To Alter and
Abolish – Secession Movements on the Move
by Diane Alden
September, 2000
"Whenever a government becomes destructive
of these ends, it is the right of the people to alter or abolish it."
(Declaration of Independence)
What do Walter Williams, Joseph Sobran, Lew
Rockwell, Murray Rothbard and Ron Paul have in common? Besides being very
bright, responsible, intelligent and erudite men, they believe in the right of
states around the world and in the good old United States of America to secede.
In this day and age it is the unspoken option
that simmers beneath the growing cultural, political, spiritual, regional,
sexual and economic chasm that has developed over the last 50 years. The
alternative to the spreading social and political balkanization of America is
gathering energy and proponents.
As in any marriage gone bad, there is the
hesitancy to speak the unspeakable. After attempts to change, to reform, to come
to grips, to adapt, the basic problem and irreconcilable differences are still
there. They grow like a killing tumor until the pain becomes so unbearable the
only choice is to cut the cause of the pain from the body. Usually
"cures" for this sickness only put off the inevitable.
Our differences have become too profound, too
wide and too deep. The anxiety and tension expand and our only options will be
to fight or flee. The divorce, the separation, the final recognition that there
can be no resolution might salvage what little love remains between some groups
of Americans and others. So, while there is still the desire to remain at peace
and not totally destroy the other, the need to separate begins to fill the air
and a day will come when it cannot be denied.
The American Secession from Britain
The American Revolution was not a revolution in
the strictest sense of the word. It was a separation, a secession, because the
British government was not overthrown; rather, a new entity came into being out
of an old union. The independent United States of America was that new creation.
England and the monarchy, however, remained and still exist today. Eventually,
our mother country became our friend and ally. We have fought several wars
together since the dissolution of the American-British marriage, and the bond is
stronger than ever.
After the secession, the U.S. Constitution and
federalism were not created overnight. Our Republic grew out of the Articles of
Confederation of 1781 into a Constitutional Republic.
As Joseph Sobran stated in his essay, "The
Right to Secede," "The original 13 states formed a
‘confederation,’ under which each state retained its ‘sovereignty,
freedom, and independence.’ The Constitution didn't change this; each
sovereign state was free to reject the Constitution. The new powers of the
federal government were ‘granted’ and ‘delegated’ by the states, which
implies the states were prior and superior to the federal government."
Sobran goes on to say that Hamilton and Madison
hoped secession would never happen but they never denied it was a right and a
practical possibility. The states would not be "rebelling" because the
states were sovereign and free and secession was the basic principle of
"self-preservation."
Today the problem is that we are no longer a
united people joined by a common culture, educational system, basic religious
beliefs, and tolerance. The fabric of America is fraying and dissolving even as
diversity is celebrated. As our common heritage and belief systems are destroyed
by something alien to them, a compromise of values and political philosophy may
not be possible.
Modern trends have shattered our unanimity and
common bond. Trying to put the American humpty-dumpty together again will only
lead to our final dissolution or an unacceptable tyranny of the majority at some
point in the future.
The trends that have been our undoing include a
denial of the Bill of Rights and its original interpretation. Add to that a
legal system not in keeping with the intent of the Founders, the destruction of
the separation of powers as well as an imperial executive branch, and a tax
system so corrupt, unfair and burdensome that no amount of tinkering is going to
fix it. Additionally, we have rejected the binding nature of our religious
heritage, which was the basis for our common purpose.
Include the exponential increase in the power
of the state and the growth of the government bureaucracy, and the late great
United States is on life support. Well-meaning conservatives offer the argument
that if they get in power they will downsize government and decrease the power
of the state. Often their actions belie their words. Many in the House and
Senate vote to expand police powers and do nothing to keep activist judges from
the bench or prevent the profusion of legislation that adds power to the state.
Apparently, they don’t understand that in the history of mankind government
has never willingly given up power or perks in order that liberty and freedom
should thrive.
