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Most Likely to Secede
by Christopher Ketcham Increasingly, I have no fealty to the U.S. government. This has nothing to do with George Bush, bogeyman of the Left, the war in Iraq, or Halliburton, and everything to do with the reasonable assessment that the United States is too big for its own good. Too big in its 300 million people to be represented by 550 mostly millionaire men (not women) in a far-off swamp called Washington, D.C. I therefore have stopped calling myself a U.S. citizen.
I prefer to be called a Brooklynite or a Moabite, after the two places I call home Brooklyn, New York, and Moab, Utahwhich to me are part of the same nation only in name and only by the force of outmoded institutions.
"When in the course of human events it becomes necessary for
one people to dissolve the political bands which have connected them
with another a decent respect to the opinions of mankind requires that
they should declare the causes which impel them to the separation."
The Declaration of Independence
In each there are unities of language and custom, sure, but the
fundamental interests of the citizens are not the same. My loyalties to
each place will last as long the place lasts, but the fealty is local,
my interest zoned within a hundred-mile radius and certainly not tied
to the abstraction known as the national interest. "There is no
national interest," the historian Howard Zinn once said. Which brings
me to the question of secessionthe breaking-off of smaller countries
from bigger countries. I am for it in the case of the United States. I
am for it because I think we need to rejigger our loyalties to the
needs of localities. And I am not alone in this thinking.
On
October 3, 2007, delegates to the second North American Secessionist
Convention met for two days in Chattanooga, Tennessee, to discuss how
to crack the United States into manageable parts. They came
representing 11 rebel groups in 36 states, under banners such as the
Republic of Cascadia (wedding Oregon and Washington), Independent
California (forging the worlds fifth-largest economy), the United
Republic of Texas (returning the Lone Star State to its lonesomeness),
the League of the South (uniting the states of old Dixie), and,
spearhead of the effort, the Second Vermont Republic (separating
Vermont from the United States). The dominant thought among the
delegates was that what they call "the U.S. experiment had failed.
"What we have today in the combination of big business and big
government is nothing less than fascism," Thomas Moore, the delegate
from the Southern National Congress Committee, told the assembled.
Dexter Clark, the white-bearded vice chair of the Alaskan Independence
Party, was less cerebral: "No one ever fought a war for dependence,"
Clark said. "The people of Alaska are fed upif ever there was a time
ripe for change, this is it." The United States, the message in sum
went, must end. It would have to be reborn smaller if the American
dream was to have a hope in hell.
If this sounded extreme, the
secessionists had an answer in the calm of American opinion. In an
October, 2006, poll broadcast on CNN, 71 percent of Americans agree
that "our system of government is broken and cannot be fixed." A Daily
Kos poll in April, 2007, asked, "Should states be allowed to secede
from the union peaceably?" Sixty-nine percent of respondents answered
in the affirmative. All in all, this was, in the words of the chief
impresario of the Chattanooga convention, an impish 70-year-old author
and activist named Kirkpatrick Sale, "extremely fertile ground into
which secessionists can plant their seeds."
What
happened in Chattanooga was an American moment, certainly, and not the
least of its charms was the irony of the old Left of the North and the
old Right of the South standing united in their opposition to the
Union. The Associated Press, The New York Times, New York Newsday, The
Washington Post, and USA Today carried the story, which traveled to
newsrooms in Canada, England, Ireland, New Zealand, Belgium, and India,
and thence to the ubiquity of eyes on YouTube, and across the airwaves
of at least 50 radio stations that ran interviews with the leaders of
the convention. By the evening of October 4, the convention had settled
on a list of principles they called the Chattanooga Declaration. "The
deepest questions of human liberty and government facing our time go
beyond right and left, and in fact have made the old left-right split
meaningless and dead," said the declaration. "The privileges,
monopolies, and powers that private corporations have won from
government threaten everyones health, prosperity, and liberty, and
have already killed American self-government by the people." The
answer, it went on, was that the American states ought to be "free and
self-governing." Two hundred and fifty years earlier, the Declaration
of Independence asked for a similar dedication to self-governance:
"Whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive," wrote Thomas
Jefferson, "it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it,
and to institute new Government."
I have no intention of going to
Canada, or France. I want to leave this country without leaving home. And the only way to do that is secession.
Indeed,
it could be argued that secession is the primal American act, the
founding event as old as the concept of the states themselves. What
else did our founders accomplish in 1776 but secession from the tyranny
of England?
In Vermont, the local farm stand serves as the village green, a center for discussion and recreation, according to Naylor
Heres
how it will be with Vermont: The leaders of its secessionist movement,
the Second Vermont Republic, want to feed, shelter, clothe, and fuel a
free republic broken from the empire. This doesnt mean the little
country will sink into Albanian isolation, its citizens ceasing to
trade with China or refusing to watch the rot beamed on DirecTV
satellites. It will continue to be a tourist destination, its slopes
welcoming New Yorkers and Quebecois equally. But the state's secesh
want to keep their tax dollars at home and put them toward localized
food economies (calling it "food sovereignty"), energy supplies based
on wind and water, and credit lines out of community lenders freed from
the distant tyrannical rate controls of central banks.
