How Is America Going To End, who's most likely to
secede?
By Josh Levin
In the American end times, our government will take one of two forms. One
possibility is that federalism will give way to an all-powerful central
government. (In yesterday's global-warming thought experiment, this was the
climate strongman scenario.) The other option is decentralization—in the absence
of a unifying national interest, the United States of America will fragment and
be supplanted by regional governance.
America was designed to avoid these two extremes—to keep the states and the
national government in balance. The United States will end when the equilibrium
mandated by the Constitution no longer holds. Tomorrow, I'll look at how the
country might transition from democracy to totalitarianism. Today, I'll focus on
America's disintegration.
Predictions of modern America's collapse usually say more about the speaker than
about the country's condition. Igor Panarin, the Russian political scientist who
believes the United States will break into six pieces in 2010, seems to be
extrapolating from what happened to the Soviet Union. Texas Gov. Rick Perry, who
paid lip service to secession at a tax-day rally earlier this year, was less
predicting America's downfall than feeding chum to a riled-up,
"Secede!"-chanting crowd. "If Washington continues to thumb their nose at the
American people," Perry said, "you know, who knows what might come out of that."
Eric Zuelow, a history professor at the University of New England and the editor
of The Nationalism Project, argues that "loud voices" like Perry's bolster the
country's strength. The fact that we can debate our country's legitimacy is a
sign of national health. For the United States to fall to pieces, Zuelow says,
it'll take more than a demagogue on a PA. Americans will have to come to believe
they're no longer Americans.
It wasn't always certain that the states would be as united as they are today.
In An Empire Wilderness, Robert D. Kaplan explains that James Madison, one of
the authors of the Federalist Papers, envisioned America as "an enormous
geographical space with governance but without patriotism, in which the federal
government would be a mere 'umpire,' refereeing competing interests." There are
regional and ideological differences in the modern United States: People in the
Deep South and the Pacific Northwest eat different foods, have different
accents, and (generalizing broadly) have different lifestyles and values. But as
compared with a place like the USSR, a constructed nation with immense regional
diversity, the United States is bound together tightly by its shared origins, a
common language and culture, and a widely held belief in the country's
mythologies (American exceptionalism, self-reliance, and social mobility). In
times of perceived danger, Americans pull together. After 9/11, Zuelow says, "I
don't care where you were in the country, the response was We've been attacked.
… It wasn't, We eat grits and We eat salmon."
What kinds of countries fall apart? Jason Sorens, a political scientist at the
University at Buffalo who studies contemporary secessionist movements, says that
ethnicity, economics, and ideology all come into play. A secessionist sweet spot
typically lies in a region with an embedded minority that has a common language
and a history of prior independence. Latvia and Lithuania fit those
requirements, as do the Serbs in Bosnia and Canada's Quebecois. According to
Sorens' models, it's no surprise that there aren't any large-scale movements to
break up the United States—the country is too prosperous and too cohesive. (Sorens'
own Free State Project—a push to get libertarians to swarm New Hampshire and
influence local politics—is "not a secessionist movement," he says, though
"there are a lot of people [in the project] who would support that as a last
resort.")
That's not to say that everyone who lives in America is content with the state
of the union. As Wikipedia's "list of U.S. state secession proposals" indicates,
there's no shortage of groups that want the country to split up. American
secessionism, however, is less a populist movement than a collection of cranky,
lonesome idealists. Thomas Naylor, the brains behind the Second Vermont
Republic—a group that bills itself as "perhaps the foremost active secessionist
organization in the country"—bemoans the fact that his movement shares the
separatist marquee with less serious-minded folk. Naylor mentions one squadron
of Long Islanders who've given their "new country" a national animal (Atlantic
blue marlin) and a national crustacean (blue crab). The League of the South is
also a perpetual source of heartburn for Naylor—the retro-Confederate group
insists on singing Dixie at meetings and has a strange obsession with returning
American spelling to its traditional Southern roots. By contrast, Naylor likes
what he sees out of the Texas Nationalist Movement. That independence-espousing
organization doesn't appear to be racist, homophobic, or violent, Naylor says,
though on the last count "you can never be sure."
Naylor is more soft-spoken than you'd expect for someone who regularly refers to
America as an "evil empire." He is 73 years old, stands a sturdy 6 feet 3, and
has longish white hair that gives him the look of a founding father. A retired
Duke economics professor, he was inspired to come to Vermont in 1993 after
seeing an Oprah episode on downshifting your life. (One of the guests was a man
who moved to Vermont to run a country inn.) In Secession: How Vermont and All
the Other States Can Save Themselves From the Empire, Naylor writes that
American civilization "promotes affluenza, technomania, e-mania, megalomania,
robotism, globalization, and imperialism." The Second Vermont Republic aspires
to dissolve the union nonviolently and return Vermont to the independent status
it held briefly in the late 18th century. Naylor believes the mystique of a free
Vermont or a free Novacadia—a secessionist joint venture with Maine, New
Hampshire, and Canada's four Atlantic provinces—would catalyze separatism
throughout America. Ben and Jerry's is "not in the ice cream business," he
explains. "They [are] in the Vermont business. We're in the Vermont business
also."
