on for a host of other goods across the state, replacing those that can be made by intelligent recycling and manufacturing; refitting and reusing others; developing handicrafts as a substitute for machinery to create others; refusing to make those that are pointless, wasteful, environmentally harmful, or costly; and foregoing many that turn out, after a while, to be unnecessary or undesirable. Wal-Mart not only wouldn’t be missed but would, upon reflection, be seen as having been a foolish enterprise that foisted too much needless “stuff,” in too many useless varieties, of too shoddy a manufacture, with too many added-in transportation costs, on a gullible and malleable public. Those citizens who really missed the big chain stores would stoically bear that burden as good and loyal patriots.

A second reason that the economic threat would not have much force is that the new state might well start out with more money in its coffers because it would not have to pay federal income, gasoline, telephone, and other taxes; 17 states (12 of them “blue,” interestingly enough) now pay more to the federal government than they get back in federal benefits. California got back just 78 cents in benefits for every dollar she sent to Washington in 2003 (according to the Tax Foundation) and, as the independent Republic of California, would thereby have an extra 22 cents in her pocket for every dollar. That would have meant, in 2004, that the citizens would have kept $88 million that could have been used for local projects.

Of course, not every state is California, and the attempt at some sort of economic independence would work out differently in different places. If a state could not survive on its own economically, it would be very foolish for its people to launch a secessionist movement. A great many states could be economically viable on their own, however, by establishing trade with outside nations, including the United States and Canada. The necessity of economic survival is a very fertile mother, and, like many small nations, an independent state could find ways of making itself useful in the economic world; indeed, some of the richest nations—Liechtenstein, Luxembourg, Monaco, the Cayman Islands, Iceland, Belgium, San Marino, and Singapore—are among the smallest (and that is leaving aside the Persian Gulf oil states).

The last reason for being optimistic about small-state viability and the nullity of the Wal-Mart strategy has to be viewed in the context of the economic future of the United States. I happen to be among the growing band of people who believe that extremely difficult times lie ahead—in the nearer rather than further future—as a combination of crises and calamities pushes us to a completely new kind of society. They include the dwindling of cheap oil supplies (which already seems to have begun) and skyrocketing gasoline prices; the collapse of the value of the dollar from the spiraling trade deficit and national debt; the bursting of the real-estate bubble; the effect of global warming on agriculture and fisheries; the rise of sea levels; the spread of diseases old and new; the increase in severe weather (of which Katrina is a foretaste); the diminution of fresh water; the exhaustion of tropical forests; the erosion of arable soils; the continued pollution of air and water; the depletion of mineral resources; and the whole impact of human activity on the global environment.

As a result of all that—or, indeed, of any of several parts of that—the national economy will have to transform itself. What follows will, in fact, be less a national than a local economy, particularly as gasoline supplies diminish and become prohibitively expensive and the dollar becomes an increasingly irrelevant measure of worth. James Howard Kunstler, whose new book, The Long Emergency, demonstrates the likelihood of just such a future, writes that it

will require us to downscale and re-scale virtually everything we do and how we do it, from the kind of communities we physically inhabit to the way we grow our food to the way we work and trade the products of our work. . . . Anything organized on the large scale, whether it is government or a corporate business enterprise such as Wal-Mart, will wither as the cheap energy props that support bigness fall away.

And then a small, independent state, which can be more or less buffered from the national emergency and dependent on a relatively self-sufficient economy, makes a lot of sense.

That might be the best argument for secession. If the future is going to be anything like what we alarmists are saying, there would seem to be a need to establish small-scale institutions and enterprises and trading circles as soon as possible, along with revivified community enterprises and cottage craftsmanship, and a statewide level suggests itself as the appropriate scale. And if that can be done in connection with political and cultural independence, such economic independence makes a powerful and attractive package—even, perhaps, a necessary one.

This country simply is not working right—as both the war in Iraq and the bumbling of Katrina (at all levels) make clear—and its corruption and inefficiency are harmful to the bulk of the population. The federal government, aside from being bureaucracy bound and politically hamstrung, is too big and complicated and inherently incompetent, and its attempt to provide for 280 million people and maintain a global empire of 725 military bases has proved to be impossible, placing terrible political and financial burdens on everyone. Secession would allow states to escape this Leviathan, keep their human and financial resources from going down the rathole, avoid association with the failed politics of an ugly empire, and set their own policies (on same-sex “marriage,” abortion, stem-cell research, etc.) without interference from a distant central government increasingly in the hands of corporate interests and neoconservative ideologues. It would allow a blue state a chance to escape from the policies and culture of a red-state government and set its own course. It would, in short, allow people to leave the country they dislike without leaving the homes they cherish. What could make more sense?

Kirkpatrick Sale is the author of 13 books, including Human Scale and Dwellers in the Land: The Bioregional Vision (University of Georgia Press). He is a founder and directorof The Middlebury Institute for “the study of separatism, secession, and self-determination.”


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Editorial; Government; Philosophy; US: Vermont
KEYWORDS: secession
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To: decal
From the Handbook of Texas online, the following...