Ancient Rome is only one example of many. As
the effectiveness of the Roman Senate decreased, the power of its bureaucracy
grew, as did the tax burden on individuals. The tax system became a career
passed on from father to son and only grew in its intrusive and self-defeating
nature.
Eventually, the Republic was lost to Empire as
Rome centralized and used military adventurism to increase its wealth and power.
Lost was the republican past, along with civic virtue, a unique culture and
common values based on notions of the individual vis à vis the state. Internal
enemies were often blamed for the problems of the state. Those enemies included
Christians, foreigners and the weak in Rome itself.
The great Roman Republic was replaced by a
culture that became so decadent it could not survive the onslaught of barbarians
and dissolution. As much as anything, Rome lost the ability to look beyond
itself to the future. It lost its will along with the imagination and creativity
that had helped to make it great.
It placated the desires and whims of its
citizens and grew government so large and oppressive that in the end it died of
its own weight. Rome was unable to envision the future free of corruption but
rather accepted that corruption as inevitable. It did not nourish the virtues
necessary for any society to prosper and remain whole and intact. In a state of
disintegration, Rome did not see the Visigoths waiting on the other side of the
hill about to take advantage of that lack of imagination and vision.
When Rome finally collapsed. it did not take
long. It had been in the process for years.
In our day many Americans observe that our
common beliefs, standards and ethics are being destroyed and replaced by
something alien. The Bill of Rights and Constitution are considered flexible
documents subject to the whims of whoever is in power or whatever a poll or the
courts say they are.
Today more and more Americans do not recognize
the country they grew up in, learned about, fought and died for, worked in,
dreamed for, or adjusted to. That fact is not acceptable to a significant
proportion of those people.
The process started long ago but has
accelerated since the end of the Cold War. In the past ten years, the great
melting pot has become an intolerant, multicultural, diverse, balkanized
hodge-podge of unworkable elements and people. Multiculturalism, along with
other movements such as environmentalism, feminism, statism, globalism, and the
miscellaneous ism, has worked only too well.
Thus, big government, mega-corporations,
various cultural movements, the monolithic mainstream media, corrupted
educational system, and feel-good, unprincipled quasi-religions have tossed the
Western cultural tradition into the ash heap. We have come to deny the
destruction of what it has taken man ten thousand years to develop. We have
created divisions that may not be healed.
The proponents of multiculturalism as well as
those who have created the Leviathan State should be satisfied to know that they
have succeeded. We now have a nation that no longer understands the philosophy
behind the principles in its founding documents. Many Americans would not even
vote for those principles if they were put on a ballot today.
This cultural and political elite should be
proud to know that only 51 percent of Americans would vote for the Constitution
of the United States if it were set before them.
The elite and the anti-Western-tradition
"progressives" have succeeded in separating men from women, families
from society, culture from tradition and beauty, government from the people, and
common sense from the underpinnings of the Republic.
They have replaced common sense with political
correctness, fed the Leviathan State with the wealth of individuals through
usurious taxes, trashed the culture, and made it safe for a proscribed kind of
tolerance while destroying the religious faith that was the cornerstone of the
nation-state they inhabit.
Life is made safe for gay individuals but the
Boy Scouts are thrown to the cultural and societal wolves. Both groups SHOULD
have their rights protected, and both should be allowed the freedom to live in
peace even if that peace is separate. Speaking or practicing one's religion is
more or less okay as long as one keeps silent about it and does not bring it out
in public or apply its tenets to life.
Recently, billionaire media mogul and one-world
guru Ted Turner led the charge against orthodoxy at the U.N. religious summit.
That summit was the showcase for what has happened to American and Western
society and tradition. Ostracized and criticized, Christians and Orthodox
religion, as well as Orthodox Judaism and Islam, took it on the chin. In fact
there was booing and tussling in the audience and outside the meeting as those
of Orthodox or traditional religions were ungraciously condemned. Thus, it has
become okay for the new religions to be intolerant, but it is not okay for the
Old World religions to complain or fight back.