I'm eating lunch at an outdoor cafe in Waitsfield, Vt., with Naylor and Rob
Williams, the editor of the independence-espousing Vermont Commons newspaper.
Secession, according to Williams, is "as American an impulse as apple pie." The
Declaration of Independence marked the United States' secession from the British
Empire. New England considered leaving the U.S. during the War of 1812, and
Maine seceded from Massachusetts in 1820. Up until the Civil War, nobody
questioned the idea that breaking free from the central government was legal and
justifiable under the right circumstances. Today, Williams admits, mutual
revulsion at the idea of secession is one of the few things the left and right
can agree on. "Abraham Lincoln did a number on us," he says.
Naylor ultimately wants the Vermont legislature to call a statewide convention
to consider articles of secession. That's not happening soon, even in the land
of Bernie Sanders. Kirkpatrick Sale, the founder of the secessionist think tank
the Middlebury Institute (and, at 72, the other grand old man of American
secessionism), acknowledges that it was "in the depths of the Bush
administration that this secession movement began and gained strength." Sale
feared that left-wing enchantment with Barack Obama would hinder his cause, but
he's been heartened by the progress of the "state sovereignty movement"—bills
being pushed by state lawmakers who want to curb federal authority.
At this point, the state sovereignty push reeks of wishful separatist thinking.
But the fact that secession is a marginal idea today doesn't mean it won't ever
come to pass. How might secession transition from a fringe idea to a
country-ender? In my conversations with economists, political scientists, and
futurists, three broad themes came up that I found the most persuasive: economic
collapse, the rise of localism, and North American reshuffling.
Peter Schiff is one of the recession's biggest winners. The Connecticut
stockbroker, once a cable news piñata on account of his predictions of economic
catastrophe, is now celebrated for his eerily accurate prophecies. Schiff, who
has formed an exploratory committee in anticipation of a potential 2010 Senate
run, believes America is going under thanks to a "phony economy" built on
borrowed cash. The stimulus, he argues, will make things worse by temporarily
taping over structural problems with unsustainable borrowing and spending.
"After we do the wrong thing and destroy [the value of] our money, are we going
to become a totalitarianist country?" Schiff asks. "Will there be a Soviet
revolution or an American revolution?"
Let's say there's an American revolution—who leaves first? Once the feds "start
imposing just huge taxes," Schiff says, the states that have to pay more in than
they're getting back out will pull their stars off the flag. Schiff lists Texas
and California as potential pull-out candidates, whereas "Florida probably wants
to stay because of all the Social Security money."
If taxation doesn't cause a mass revolt, economic polarization could yank
everything apart. "The Sun Belt states and the interior West are growing faster
than the Midwest," says secession scholar Jason Sorens. "If they get rich
enough, they might see their membership in the U.S. as burdensome if they have
to support dying industries in Ohio and New York." (Sorens apparently hasn't
considered the possibility that Cleveland and Buffalo will become America's
oases thanks to global warming.)
A place like Texas has the means to support itself as an independent country.
What it needs is an ideological spark. Northern Italy's Lega Nord could be a
potential model. Rather than emphasize a linguistic or ethnic difference, the
political party has espoused independence for economic reasons. In Italy's 1996
general elections, the political party won 10 percent of the vote nationwide by
calling on rich, conservative northerners to go it alone in a state called
Padania. In the last eight years, Lega Nord has moderated its separatist
rhetoric as it's become a part of Silvio Berlusconi's coalition government.
(Still, the party is regularly accused of xenophobia.)
For secession to tear the United States to pieces, somebody has to jump first.
"As states leave, more states want to leave," Schiff says, "which is why the
government will try to say you can't leave, or we'll invade you." The Second
Vermont Republic's Thomas Naylor agrees that someone has to set a secessionist
example. But Naylor doesn't believe that the U.S. would try to "enslave free
Vermont." (His farcical suggestion: "They could burn all the maples and destroy
all the black-and-white Holsteins.") If American troops did invade Montpelier,
he says, it would destroy America's moral authority just as attempts to stamp
out anti-Communist movements in the Soviet Bloc eventually undercut the USSR.
The Institute for the Future's Jamais Cascio contends that "very few national
entities maintain their structural coherence for much more than a couple hundred
years." In Cascio's 50-year forecast "The Long Crisis," the United States breaks
into eight pieces. By 2054, the Midwestern states have invaded the Gulf and
Southern Federation, with New Columbia (the Atlantic seaboard) and Pacifica (the
West coast) supplying arms to the Southern insurgents.