The 1845 Constitution incorporated a rigid amending process that required two legislative approvals by a two-thirds vote with an intervening election at which a majority of all voters voting for representatives had to approve. The rigidity was retained until the Constitution of 1876qv except for substituting a majority of voters on the amendment in the next three charters. The statehood charter was amended only once. The 1850 amendment established a "plural executive" whereby the governor must share power with other popularly elected executives, in this case the lieutenant governor, state treasurer,qv comptroller, general land commissioner, and attorney general (designated an executive officer in 1869 and 1876). It also provided for popular election of judges and district attorneys.

snip

1861-75. As momentous as were the Civil War and its aftermath, continuity outweighed change in the fundamental structure of Texas government provided for in the four constitutions from 1861 to 1875. Constitutionally speaking, Texas was ruled (in Texas v. White) never to have left the Union. The Constitution of 1861qv approved after secessionqv and the 1866 charter drafted under presidential Reconstructionqv were in actuality amendments to the 1845 constitution. The 1861 amendments, which were never submitted to the voters, were minimal with respect to structure. A new provision expressly authorizing the legislature to call a constitutional convention had no lasting effect, but the requirement that amendments be proposed only at regular legislative sessions was not altered until 1972"

I learn something new everyday, Thank you

TT
21 posted on 04/24/2006 7:23:57 PM PDT by TexasTransplant (NEMO ME IMPUNE LACESSET)
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To: georgia2006
I wish Alaska would suceed

Speaking as an Alaskan, So do I.

We could develop our land and resources as we see fit and without interference from outsiders, greenies, and democrats.

Just selling the 10 Billion bbl's of oil in ANWR is worth 700 Billion at todays prices. I will leave it to your judgment weather we could build an independent country on an investment of that size.

22 posted on 04/24/2006 7:39:16 PM PDT by Species8472
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To: georgia2006
I left New Orleans 10 years ago and my only criteria for destination was which State was more likely to secede, my two picks were Texas and Alaska, Texas at the time had a very active movement and so here I am.

I Love the USA, I spent 28 years in Service, saying that and seeing (at the time) what the Clintons could do, I wanted to find like minded Free people not interested in traveling a Socialist path.

I still think that Alaska and Texas fit that description (Perry can't zip his zipper without looking in a mirror to comb his hair first, he WILL NOT Californicate Texas). I lived in Alaska as a child and it is dear to my heart, I'm just a little old and underfunded to make that move (until my kids are out of College)

Freedom as I lived it in my youth does not exist anywhere on this Planet anymore, I just want to live my last years in a place that is a close approximation.

TT
23 posted on 04/24/2006 7:39:41 PM PDT by TexasTransplant (NEMO ME IMPUNE LACESSET)
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To: Species8472

is there any serious movement?


24 posted on 04/24/2006 7:40:02 PM PDT by georgia2006
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To: georgia2006
Alaskan Independence Party Website
25 posted on 04/24/2006 7:48:19 PM PDT by Species8472
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To: Jim_Curtis

> Problem is when you fence the borders, Chicago will be caged in.

How is this a problem?


26 posted on 04/24/2006 8:00:25 PM PDT by orionblamblam (I'm interested in science and preventing its corruption, so here I am.)
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To: robowombat
Somewhere John C Calhoun is laughing.

So am I. Thank you for posting this.

In addition to being strange, the author is just plain wrong. The U.S. military "wouldn't mow down San Franciscans"? Oh yes it would, and there would be milllions openly volunteering to join the armed forces to help cut down any such "secession". What Sale seems to forget is that even such ultra-liberal bastions as San Francisco have population that are roughly 25% Republican, give or take. None of those people would ever want to secede, and unless such a movement was essentially unanimous in any given area, the local government would have no moral standing to attempt to do so. That other 25% would have the right to compel their nation to come to save their freedom and soverignty from the tyranny of the majority, and we as Americans would have the unquestionable responsibility to save those people's right to live as Americans under an American flag. The Constitution's pretty clear about this.

27 posted on 04/24/2006 8:04:28 PM PDT by Dont Mention the War (This tagline is false.)
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To: TexasTransplant

What's funny is, up until Lincoln's assassination, the Government maintained that the Southern States never Seceded. They were simply "states in rebellion."

How can the government then force a state to apply for readmission to something they never left?

The Union handed the South it's victory after beating them on the battlefield.

Idiots then, Idiots now. Just now they are arrogant idiots.


28 posted on 04/24/2006 8:10:11 PM PDT by Leatherneck_MT (An honest man can feel no pleasure in the exercise of power over his fellow citizens.)
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To: orionblamblam

May I strongly beg that New York city be added to that list of separations from the US. I'm sure Detroit and Nawlins could go it alone just fine too.


29 posted on 04/24/2006 8:42:18 PM PDT by eleni121 ('Thou hast conquered, O Galilean!' (Julian the Apostate))
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To: robowombat

WEll, he does have a point.