By whatever name it is called, intolerance is
still wrong. Christianity, Islam and Judaism can not gut basic doctrine in order
to gain the good wishes of Ted Turner or anyone else. Though not always
following it very well, Christianity and the other great world religions have at
their core the Golden Rule, "do unto others as you would have them do unto
you."
The effort on the part of these religions has
given the basis for the United States of America, which has the most freedom
mankind has ever known. This freedom has led to prosperity and a home place for
nearly every kind of person on the planet that has ever made the effort to get
here, with the exception of small boys from Cuba.
It would seem Mr. Turner and others have now
replaced the Golden Rule with the golden calf. They substitute concepts that
have worked to man's benefit with those that will only make him less free, more
barbaric and more subject to the whims and dictates of the elite like himself.
However, the world according to Ted Turner and
his ilk is merely the visible symptom of the great divisions that have taken
place in American society as well as in other societies throughout the world.
In the United States it is becoming obvious to
all but the most obtuse and implacable that the contract between society,
government and the people has been displaced by a new ethic and a new contract.
Out of the ooze of 19th century Prussian statism, Marxism and fascism, 21st
century America is now home to a bizarre philosophy and rationale.
They may call themselves Progressive Democrats
or Progressive Socialists or the Third Way. By whatever name you call it, that
philosophy is incompatible with the ethics and philosophy of Western tradition,
which is the girding for the Constitutional Republic known as the United States
of America. There is no compromise with the philosophy of progressivism, because
at the heart of that philosophy the state is superior to the individual, the
collective is more important than individual liberty. Western tradition and
progressivism are opposites and one or the other will be destroyed.
Tolerance recognizes these differences and in
the immortal words of Star Trek's Spock the wise would say, "Live long and
prosper." However, that cannot mean that I want to become a convert and
turn over my core beliefs to your system.
Americans can't have it both ways. This is more
than a minor disagreement over the color of paint in the bathroom. It goes to
the heart of where freedom lives.
On one side the individual is only as free and
at liberty as the state will allow. Government is no longer the servant but the
master, and an expensive one at that.
This philosophy is neither progressive, as the
left would like to believe, nor is it compassionate: it does not serve mankind,
it serves itself and the elite who benefit from it. This new state of affairs is
antithetical to all that has gone before and it is tyranny by whatever names it
is called.
In America the new progressive politics plus
the various social trends are a bad combination of Aldous Huxley's "Brave
New World," George Orwell's "1984," "Animal Farm" and
"Blade Runner."
Yet if that is how some wish to live, they
should be allowed to do so. But those who do not should be free to create a
place, government, and environment that is compatible with their core beliefs.
An Idea Whose Time May Have Come
Nonetheless, a revolution is brewing. As the
"progressive" movement with its politically correct social engineers
becomes more entrenched, there will be a revolt against it. Human nature will
not exist for long confined to a condition that it deems oppressive. It is not
long before it seeks to go beyond those boundaries that are antithetical to
human nature, the laws of nature and nature's God, the movement of history, and
man's own evolution as a free being.
While many people worry about the New World
Order, the European Union, and America's own growing tendency to give up its
sovereignty to supranational bodies, another tendency has been germinating all
over the world. Like the universe, our world is coming together and breaking
apart. New nation-states are forming out of old alliances and dependencies. It
is the natural law for new growth to form out of the old. For young stars to
form out of what is left of the old stars.
With the end of the Cold War, independence and
secession movements have sprung up in the Soviet Union, Eastern Europe, Belgium,
Italy, Scotland, Northern Ireland, Spain, Yugoslavia, Indonesia, Canada and the
Middle East.
Yet there are those who cannot conceive that it
could happen in the United States. Many people believe secession movements in
the U.S. are nothing more than the crazed fantasies of loony militia white
separatists, when actually some of the leading proponents of secession are
blacks, Hawaiians and Native Americans.
In the United States the two most influential
independence movements are in Alaska and Hawaii. The Alaskan Independence Party
has 18,000 members – about 8 percent of the electorate. The party gained
respectability in 1990 when Walter J. Hickel was elected governor on that
party's ticket. The AIP complained to the United Nations in 1993 about the
abuses against that state and their right to 'use and exploit' the state's
wealth and natural resources.
