Question: What would be the problem with dividing the US and Canada into more sovereign nations?We already have enough red-state/blue-state strife. Wouldn't it be better just to split the two groups off into separate countries? Of course, America's ability to strong-arm the rest of the world would diminish, but wouldn't it be worth it not to have to deal with those inbred, cousin-fucking, bible-thumping, xenophobic, knuckle-dragging, war-mongering conservative assholes or those limp-wristed, arugula-munching, appeasing, peacenik, sodomite, euphemism-spouting, politically-correct liberal fucktards screwing up the whole country?Here is a picture I paintsbrushed of the US and Canada divided into a number of smaller nations.Liberals get Canada, Quebec, the North East and the Great Lakes area and California. Conservatives get the South and Midwest, (and for Theocrats) Texas and Utah. (nobody cares about Texas or Utah. Good riddance.) Libertarians of various stripes (ranging from nearly conservative to nearly anarchist) get the high arctic, New England and the Canadian Maritime Provinces, Hawaii and the Western US.P.S. You may find the libertarian areas excessively large. Keep in mind, however, that these only represent 11.5% of the current population of the US and Canada. Assuming a certain amount of migration, its not completely unreasonable to assume that libertarians (using a lose definition of "libertarian") could gain political control of such areas. In the end though, this is my hypothetical situation, so go fuck yourself.P.P.S. Yes, this is the sort of thing I do when I'm drunk on a Monday night...[Edited on September 2, 2008 at 1:34 AM. Reason : pic]
9/2/2008 1:25:28 AM
Zombie Lincoln would put an end to it pretty quick.
9/2/2008 1:47:45 AM
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jesusland_mapGod bless Wikipedia.
9/2/2008 2:05:51 AM
I don't know what kind of ideas you normally have, but this is probably your worst one yet.
9/2/2008 2:40:23 AM
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/26501863/
9/2/2008 6:44:33 AM
It worked out well in A Handmaid's Tale.
9/2/2008 7:25:15 AM
That map brings back some memories of RISK, complete with crazy nation namesnot sure I ever made it through an entrie game though
9/2/2008 8:06:55 AM
Look the question isn't about the map, the question is about separatism.Is the US too big? Aren't there too many conflicting groups and interests fighting over the same goverment? Wouldn't it be better to be able to just give some of those groups the finger and send them on their separate way?Smaller countries have a number of advantages over large ones. First of all, they simply can't get away with as much shit. A lot of the dumb things that big countries do would simply be impossible for a small country. Take trade. The US has a number taxes, tariffs and restrictions on the import and export of various goods. If those restrictions were total, if no trade was permitted with the rest of the world, then our standard of living would drop (a lot), but the US still has enough resources and division of labor to maintain a technological civilization. A smaller country couldn't do this at all, and even the sort of trade barriers which now exist would be felt more acutely. A small country would be forced by necessity to integrate itself much more seamlessly into the world economy. With smaller countries it's much easier to move to the next country over. Small countries will thus be forced to compete more fiercely over businesses and taxpayers. It's much easier to move a factory or your family a few hundred miles than to have to move thousands of miles to find a saner or more agreeable political jurisdiction. This competition of smaller, regional governments to attract and keep taxpaying residents and productive businesses should tend to produce more efficient, responsive and accountable government that's less burdensome and oppressive.
9/2/2008 9:42:06 AM
The problem with the proposal isn't so much in the end result, it's the process to get there. A peaceful transition turning two sovereign nations into 11 new powers? I suppose it's possible. I also think there is something to be said for the sustainability of smaller (geographically) nations. In the very long run, it may be easier to sustain smaller regions politically and economically.If we were to say say "I'm in" how do we get there from here? A map such as the one you've outlined could possibly evolve over a long period of time, through a series of conflicts. Or some cataclysmic event could force the Populus to operate on a localized scale more quickly. (Nuclear war being the most obvious candidate, but a pandemic or possibly Peak Oil worst case scenario might get us there.) There are also rumors (I believe on the Internets) of a global financial crisis as a result of the current trade system coming to terms with drastically higher energy costs at the same time the cost of living in developing nations is quickly going up with the standard of living.Then there is the question of how does North America then compete with other more singularly powerful world entities (both Economically, and quite possibly militarily) A North American Union of sorts? Which gets us back to square one (or possibly worse.)[Edited on September 2, 2008 at 10:00 AM. Reason : .]