30 posted on 04/24/2006 10:10:11 PM PDT by TBP
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To: robowombat
Do you wonder whether this guy is a liberal or a conservative?

it is hard to believe that Washington would actually command its troops to mow down Los Angelenos and San Franciscans the way they do the civilians of Fallujah and Najaf,

What a #4c%1ng loser. Our troops do not mow down civilians anywhere, no matter how much such action would be justified. The author gives away his intentions fairly quickly. I stopped reading at this point, and I don't care what he has to say.

31 posted on 04/25/2006 12:50:14 AM PDT by webheart
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To: Dont Mention the War

If they secede let em go by counties, sparing those of us in "blue" states, but NOT in blue territory. If you look at the last election map, that leaves the Left a few South African style "homelands" where they can not feed themselves. Hell they will need a passport to get to the Walmart....


32 posted on 04/25/2006 1:01:01 AM PDT by Kozak (Anti Shahada: " There is no God named Allah, and Muhammed is his False Prophet")
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To: Lester Moore

Never forget Waco! Never, ever, ever forget Waco!

Never deceive yourself into thinking that the government is your friend.

Never forget the first public murders committed by the Clintons and Reno!

Never forget the liberals who smugly announced that "Now we're going to get some serious gun control!"


33 posted on 04/25/2006 4:49:15 AM PDT by NaughtiusMaximus (Join me! Every night I pray for Global Warming . (And I think it's beginning to work.))
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To: MACVSOG68
The Constitution begins "We the people...", not "We the states..."

Interesting sequence demonstrates theological degeneration:

The great blood-drenched death-machines of the 20th century were all "democracies," unrestrained by any power other than the whims of the majority.
34 posted on 04/25/2006 5:16:50 AM PDT by TomSmedley (Calvinist, optimist, home schooling dad, exuberant husband, technical writer)
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To: TomSmedley

Democracies were they? I would say the "great death machines" of the 20th century were Russia (communist), Germany (socialist), China (communist), and Cambodia (communist). Where are the "death machine" democracies?


35 posted on 04/25/2006 5:50:57 AM PDT by Durus ("Too often we enjoy the comfort of opinion without the discomfort of thought." JFK)
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To: TomSmedley
The great blood-drenched death-machines of the 20th century were all "democracies," unrestrained by any power other than the whims of the majority.

You mean like Nazi Germany, Tojo's Japan, Mao's China, Stalin's Soviet Union, Pol Pot's Khmer Rouge...? Please help me out here. Which of those were democracies?

36 posted on 04/25/2006 5:57:44 AM PDT by MACVSOG68
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To: robowombat

Sale says some crazy things about WMDS, the economy, foreing policy, and other matters, but as far as the legality of secession, he hits the nail on the head.

Secession should be a last resort, but when the constitutional limits have totally disasppeared and every other means has been tried, secession is the states' trump card. By quashing it, Lincoln essentially empowered the Federal government to exercise absolute power.


37 posted on 04/25/2006 7:20:38 AM PDT by TBP
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To: MACVSOG68

Just read your note about Lincoln being right based on "we the people", not "we the states".
This is a very curious viewpoint.

"The people", en mass, did not create, nor do they modify the Constitution.

The Constitution was created when States sent representatives to the Convention; it was only effected when ratified by THE STATES--- NOT "the people" in general.

The federal government has ONLY powers delegated to it by the STATES, when they ratify an amendment.

The federal government, therefore, is not superior to the States, but only an agent of the States.

As the author clearly stated, for many, many years, States passed acts of nullification- if effect, telling the federal government to KISS OFF.

Lincoln was a tyrant. There is no other explanation for his actions. Like all tyrants, he abused his power to force a government on a large group of people who wanted liberty from that government. Just like King George, and Mao, and Stalin.


38 posted on 10/04/2006 1:53:57 PM PDT by Jsalley82
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To: TBP
Secession should be a last resort, but when the constitutional limits have totally disasppeared and every other means has been tried, secession is the states' trump card.

BINGO!

While many people rightly believe government can only posses the authority given to it by the People, no one can explain where the right to force a State to stay in the Union can be found.

-------

A visitor to your home cannot be forced to stay past the point in which he wishes to leave. If, as individuals, we do not have the legitimate authority to force someone to associate with us against their will, how could we ever have given that power to the State governments? If the State governments can't posses that power, how did they give it to the federal government?

The beast we live under today is a far cry from the Freedom of the Founders.

39 posted on 10/04/2006 2:11:53 PM PDT by MamaTexan (I am NOT a 'legal entity'...nor am I a *person* as created by law!)
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To: Jsalley82
Just read your note about Lincoln being right based on "we the people", not "we the states".

PRE'AMBLE
1. Something previous; introduction to a discourse or writing.
2. The introductory part of a statute, which states the reasons and intent of the law.

The Preamble is an introduction to, but not part of, the legal text of the Constitution.

It is merely a statement of purpose.

40 posted on 10/04/2006 2:38:27 PM PDT by MamaTexan (I am NOT a 'legal entity'...nor am I a *person* as created by law!)
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