Alaskans have been in turmoil since Jimmy
Carter declared nearly 55 million acres as "wilderness," disallowing
the state from using its own resources or deriving the benefits therefrom.
Alaskan Indian tribes have been cut off from their own riches as the federal
government in Washington has taken over these resources for its own purposes.
This same federal government thousands of miles
away is running Alaska's territory and wealth for environmental or statist
military purposes.
Additionally, up until 1992, Alaska was one
place where an American could homestead. In other words, stake out a claim on
property and “prove it up” so that in five years an individual could own the
property free and clear. That is no longer allowed. Actually, private property
rights have been lost all over the United States and the federal government now
owns 42 percent of the land mass of the states, particularly in the
intermountain West.
In Hawaii a similar move toward independence is
under way and gaining steam. On January 16, 1994, Hawaiian separatists declared
the restoration of the Independence of the Sovereign Nation-State of Hawaii.
They declared: "The current citizens of the Independent and Sovereign
Nation of Hawaii consist of all those who are descendants of the Kanaka Maoli
prior to the arrival of the first westerners in 1778, and those persons, and
their descendants who have lived in Hawaii prior to the illegal overthrow,
invasion and occupation of January 17, 1893. ... " Thirty thousand
descendants of Hawaii's Polynesians voted in favor of creating a native Hawaiian
government that may resemble Indian reservations on the mainland.
Indigenous tribes located within the United
States have been granted self-rule through the "Indian Country" Laws,
18 U.S.C. Section 1151. The U.S. Government recognizes 200 tribes in Alaska and
235-plus tribes in the remaining states.
In The Republic of Texas on December 13, 1995,
there was "The rebirth of the Sovereign Nation of The Republic of
Texas," International Court of Justice, cause #94135. Texas, as a Nation,
was first established in 1836, when it won independence from Mexico. Proponents
state that the United States has unlawfully occupied Texas since 1865.
Speaking the Unspeakable
Professors Thomas Naylor of Duke University and
Donald Livingston of Emory University in Atlanta have stated: "A booming
economy and a roaring stock market can cover up a host of social, economic, and
political sins. But once the bubble bursts and everyone discovers that the
emperor truly wears no clothes, whether in the Oval Office or elsewhere, local
independence movements may seem a lot less radical than they do today."
Cultural and political analyst Lew Rockwell of
the Von Mises Institute is a former student and friend of libertarian godfather
Murray Rothbard. The late Rothbard was a most articulate spokesman for secession
around the world and kept track of the various movements and their histories.
Rockwell stated in a column in July that
"the usual democratic channels don't offer much hope for real change, any
more than they did in the Colonial period. The Congress and the White House can
throw us bones in the form of tiny tax cuts spread over 10 years but no
legislative efforts are going to gut big government in a way that would have
satisfied the signers of the Declaration of Independence, much less those who
fought and died to throw off the British Crown. … [B]ig government is bigger
than it has ever been, but there is no practical or ideological rationale behind
it. The state is just openly and aggressively ravenous much more so than the
original British oppressors."
Walter Williams is an African-American and
heads the economics department at George Mason University in Virginia. Williams
is also very funny and a dead-on analyst of the economic and political scene in
modern America. Not long ago he wrote a column, and several since then,
suggesting that perhaps it was time for Americans to begin thinking about
secession.
Williams maintains that at the time of the
first constitutional convention in 1787 the 13 original states had "status
as sovereign, free and independent nations. They created the federal government
delegating it certain limited powers. In other words, the federal government is
an agent, created by the states, who are the principles." He compares it to
a relationship between stockholders and corporations whereby the stockholders
can fire the folks running the corporations.
There have been successful secessions. In 1907
Norway seceded from Sweden. Texas seceded from Mexico; Panama seceded from
Columbia, Cuba from Spain, and the definer of the Union himself, Abraham
Lincoln, approved West Virginia seceding from Virginia. While Lincoln put the
end to Southern secession, that act and the resulting war did not change the
constitutionally guaranteed right of the states to separate.
