Wednesday, October 03, 2007

281 - Radical Vermont ...



I have traveled to many of the US states in my lifetime. Mostly eastern states like New York, Maine, Massatucets, New Hampshire, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Florida but also Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, Georgia, Michigan, California and Nevada. My favorite state, by far, is Vermont. It is beautiful. It is green. It is small town America. It is quiet, safe (from what I ever saw) and simple. Great for outdoor life, farming and fun. Does this sound like a travel commercial for the state?

I have traveled to many of the US states in my lifetime. Mostly eastern states like New York, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Florida but also Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, Georgia, Michigan, California and Nevada. My favorite state, by far, is Vermont. It is beautiful. It is green. It is small town America. It is quiet, safe (from what I ever saw) and simple. Great for outdoor life, farming and fun. Does this sound like a travel commercial for the state?

There is a very real idea that Vermont may leave the union and the following piece states some very tangible reasons for doing so. It was written by a Vermonter who is all for secession. I have edited the piece in order to make it shorter and have changed the point of view to that of an outsider.

I find this to be a very informative article that is also a history lesson.

The Case for Vermont's Secession

If the principle were to prevail of a common law [i.e., a single government] being in force in the United States . . . it would become the most corrupt government on earth.”

Thomas Jefferson

Over the course of the twentieth century the United States were replaced by a confederation of special interests. Indeed, at the center America resembles a League of Interests more than it does a nation. Loyalty, resources, policy, passion and even principle—the elements that comprise the public weal—are now magnetized and drawn not to the commonwealth but to the iron pegs of special interests that have been driven deep into the heart of the republic.

Consequently, the American national government is imploding. In many respects this is a worldwide phenomenon. The age of nation-states is ending.

With nationalist structures on the wane, new smaller unions (often bio-regional) are emerging. The work of nation-states will shift toward their roles as part of larger, transnational structures, and their attention will be siphoned away from the micromanagement of their own societies. In this vacuum lies the future of democracy.

The idea is that the work of government should be spread out and thus become more democratic. We must decentralize, deregulate, and re-em­power, not under the assumption that this will mean less government, but under the knowledge that it will spawn a more participatory politics and a thicker, stronger, more democratic governance.

To achieve this vision, the world desperately needs a nation with the democratic infrastructure and requisite resources to lead a peaceful transition away from the quest for empire and toward a global union on the principles of peace, justice, and equality.

At its best America could and should be that nation. But America is not now at its best and it hasn’t been for some time. The problem we face is much deeper than George Bush and the war in Iraq; if our passion and commitment is fired only by that furnace, we are doomed. America’s problem is as much a fault of the liberals as it is the conservatives. It is as much a fault of the Democrats as it is the Republicans.

Thus it is the imperialism of Washington inward against its own nation that must be stopped before America can be restored as the planet’s best hope for a just and peaceful world. We have destroyed our own democracy. By what logic can we now argue that we are intellectually and morally equipped to “export” democracy to other regions of the world? Export what democracy?

Now there is about as much real democracy left in America as there is oil.

And that is where Vermont comes in. For in Vermont one finds a national reservoir of social capital and real democracy. It is time for us to act. Waiting for incremental reform is too dangerous. The political establishment shows no inclination to see the handwriting on the wall. This is bipartisan myopia. When George Bush and Ted Kennedy join forces to wrest control of our education system from us and place it in the hands of that intellectual wasteland we call Congress, it is time for something different.
We should seriously consider the case for Vermont’s secession from the Union.

My principal concern with such a proposal is that, if successful, a Vermont secession might be followed by other states. While New York or California could not secede without irreparably harming the Union, Vermont can.

Vermonters are good Americans. But somewhere along the way they've switched churches on us. The patriotic thing to do is to politely, yet firmly, excuse ourselves.

What this country needs is a good swift slap alongside the head.

A loving slap, self-administered.

A slap that says, “Clean up your act or we’re gone.”