One day
two years ago, I heard Sale speak before 1,500 attendees at a meeting
of the SVR. Sale, who has the build and mien of a terrier on
methamphetamine, reasoned out the desire for separation from the
behemoth. "It is intolerable," he said, "for a citizen to succumb to a
government that is in favor of unjust and unjustified warfare, brutal
torture in defiance of all conventions, illegal detentions, the
fostering of terrorism, war profiteering, sky-high trade deficits. It
is intolerable, I say, for a citizen to live under such a government,
in such a country."
"But," Sale went on, "I have no intention of
going to Canada, or France. I love my home, and I want to leave this
country without leaving home. And the only way to do that, ladies and
gentlemen, is secession." The crowd exploded, but gently. They were
young and old, hippies and farmers, old Right and new Progressive,
college educated and tenth-grade educated. The room where they
gathered, the great hall of the Vermont State Legislature, was hung
with purple velvet, and built of fine wood and marble, and smelled
clean. The rebels were not of the type to shame the solemnity of the
place.
[Secession is] the ultimate
destructive rejection of the system, the strongest possible way you can
say to someone like George Bush, Go fuck yourself.
As
Sale slapped out his peroration at the podium, nearby sat the foremost
organizer of the secessionist cause in Vermont, the softer-spoken but
no less radical Thomas Naylor, 72, a former Duke University economist
and social critic, co-author of the bitterly funny Affluenza, a
diagnosis of the American consumerist condition as political pathology.
Naylor, who knows his history, christened the movement under the title
"Second Vermont Republic" because there was once a first Vermont
republicit was no mere colony or statethat ceded its independence and
voted on March 4, 1791, to join the nascent American union. Each year,
Naylor and his Second Vermonters like to memorialize the event by
walking in a mock funeral procession through Montpelier playing a dirge
and carrying a casket marked "Vermont."
Now he took to the
podium, looking tall, if a little aged, with white hair, and answered
questions from skeptics who wondered if Vermont could indeed go it
alone as a political and economic unit, or, more important, if perhaps
the secession urge was just a hotheaded reaction to the injuries of the
Bush administration. What Thomas Naylor will tell you in answer when
you sit him down at his little house in the Vermont village of
Charlottewhat he tells every crowd he addressesis that the problem of
the United States as it stands has no solution in the current
framework. In other words, look not for answers in a Democratic revival
in 2008.
"The nation is not sustainable," Naylor tells me. He
thinks the United States is a political and economic monster, stumbling
and out of control, a land where bigness in all things has led to
military overstretch, runaway debt, mass inequalities, and a government
by and for the few. He draws a causal connection with the dire social
effects on the ground: Of all the western democracies, the United
States stands near dead last in voter turnout, last in health care,
last in education, highest in homicide rates, mortality, STDs among
juveniles, youth pregnancy, abortion, and divorcea society which, in
keeping with its degenerate morals, wreaks one-quarter of the
environmental damage on the planet every day.
Local agriculture will help support an independent Vermont's economy
"It
comes down to the problems of the human condition: separation,
meaninglessness, powerlessness, fear of death," he says. "The human
condition is not being dealt with in the United States. It is our
inability to deal with this human condition that leads to a sickness
that I call affluenza."
Affluenza, he says, can be recognized by key
symptoms: technomania and e-maniaobsession with technology and the
internetrampant consumerism, megalomania, narcissism, "robotism," and
"affluenzas concomitant: imperialism and national aggression."
Consumerism and megalomania and narcissism I getI grew up in New York
City. But "robotism"? As Naylor puts it, all Americans "watch the same
TV programs, listen to the same radio programs, subscribe to the same
political viewpoints"the limited amplitude of opinion afforded in the
two-party system"claiming to be a country of individualists while in
truth we are the nation of conformists."
So what to do? "You can
commit suicide," offers Naylor. "You can deny the human condition
through megalomania and the pathology of having, owning, possessing,
which requires an empire that stomps around the planet stealing
resources. Or you can say 'hell no' and rebel and confront the human
condition and, as Camus says, die happy. Secession is fundamentally an
act of rebellion driven by a combination of fear and anger and hope.
It's the ultimate destructive rejection of the system, the strongest
possible way you can say to someone like George Bush, 'Go fuck
yourself.' The creative element is Vermont. A state of small towns,
small farms, small churches, small businessesthis is the alternative
were offering to America."