The New England Confederation seeks to separate
from the U.S. along with a couple of maritime Canadian provinces. The reason
they state is because the "United States government has grown too large, is
too out of touch with the people of the nation and is too expensive to
maintain."
The North Star Republic seeks to combine the
present states of Minnesota, Wisconsin and the northwest part of Michigan.
However, they probably would have to go to war with the feminists who have taken
over the universities of those states.
The Northwest Angle of north central Minnesota
saw Representative Colin Peterson of Minnesota introduce a Constitutional
Amendment in favor of secession. This area wants to unite with Canada.
In July 1998, Frye Island, Maine, a tiny hamlet
located in Sebago Lake, approximately 25 miles west of Portland, successfully
seceded from the town of Standish.
Meanwhile, residents of the San Fernando Valley
still are trying to secede from the City of Los Angeles, claiming LA is simply
too big to serve the needs of Valley residents.
There are also the independence movements in
Vermont and Illinois. In the case of Vermont, the movement considers that
urban-suburban America does not care about the demise of rural areas. They
believe rural areas are no longer represented in the federal system and that
rural Vermont concerns and needs have been totally abandoned and ignored. The
same could be said of the situation in many Western states.
In January of 1992, 27 northern California
counties introduced into the state legislature a plan to secede from California
and form the 51st state. Staten Island acted similarly when it voted to secede
from New York.
Not surprisingly, one of the most famous
secession movements is in the South. The Southern Party envisions a republic
based on “private property, free association, fair trade, sound money, low and
equitable taxes, equal justice, secure borders and armed and vigilant
neutrality."
U.S. neighbors on both borders have very active
and strong secessionist movements. In Mexico some provinces have revolted
against the central government and have more or less gone their separate ways.
The rural area of Chiapas revolted and federal troops were called in to quell
the rebellion, but it continues under the radar.
Then there are Canada's Cree Indians, a native
North American tribe that has an agreement with Canada for a separate territory
in Northern Quebec.
The Quebecois French-speaking movement is the
most famous secession movement in Canada. A referendum went down to defeat a few
years ago, but the fires of separation burn bright.
A less publicized but still powerful movement
west of Ottawa is The Western Canada Concept, which seeks to separate the
Western part of Canada from the rest of the nation. This country would include
Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta, British Columbia, the Northwest Territories and
the Yukon.
The upcoming registration of firearms and
confiscation of certain previously legal firearms in Canada may lead to
approximately 1.5 million Canadians choosing to break the law rather than
comply. Sixteen thousand residents of the Western provinces have indicated they
will not comply under any circumstance.
As one Canadian stated, "Western Canada
has been used and abused by Ottawa for too long. They don't have our best
interests at heart. We are not like them in any way. We are Canadians but we are
unified in name only. They have taken our resources and denied us private
property rights. In Canada today they can confiscate private property because we
don't have the kind of Constitution the United States has."
People in Canada are also being fined and going
to jail for breaking the PC and multicultural laws as well. Even those refusing
to obey PC laws based on religious reasons are suffering for those beliefs and
granted no relief. A similar circumstance is beginning to happen in the United
States.
I had to remind the Canadian that the U.S.
government is confiscating private property due to the legislation growing out
of the "war on drugs" and grabbing private property of those affected
by the Endangered Species Act, tax laws and other government policies.
Additionally, PC is rampant in the states. Dr.
Laura and the Boy Scouts have suffered the wrath of PC advocates. Many other
Americans have, as well, because they do not think special rights belong to
specific groups because of their gender, race, religion or ethnicity.
Separation Papers
In the United States we have more or less
abrogated the Bill of Rights. Yet our three implacable monkeys are fixed in
their high-paying positions and dare not speak. They sit in government, the law,
and the media. They see no evil, hear no evil, and speak no evil.