What could precipitate such a schism? Cascio foresees a shift to localism—a
focus on eating where we live, on supplying our own energy (micro-wind and
micro-solar), and on fabricating our own products (and possibly weapons) with
industrial-grade 3-D printers. Allen Buchanan, the author of Secession: The
Morality of Political Divorce From Fort Sumter to Lithuania and Quebec, says
that (while he's not predicting this) climate change, a pandemic, or an economic
collapse could lead to what he calls sauve qui peut secession—"let him save
himself who can."
This idea of a reversion back to a time when no kingdom or ruler had enough
power to control a large territory squares with collapsists like Dmitry Orlov
and James Howard Kunstler, who argue that America will revert to pre-industrial
times in the post-petroleum age. In an essay called "Thriving in the Age of
Collapse," Orlov writes that a dearth of oil will force people "to stay put most
of the time, perhaps making seasonal migrations, and to make use of what they
have available in the immediate vicinity." Not one to dwell on the negative, the
Russian writer points out that societal collapse boosts one's health and vigor:
"[T]he air will be much cleaner, there will be no traffic jams, … [l]ocal
culture will make a comeback, [and p]eople will get plenty of exercise walking
around, carrying things, and performing manual labor."
In 1995, a referendum on Quebec independence failed by less than 1 percent of
the vote. What might have happened if Quebec had broken away, and Canada were
severed into Western and Eastern chunks? As in Italy, where tax receipts from
the wealthy North prop up the more-destitute South, Canada's richer west side
(Alberta and British Columbia) helps support the poorer Maritime provinces back
east. Without Quebec keeping the country contiguous, Canada's Westerners might
want to go it alone rather than export their riches.
What would happen to the U.S. upon Canada's disintegration? North America's
borders have remained pretty much static for the last century. (The same can't
be said for, say, Europe and Africa.) But this stability shouldn't imply that
our dividing lines make sense. In 1981's Nine Nations of North America, Joel
Garreau argued that the continent's borders don't reflect how we live. Garreau's
nine nations map—which highlighted regions where people share common values,
culture, and natural resources—wasn't intended to be predictive of a future
breakup. Still, something like Canadian breaking could bring on a continental
reordering. British Columbia might join Washington and Oregon to form a Pacific
Northwest partnership—Ecotopia? The Republic of Cascadia?—and the Maritime
provinces could flit away from Canada to become a part of Novacadia.
In the absence of logical borders, how have we stayed intact? Mostly because the
Quebecois remain the continent's only serious nationalist movement—a sizable
embedded minority with its own identity and its own language. One path to
continental disintegration is the radicalization of America's Quebecois:
Spanish-speaking immigrants. No matter what immigration laws go on the books,
the U.S. will still need cheap labor, and Mexicans and Central Americans will
continue to head north to pursue this country's higher wages. By 2050, by which
time whites will be a minority in America, Hispanics are expected to make up 29
percent of the population.
Can we all just get along? In a lecture at the 2006 Pop!Tech conference, Juan
Enriquez—the author of The Untied States of America: Polarization, Fracturing,
and Our Future—said it depends on how we treat Spanish speakers. If Lou Dobbs
and the English-only crowd become the architects of America's foreign policy,
Enriquez argues, America is in peril. "How you treat people today is going to be
remembered for a long time," Enriquez says, noting that the license plates in
Quebec read Je me souviens—I remember.
Charles Truxillo, a professor at the University of New Mexico, says it's too
late to save the United States we know today. Truxillo believes this century
will see the birth of La República del Norte, a sovereign "Mexicano nation" in
what's now the American Southwest. "The U.S. ripped these areas off from Mexico
in 1848," he says, and the debt has come due. Rather than fight what's
inevitable, Truxillo says North America should toss out the melting pot and
learn to love "autonomous sovereign zones"—a French-speaking nation for the
Quebecois, a Spanish-speaking nation for the Latinos, and an English-speaking
nation for the Anglophones.
It's no accident that, when you ponder both secession and climate change, the
most convincing end-of-America scenarios involve Canada and Mexico. For the last
160 years, America has been the hemisphere's alpha dog. But the United States is
not a closed system—we're tightly integrated with our neighbors, and the forces
that might crush the U.S. will also affect them. One conspiracy theory, pushed
by loony swift-boat-truther Jerome Corsi, has it that the U.S., Canada, and
Mexico will soon share a common passport, currency, and military. While the
propaganda about the looming North American Union is completely bogus, it's
certainly true that we are not alone. Take away the artificial borders and we're
all just North Americans, clinging to each other for life. If America ends, so
will Canada and Mexico. And if Canada or Mexico goes down the tubes, we won't be
long for this continent either.
"I think that even if states seceded from the U.S. the citizens of those states still would consider themselves Americans they just wouldn't think of themselves as United Staters." PCB