Vermont is just the state to give it.

Vermonters stand on the high ground. For two centuries they have worked to enhance the Union. They have been patient. They have carried more than their share of the load. But enough is enough. Every year the federal government applies every red cent Vermonters pay in income taxes to scandals and pork. At the time the first Vermont secession movement was getting underway in the early 1990s, it was pointed out that what the government had lost in the FMHA, HUD, and S&L scandals would take every cent of Vermont’s tax contribution from then until the year 2052 to pay back. Their contribution to the national government for the next half-century has already been spent. Better put, it has already been lost.

In Washington the interest on the debt threatens to take one-third of the tax money each year. To retire the debt would require a stack of thousand dollar bills more than two hundred miles high.

Leaving the Union will involve the breaking of no promises. Vermont’s contract with America made two hundred years ago has been repeatedly ignored by a national government with an unquenchable thirst for power. The American Constitution ensured that "The powers not delegated to the U.S. by the Constitution nor prohibited by it to the states, are reserved to the states respectively, or to the people." Is there anyone left in America today over the age of six who does not understand that the reserved power clause has become a joke?

Several years ago, Vermont decided it was hopeless to pursue a case before the courts whereby they sought to retain the right to set a retirement age for their own judges. And when the feds want control over something so clearly a state's right that even the most centrist judge can't find a way to make it "constitutional," Congress takes the right away by threatening to withhold their own money from them. These are called “crossover sanctions." In the 1980s Ronald Reagan, in an act of mind-wrenching hypocrisy, convinced Congress to withhold highway repair funds from states like Vermont unless they raised our drinking age to twenty-one.

Vermont’s patience with the federal government is more commendable still when one understands that there is no state in the Union as historically predisposed to secession as Vermont. Vermont was America's first frontier. It was born free, never a colony of the Crown, never a territory of some distant power. For fourteen years (1777–1791) it existed as an independent republic doing those things nations did in those days—coining money, raising armies, engaging in foreign relations. No state, including Texas, governed itself more thoroughly or longer before giving up its nationhood and joining the Union.

Vermont sat out the War of 1812, their beef cows feeding the British army in Canada—a move we can remind our northern neighbor of during secession. Vermont also ignored the Fugitive Slave Act. Vermont Supreme Court Justice Theophilus Harrington demanded a "Bill of Sale from the Almighty" before he would return a runaway slave.

In 1867 Vermont provided a staging ground for the Irish Fenians, who attacked Canada from Franklin, Vermont. United States marshals had been sent to Vermont to halt the process; they were ignored.

In 1917, before America declared war on Germany, Vermont did so, by appropriating one million dollars (real money in those days) for war against Germany. The largest newspaper in the state editorialized that if Vermont insisted on fighting the Germans all by herself, we should raise taxes instead of issuing bonds to pay for it! Earlier, Vermont’s governor had made the following public promise: “If America goes to war, Vermont will surely follow.”

In 1927 the worst national disaster in the state's history struck. After the flood, the President of the United States, a Vermonter named Calvin Coolidge, offered federal help. Replied Vermont’s Governor John Weeks, “Vermont will take care of its own."

A few years later the nation offered to bail Vermont out of the Depression with what would have been the biggest public works program in the history of the state—an asphalt highway down the top of Vermont's famed Green Mountains, every square inch of tar poured above the 2500 foot mark. Nope, said Vermont to an astonished America. We will not have our lofty peaks hitched together with pavement. In the most democratic expression of environmental consciousness in American history, Vermonters assembled in their town meetings in March of 1936 and voted to reject the proposal and all the federal loot that went with it. In the 1960s, Vermont’s innovative and highly emulated land-use reforms protected this land from any development.

In September 1941 the Vermont legislature passed a law providing funds for Vermont soldiers to fight Japan two months before the bombs fell on Pearl Harbor. We declared war on Japan before Washington did.