Representative Ron Paul of Texas is the
exception. At the time of the breakup of the former Soviet Union he stated,
"The right of secession should be ingrained in a free society. There is
nothing sacred about large units of government. And there is nothing wrong with
loosely banding together small units of government. With the disintegration of
the Soviet Union, we too should consider it. Why not think about getting rid of
the federal government, returning to the system of our Founders and breaking up
the United States into smaller government units?"
A very good question indeed. As our differences
grow, as Christians feel put upon by the rest of society, the anger of many men
and women grow as feminization takes hold of every aspect of life. Furthermore,
as the culture is debased, as government is up for grabs to the highest bidder,
as more power is solidified in Washington, and as the Bill of Rights continues
its spiral into irrelevancy, perhaps it is time to speak what is in the hearts
of many.
America doesn't work anymore. It's been a
victim of its own success, hijacked by power and the elite and notions that do
not fit with its traditional "rights of man" as they have evolved from
the Judeo-Christian tradition.
I suspect if this great secession ever takes
place Americans will be better off. The northeast corridor will go its European
socialist and PC way. The mid-Atlantic will do what it wishes. The Midwestern
rust belt will be one entity. Northern California, Oregon, and parts of
Washington State along with Western British Columbia will find more in common
than it has with the intermountain West. We could yet become the diverse
confederacy of peaceable kingdoms the Founders originally envisioned.
Perhaps we could adopt the Articles of
Confederation, which would allow the states to make their own laws, amenable to
the people who inhabit those states.
Yet we could share some things in common.
The people who are rabid about any issue could
seek out an area of the country that suited them while remaining friends with
the rest. Women who live and breathe for the right to an abortion,
environmentalists who want every tree saved and every animal to survive, and
every advocate of free sex or no sex, gambling or no gambling, God and religion,
or no God and religion, or a healthy mix of the two would find the somewhere
they belong.
We all need a place where we are comfortable,
at home and at liberty.
What we have now is becoming the horse invented
by a committee. As legend has it, that beast is called the camel.
Every July Fourth we could have a celebration
to mark our loose confederation of the happy and the free.
In America the one thing we should keep in
common is the right to live and let live, not one superior to the other, but
separate and apart if it must come to that.
In the end, a friendly divorce would be better
than the continued civil, political and cultural war we have endured. At the
rate we are going we will be at each other's throats soon, and that would be a
sad day for these United States.
Success and Secession
Secession movements do succeed.
Norway never went to war with Sweden after it
seceded. Southern Ireland never went to war with the British after 1922 or with
Northern Ireland, for that matter. In addition, Ireland and Britain fought
common cause in World War II as the Irish served in the united forces of the UK.
West Virginia has not fired a single shot
against Virginia since it split. Scotland and England still carry on business
with each other and with Ireland. India continues to send students and
businessmen to Britain even though they are no longer a colony. Poland trades
with Russia ten years after the Berlin Wall fell.
The world still works despite the fact that
some countries and alliances wisely adjust their differences and allow the
individual and the state he chooses the right to live as they see fit.
Adjustments would have to be made and some
things would be held in common between the states. Perhaps we could all agree to
“provide for the common defense, promote the general welfare,” and keep the
interstate highway system intact. As far as taxes go, Washington can go back to
charging tariffs or excise taxes for keeping the unified military establishment
for our continental defense.
While they don't need my help or my
collaboration I will throw in my two cents and join other proponents of
secession: Walter Williams, Joseph Sobran, Lew Rockwell, Murray Rothbard, and
Ron Paul. I will say, "said the Walrus to the Carpenter, the time has come
to speak of many things, of sails and ships and sealing wax, of cabbages and
kings." To this verse from “Alice in Wonderland” I will add the
unspoken word and breathe a sigh of relief as I say it. Secession is not a dirty
word, and it may be a word that will be used often in the future.
Diane Alden is a research analyst, writer,
historian and political economist. She writes columns for NewsMax.com, Etherzone,
Enterstageright, American Partisan, KeepAndBearArms.com and many other online
publications. She also does occasional radio commentaries for Georgia Radio Inc.
Reach her at wulfric8@yahoo.com or www.inflyovercountry.com.