Here's
the way it is with Vermont: At the border with New York State, the
billboards disappear. They just go, as if aliens had hoovered them
away. Vermont, you see, is already a separate country. It is the most
radical state in the Union in terms of the number and kind of town
meetingsdirect democracy in action. Its constitution of 1777 made it
the first state to outlaw slavery, it was the first to mandate
universal suffrage for all men, and is currently one of only two states
that allow incarcerated felons to vote. It has no death penalty and
virtually no gun-control laws, yet remains one of the least violent
jurisdictions in America. It has no big cities, no big businesses, no
military bases, no strategic resources, few military contractors. All
three members of its Congressional delegation voted against the Iraq
War resolution. It is rural and wild, with the highest percentage of
unpaved roads in the nation. And those billboards? It was the first
state to ban them along its roads.
With its strict environmental-impact
laws, Vermont fended off the predations of Wal-Mart superstores longer
than any other state, and Montpelier today remains the only state
capital in America without a McDonald's restaurant. Economically,
though, Vermont has the smallest gross state product. And the SVR
concedes it is still unclear how secession would play outlegally,
economically, and logistically.
Economically, though, Vermont has
the smallest gross state product. And the SVR concedes it is still
unclear how secession would play outlegally, economically, and
logistically.
The idea of it coming to pass in
Vermont today is not entirely quixotic: Following mock secession
debates during the 1990s in seven Vermont towns, all seven voted in
favor of the idea. Statewide, this peculiar contrarianism would need to
be harnessed in a legislative vote (the method employed by Confederate
states in the 1861 secession), a popular referendum, or a
constitutional convention. In each of these cases, a supermajority
would be required. Vermont's governor would then be empowered to
present the states exit declaration to the U.S. secretary of state. As
it stands, a 2007 poll found that just 13 percent of Vermonters say
they would opt for it.
The movements detractors, of course,
have a valid set of concerns, too. Some have expressed discomfort with
conferences like the one in Chattanooga, seeing a dire development in
the far Left working in tandem with the far Right. (Several Southern
secessionist groups are vocally racist and socially conservative, no
doubt a recipe for statehood antithetic to the Vermont way.) Another
concern is that the understanding of the U.S. Constitution today allows
no other recourse but armed revolt for a state wishing to go its own
way. "Secession is not possible today without violence," Pauline Maier,
a professor of American history at the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology, told me for a related piece I wrote for Salon.com a few
years ago. "It's to follow the example of the Southern secessionists
who thought that they could just leave the Union peacefully, and,
nuttier still, get a part of the unsettled territory as a parting gift.
Isn't it time that Americans began learning something from history?
Or must we again bleed ourselves into wisdom?"
The literature of the Free Vermont Movement
In
her 1936 book, Give Me Liberty, Rose Wilder Lane, an avowed Leninist,
described her travels to the Soviet Union, where she found that the
workers "liberated" into the "communal" life of the state were pretty
unhappy. One peasant she spoke to said of the new country: "It's too
big. At the top, it is too small. It will not work." History bore out
the lowly peasant's judgment, not Lenin's.
George Kennan, the
architect of Cold War containment and the national-security state that
arose in answer to the Soviet Union, came to the same conclusion about
the United States. "There is a real question," Kennan warned, "as to
whether bigness in a body politic is not an evil in itself." Years
later, when Thomas Naylor wrote to the old Cold Warrior outlining a New
England secession uniting Maine, New Hampshire, and Vermont, Kennan
personally responded with a letter dictated from his sickbed:
"I write
to say that in the idea of the three American states' ultimate
independence, whether separately or in union, I see nothing fanciful.
[Such] are at present the dominating trends in the U.S. that I see no
other means of ultimate preservation of cultural and societal values
that will not only be endangered but eventually destroyed by an
endlessly prolonged association with the remainder of what is now the
U.S.A."
It was the stratagems of George Kennan, who died in
2005, that ultimately defeated the Soviet Union. Naylor sees this as
historical irony, and he takes pleasure in drawing a dark comparison
between the Soviet Union and the United States: There is the same
far-flung geography. The same corporate socialism that defies free
markets. The same spread of influence worldwide through violence,
murder, and pillage. The same stunted public discourse. The same
electoral sclerosis in the legislature (Congress is almost as stable in
membership as the Politburo). "No one in the Soviet Union in 1960 or
1970 or even 1980 found it imaginable that someday it would collapse,"
says Naylor. So, too, he says, is our certainty today in the stability
of the United States of America.
The South lost 18% of its population thanks to the egomania of Abraham Lincoln, more even than Germany in WWII (10%)—a war, ironically, in which naive white Southerners were decisive against their Aryan/Celtic brethren. And what is the thanks they get? The honor of being the "last Berlin" of public opinion following WWII, of seeing and feeling the press/judicial complex spearhead a complete wrecking job on some the best public schools in the country, most in the old cotton belt counties. No people in the world has ever been so basely betrayed. Although Mr. Ketcham presents evidence that Yankeedom, one of the most destructive forces in human history, is finally coming to its senses, I really doubt it.