Is Red State America Seceding?
By Patrick J. Buchanan
In the last decade of the 20th century,
as the Soviet Empire disintegrated so, too, did that prison house of nations,
the USSR.
Out of the
decomposing carcass came Russia, Belarus, Ukraine, Lithuania, Latvia, Estonia
and Moldova, all in Europe; Georgia, Armenia and Azerbaijan in the Caucasus;
and Tajikistan, Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan, Kyrgyzstan and Kazakhstan in Central
Asia.
Transnistria
then broke free of Moldova, and Abkhazia and South Ossetia fought free of
Georgia.
Yugoslavia
dissolved far more violently into the nations of Serbia, Slovenia, Croatia,
Bosnia, Montenegro, Macedonia and Kosovo.
The
Slovaks seceded from Czechoslovakia. Yet a Europe that plunged straight to war
after the last breakup of Czechoslovakia in 1938 and 1939 this time only
yawned. Let them go, all agreed.
The spirit
of secession, the desire of peoples to sever ties to nations to which they have
belonged for generations, sometimes for centuries, and to seek out their own
kind, is a spreading phenomenon.
Scotland
is moving toward a referendum on independence from England, three centuries
after the Acts of Union. Catalonia pushes to be free of Madrid. Milanese and
Venetians see themselves as a European people apart from Sicilians, Neapolitans
and Romans.
Dutch-speaking
Flanders wants to cut loose of French-speaking Wallonia in Belgium. Francophone
Quebec, with immigrants from Asia and the Third World tilting the balance in
favor of union, appears to have lost its historic moment to secede from Canada.
What are
the forces pulling nations apart? Ethnicity, culture, history and language —
but now also economics. And separatist and secessionist movements are cropping
up here in the United States.
While many
Red State Americans are moving away from Blue State America, seeking kindred
souls among whom to live, those who love where they live but not those who rule
them are seeking to secede.
The five
counties of Western Maryland — Garrett, Allegheny, Washington, Frederick and
Carroll, which have more in common with West Virginia and wish to be rid of
Baltimore and free of Annapolis, are talking secession.
The issues
driving secession in Maryland are gun control, high taxes, energy policy,
homosexual marriage and immigration.
Scott
Strzelczyk, who lives in the town of Windsor in Carroll County and leads the
Western Maryland Initiative, argues: “If you have a long list of grievances,
and it’s been going on for decades, and you can’t get it resolved, ultimately
[secession] is what you have to do.”
And there
is precedent.
Four of
our 50 states — Maine, Vermont, Kentucky, West Virginia — were born out of
other states.
Ten
northern counties of Colorado are this November holding non-binding referenda
to prepare a future secession from Denver and the creation of America’s 51st
state.
Nine of
the 10 Colorado counties talking secession and a new state, writes Reid Wilson
of the Washington Post — Cheyenne, Kit Carson,Logan, Morgan, Phillips, Sedgwick, Washington, Weld and Yuma — all gave more
than 62 percent of their votes to Mitt Romney. Five of these 10 counties gave
Romney more than 75 percent of their vote.
Their
issues with the Denver legislature: A new gun control law that triggered a
voter recall of two Democratic state senators, state restrictions on oil
exploration, and the Colorado legislature’s party-line vote in support of gay
marriage.
In California, which many have long
believed should be split in two, the northern counties of Modoc and Siskyou on
the Oregon border are talking succession — and then union in a new state called
Jefferson.
“California is essentially ungovernable
in its present size,” says Mark Baird of the Jefferson Declaration Committee.
Baird hopes to attract a dozen counties to join together before petitioning the
state to secede.
Like the
western Maryland and northern Colorado counties, the northern California
counties are conservative, small town, rural, and have little in common with
San Francisco or Los Angeles, or Sacramento, where Republicans hold not one
statewide office and are outnumbered better than 2-1 in both houses of the
state legislature.
Folks on
the Upper Peninsula of Michigan, bordered by Wisconsin and the Great Lakes,
which is connected to lower Michigan by a bridge, have long dreamed of a
separate state called Superior. The UP has little in common with Lansing and
nothing with Detroit.
While the
folks in western Maryland, northern Colorado, northern California and on the
Upper Peninsula might be described as Red State secessionists, in Vermont the
secessionists seem of the populist left. The Montpelier Manifesto of the Second
Vermont Republic concludes:
“Citizens,
lend your names to this manifesto and join in the honorable task of rejecting
the immoral, corrupt, decaying, dying, failing American Empire and seeking its
rapid and peaceful dissolution before it takes us all down with it.”
This sort
of intemperate language may be found in Thomas Jefferson’s indictment of George
III. If America does not get its fiscal house in order, and another Great
Recession hits or our elites dragoon us into another imperial war, we will
likely hear more of such talk.
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