No state, including Texas, can match Vermont's thirst for independence. Still, to think about secession conjures up the worst kind of imaginings. But they are false fears. Consider the most common arguments:

Vermont is too small to be a nation again.

Sitting in the United Nations today are the representatives of twenty nations with populations smaller than Vermont's. Each of these nations has voting rights in the General Assembly equal to those of the United States of America. More important, small nations have been asked to sit on the Security Council. Guido de Marco from Malta, representing a nation with two-thirds the population of Vermont, was elected president of the 45th General Assembly.

Vermont’s tiny economy would be swallowed up by giant international trading systems.

In actuality, small nations have great advantages in the international marketplace. Gary S. Becker, a highly respected University of Chicago professor, writes, "Bigger isn't necessarily better. . . . Smaller countries tend to be more nimble traders in international markets, offsetting their lack of economies of scale." Vermont products have always had a special mystique. They are prized outside Vermont as much for what we are as for what they are. Anyone who thinks Vermont ice cream or Vermont maple syrup or Vermont cheese would suffer if Vermont became the Switzerland of North America needs to read an introductory textbook on marketing.

A little state like Vermont is too dependent on the federal dole to go it alone.

Question: would you rather have $10,000 to spend any way you want or $11,500 that you have to spend as I say? Vermont's return on its tax dollar from the federal government is much smaller than most people believe. A fair estimate is that we get back about $1.15 for every dollar we pay in. And even this small positive ratio is declining.

When one considers the hassle one must go through to get that extra 15 cents on a dollar (grant applications, dealings with the federal bureaucracy), the benefit of federal money may already be nil. Much of the money from Washington is spent on unnecessary things in order to get funds for things we do need. And don’t forget that every dime returned over and above what we pay in is apt to be borrowed money (deficit money).

Even some of the original dollar we get back for each dollar we put in probably comes back in bad (borrowed) money. In other words, Vermont's "great deal" looks like this: for every dollar Vermonters pay in federal taxes, most of it comes back in cash but the rest in the form of a loan the government has extracted from the American people.

It is true that Vermont benefits from something we might call "national infrastructure," the most obvious examples of which are the military and the interstate highways. But think of the 1.3 billion Vermont tax dollars that go toward U.S. defense-related expenditures each year. Vermont will need no army after secession. A couple of dozen more state troopers and a militia organized from local fire and rescue organizations, at no expense to the Republic, will be enough. Think they could come up with some other ways to spend that 1.3 billion?

If they tried to secede, the United States would invade.

American tanks rolling into Bennington? It'll never happen. All they have to do is simply assert their independence and leave. The very act of secession will be their greatest strength. They have an open border to the north with a country that owes Vermont for their benign neglect during the War of 1812 and to a province of that country with secessionist ideas of its own.

It takes big government to solve big issues.

Vermont Supreme Court Justice John Dooley, stated that, "Acid rain won't be ended by cute little nations like a new Republic of Vermont." Wrong. The history of the last two decades has shown an increasing incapacity of the federal government to make progress where real conflicts among the states exist. Mediocrity is the best you can hope for when problems and benefits are diffused over large systems.

The federal government likes to "facilitate" cooperation and then take credit for natural impulses for consensus that are locally inspired. It is the states and localities that are "putting Washington to shame," as one publication put it, in the field of environmental protection. Vermont finds again and again that Washington is a hindrance to attempts to protect the environment. It can be argued, for instance, that the federal government caused the acid rain problem because it was forced to compromise over smokestacks and scrubbers when it sought to protect Midwestern cities from their own pollution in the 1970s.

What about the Bill of Rights?

Many of the people attending the secession debates seemed worried about giving up the protections guaranteed under the Bill of Rights in the Federal Constitution. One wonders why. Vermont’s record on civil rights and liberties is far stronger than America’s. It was the constitution that first outlawed slavery. It was the constitution that first provided universal voting rights for all freemen.

It was Vermont that provided much of the leadership in the anti-slavery movement. Lincoln fought the war to save the Union. Vermont fought the war to free the slaves.

