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Would the United States be better off as the Divided States?

Results so far:

No
66% 202 votes Total: 305 votes
Yes
34% 103 votes

by Bruno Somerset

Created on: August 10, 2009   Last Updated: August 12, 2009

Texas Governor Rick Perry caused a national uproar recently by suggesting that if Washington continues to "ignore the will of the people", then secession is a possibility that should be considered. What seems to be lost in the almost universal condemnation of Perry is that secession may not be such a bad idea, and not just for Texas.

Before venturing too far into the idea of secession, one thing should be made clear (since even Gov. Perry seemed to get it wrong): Texas did not enter the United States with the option to secede at a later time. Texas joined with the option of dividing itself into four additional states; this was pushed by Southern Senators prior to the Civil War who wanted to ensure that the balance between free states and slave states was maintained.

This caveat is of no consequence today, and those who think subdividing the state would add eight more Republican Senators don't understand the makeup of Texas; South and Central Texas would likely vote Democrat, so at best the net gain would be four Senators, hardly worth the monumental problems such a split would cause.

As for the issue of secession, while it is not a right (even for Texas), it is a fairly American idea. The state of West Virginia exists today because it seceded from Virginia after Virginia seceded from the Union in 1861. There is an ongoing secessionist movement in, of all places, the state of Vermont. And obviously the original thirteen colonies broke away from England, which while not a secession per se, in essense had the same result.

It is somewhat ironic that a nation that has supported the breakaway of any number of countries over the years (the Baltic States, Bosnia, Kosovo, Ukraine, Taiwan, East Timor, etc.) would be so opposed to the notion here. And for those who would say the countries mentioned above had been held in place by force, tell that to the states of the old Confederacy.

It is more and more apparent that the United States has become a forced marriage, one where neither partner really wants to be with the other, but stays as much out of habit as anything else.

For all the talk of Republicans and Democrats as two monoliths encompassing our political landscape, a Democrat from Texas is more conservative than a Republican from Massachusetts. The virtual stalemate that has existed between the two parties since 2000 is likely to continue idefinitely, in spite of the Obama win last year.

There will be fluctuations where one party seems to take the upper hand,

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