9/2/2008 9:58:46 AM
More like the United States of Europe.
9/2/2008 10:05:59 AM
9/2/2008 10:17:46 AM
^^.... that doesn't make any sense. at all[Edited on September 2, 2008 at 10:18 AM. Reason : .]
9/2/2008 10:18:23 AM
^^^^ You're right. It seems unlikely that the US would simply let something like a state, or group of states, peacefully separate from the Union. Democracy, its seems, means that whoever happens to be in power ought to retain that power by force, not that people should be free to choose how they wish to be governed. The only way it could occur is if there was a war and the separatists won, or if very nearly all the states seceded at once, leaving no large block loyal to the former central government.On the other hand, as unlikely as it now seems, something like a complete financial meltdown could shake people up enough to allow a peaceful dissolution to occur, a la the Soviet Union.But what about a fundamentally different approach. What if a single town, or a rural county, were to secede? Would the state government and the federal government have the political will to employ the necessary brutality to bring them back to heel by force? If the secessionist area were not large enough to pose a threat to the central government, would the negative publicity of butchering a few thousand helpless civilians outweigh the potential benefit of bringing them back under subjugation?[Edited on September 2, 2008 at 10:29 AM. Reason : ^^]
9/2/2008 10:29:01 AM
don't they already do that to things like religious compounds?
9/2/2008 10:31:03 AM
No, it's just that the inhabitants of religious compounds have an unfortunate habit of committing suicide when they get massacred by federales.
9/2/2008 10:52:43 AM
Wouldn't it be easier to keep the federal government but to utilize state governments like the original Founding Fathers intended?
9/2/2008 11:27:45 AM
The soviet union broke apart because it was a forced and artificial empire in the first place. Russia simply lost the power to hold the other states in line, so they broke off. None of the states in America want to leave, I don't see any US state except possibly Alaska trying to break off even in the case of total economic collapse, maybe Puerto Rico and other US territories.The people would never vote for this, the only way it happens is if it is forced on the US and Canada by a tyrannical government, and for some reason I don't see a tyrannical government willingly relinquishing control of most of the government.The only way this happens is in the case of nuclear war resulting in pretty much the entire US government's destruction.
9/2/2008 11:34:00 AM
I could see California breaking off before Alaska. For one thing there has been several occasions of conflicting stances btw state and federal law. For instance medical marijuana
9/2/2008 11:45:54 AM
9/2/2008 12:57:53 PM
9/2/2008 3:09:02 PM
a country of you, prepare to be annexed
9/2/2008 5:55:54 PM
LOL
9/2/2008 8:55:14 PM
I can't claim to have read the whole thread, but here's my bit:
9/2/2008 10:01:14 PM
9/2/2008 10:59:57 PM
9/3/2008 12:06:28 PM
9/3/2008 12:43:37 PM
I haven't read any of this, but I'd point out (if it hasn't been before) that the cultural lines are drawn less on state borders than on metropolitan, suburban, exurban, lines. Ask a guy in Northern California or the Michigan UP if he's a liberal. Ask someone in Austin if he's a Bush supporter.
9/3/2008 1:14:34 PM
9/3/2008 2:05:57 PM
Texas would definitely be America's Germany.
9/3/2008 3:31:07 PM
I don't know. America is more akin to being north america's germany. After all, we did invade all of our neighboring countries at one point in time.
9/3/2008 3:36:57 PM
I'm sure if we sliced America up, one of our successor states would definitely step in to fill the Germany role.
9/3/2008 5:49:45 PM
Oh, I didn't notice that Hawaii was a free state. BINGO!1!11!!
9/3/2008 8:07:21 PM
9/4/2008 4:18:12 PM
How about Republica del Norte for the Southwest?http://www.aztlan.net/homeland.htm
9/4/2008 8:59:08 PM