@Secession_US

3 Followers
28 Following
13 Posts
We want to explore the possibilities and ramifications of peacefully dissolving the United States based on partisan ideology. We'll need help from constitutional law experts, economists, natural resource professionals and others.
New post up on Substack this morning. What is a "Convention of States" and could it actually work?
https://open.substack.com/pub/nationaldivorce/p/convention-of-states?r=n9hsw&utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=web
Convention of States

An untested process

National Divorce

@jbf1755 On MSNBC, Jamelle Bouie said something like: 'they've given up on trying to persuade people.'

That has stuck with me. It's true here. On the Ohio vote. On the defiance of subpoenas. It's all the same thing--they don't have good ideas and have to force them now.

New Substack post up yesterday on reasons why many Americans are "mad enough to leave" the Union.
https://nationaldivorce.substack.com/p/why-are-folks-mad-enough-to-leave
Why are folks mad enough to leave?

Analyzing the motivators for secession

National Divorce
Last week's Substack post, asking if the US is too big to govern, https://open.substack.com/pub/nationaldivorce/p/are-we-too-big-to-govern?r=n9hsw&utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=web listed some of the countries at the top of the World Happiness Report. Many of them are Nordic/European countries. I just came across a listing of countries rated by level of trust in government. Many happy countries are also high on governmental trust.
https://data.oecd.org/chart/7g2S
Are we too big to govern?

In the summer of 1787, a group of people - all white men - gathered in Philadelphia in a convention to write the governing documents for the new United States. The Revolutionary War had been over for almost four years, and the first agreement uniting the colonies, the Articles of Confederation, had proven to be woefully inadequate.

National Divorce

In an article written shortly after the Brexit vote in the UK, Philip Bump of the Washington Post wrote a tongue-in-cheek guide on "How to Secede" for US states. His list of options:
1) Ask Nicely
2) Amend the Constitution
3) Armed Rebellion
4) Await the Collapse of the US

We think that #2 offers the best chance that unhappy states could leave the Union without bloodshed.

Your thoughts?

New Substack post up today about whether the US is too big to govern as one entity. Let me know what you think.
https://open.substack.com/pub/nationaldivorce/p/are-we-too-big-to-govern?r=n9hsw&utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=web
Are we too big to govern?

In the summer of 1787, a group of people - all white men - gathered in Philadelphia in a convention to write the governing documents for the new United States. The Revolutionary War had been over for almost four years, and the first agreement uniting the colonies, the Articles of Confederation, had proven to be woefully inadequate.

National Divorce
TEXITCon continues today in Waco, Texas. Their major effort is to qualify a secession question on the 2024 primary ballot. texitpetition.com
#Texit
A very good analysis of "how we got here" is Heather Cox Richardson's new book "Democracy Awakening." She documents the social upheaval since the 1970s that has led to the levels of polarization that we see in the US today.
We're developing a step-by-step approach to a #nationaldivorce. Our goal is to allow states to peacefully withdraw from the Union. The Civil War of 1861-1865 took more American lives than ALL of the other wars in which the United States has been involved. #introduction
New polling reported over the weekend shows Trump leading Biden in five of six swing states.
If Trump were to win a second term, we'll see a bunch of the BLUE states investigating a #nationaldivorce.