It was from Vermont that the first anti-Christian book ever published on the North American continent was penned.

It was a Vermont Senator that led the fight to censor McCarthy. It was in Vermont that gays were first provided the opportunity to form civil unions. It is in Vermont that a citizen’s Bill of Rights guarantee to keep and bear arms is strongly defended—not for hunting, not for personal protection against wayward citizens, but for what is was intended: to insure that free citizens always have a means to protect themselves against governments, a protection that takes on special meaning as our civil liberties come under attack from Washington, the center of our own nation, our beloved America.

Yes, our beloved America.

But America has gone astray. It needs to be brought home. And what better place to come home to than Vermont, about which the great historian Bernard DeVoto wrote, “There is no more Yankee than Polynesian in me, but when I go to Vermont I feel like I am traveling toward my own place.”

We say to America: We love you, but we love our democracy more. Come back when you are ready to let us practice that democracy in the way you promised us you would when we first agreed to this joint enterprise in 1791. In the meantime, we hereby politely and peacefully excuse ourselves.

I, for one, hope America heeds our call and, like the Bible’s prodigal child, soon comes back to us.

7 Notes to Me:

Southernspeak4 said...

Hey George,

I'd love to comment more on your post, but I can't stay.

You see..um..a couple of weeks ago, some old online "friends" of mine apparently right-clicked on my picture and made me a brand new ID called "youliveinmyhead1?"

Yeah, so this is my read ID.

And that "strange post" you read? Unfortunately, it's all true...and that would be them.:)

Just because I'm paranoid doesn't mean they're not out to get me, hehehe...it's been two years now, I'm not even kidding...and blogger will do nothing about it.

Sorry they involved you...take care...

~d said...

(Of COURSE I was passing by to see if you got this, too!)

Be watching you tonight, George!
(mee-yow!)

Fusion said...

I've been telling people for several years now that America is no longer a democracy but a capialist state, run more and more by business and business interests. Some still say we're the greatest country on earth and will be here forever with our light shining bright. What bullshit. Look at Rome for example. Nothing lasts forever, and we're so far from the ideals that were concieved over 200 years ago, it's laughable. The future of the US is going to be very different I think, how long it takes to change is anybodys guess, but Vermonts stand here is just the beginning to be sure.

Loving Annie said...

Good Wednesday evening to you, George !

And to think, I just wanted to go see Vermont because it is supposed to be so pretty and the Bed&Breakfast Inns so charming...:)

Coming here is always a good education.

Loving Annie

George said...

Hello SouthernSpeak ... frankly I don't know whether to believe you or not ... your story seems rather far fetched ... I know that you cannot right click on a picture and create a new ID. What they may have done id right click and save your picture to their computer ... then go to blogger and create an account in your name.

~d ... I saw you had it as well ... the light is on by the way

Fusion ... Hi, the US is not the place it was years ago but neither is Canada, nor England nor any other place you can think of. But I find the US has been a leader in going to extremes. I actually think it would be a good thing for government to be run like a business, not so much to make profit but to become efficient and follow rules ... not make them up as you go along and ignore those that don't suit you. I agree that the future will be very different but I don't think it will be an overnight change. More than likely it will take years and will be so gradual that citizens won't even notice it until they look at life today and life 20 or 50 years ago.

Hello Annie ... as I mentioned ... Vermont is my absolute favorite state ... especially in the summer ... it's fantastic in the winter if you are a skier/snowboarder.

Go there, whether it is part of the US or not ... it's absolutely beautiful ... the scenery and the people

Keshi said...

u hv travelled ALOT George WOW! I havent evn been to the US :( well not yet...

Just a curious qn...

With so many States in the US, r ppl in distant States VERY different from each other?


Keshi.

George said...

Morning Keshi ... I don't think they are very different from one place to another aside from the accents. The big difference in my opinion is he same as in every other country ... people in small towns are very different from people in big cities