Altered States

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Altered States

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Altered States
The state of Long Island would be bigger than Rhode Island, while the official bird of West Kansas would be the pheasant. Frustrated citizens are trying to redraw borders, add new states and lower taxes. Michael J. Trinklein on how to succeed at seceding.


By MICHAEL J. TRINKLEIN

(See Corrections & Amplifications below .)

Long Island's latest quest to split from New York and become its own state had a promising start last year. Legislators in Suffolk county, upset over a new payroll tax to fund New York City's subways, voted 12-6 in favor of a secession plan. It seemed viable: In terms of square miles, Long Island is bigger than Rhode Island; its gross state product would be larger than that of 20 states. Some optimists even proposed a state bird: the duck.
States That Never Made It on the Map



Objections from the rest of New York effectively killed the idea, but attempts to make Long Island a state will almost certainly return. The proposal was just the most recent in a series of statehood crusades, usually arising from complaints of unfair taxation. During a campaign in the 1890s, one proponent—Long Island sugar magnate Adolph Mollenhauer—said, "We're tired of bosses and bossism." His quote could be the rallying cry of any number of secessionist movements.

Across the country, there have been a persistent and surprising number of attempts to redraw borders and create new states. Last month, objecting to proposals to create a national park in northern Maine, State Rep. Henry Joy submitted legislation to split his state in two. He suggested calling the southern part "Northern Massachusetts," a thinly veiled insult that assured rejection of the legislation. In recent years, new state proposals have cropped up in Florida, Washington, Kansas and Maryland.

Modern quests for statehood may seem like nothing more than odd footnotes, because Americans have largely forgotten that adding and dividing states is one of the primary mechanisms used throughout U.S. history to solve problems and redress grievances. As far back as the proposed state of Franklin in 1785, disaffected regions have attempted to cleave themselves from their mother states. Like most subsequent secessionist movements, the Franklinites believed that the established state government (North Carolina, in this case) wasn't responding to their needs. So, in a workmanlike manner, Franklin unilaterally adopted a constitution, established courts, and elected a governor, John Sevier. Then they decided not to collect any taxes, which meant the state had no revenue to pay a militia. Without a militia, Franklin quickly crumbled.

This sort of idealistic optimism—at the core of the American psyche—is amplified in secessionist movements. We're a can-do people, and if we don't like our state government, we are quite prepared to make a new one. Sometimes the fervor pushes secessionists to the next level, and they attempt to leave the union altogether. The outcome of the Civil War is no deterrent to the outraged. North Dakotans proposed leaving the nation in 1933; Texas governor Rick Perry flirted with the notion in 2009; and just last week, Republicans in Minnesota's 5th District passed a secession resolution.
Albania Makes 51

A look at some would-be states.
[States_Sidebar] Lake County Museum/Getty Images
Boston
Population: 630,000

Angry over a $600,000 tax that Boston was supposed to pay for funding schools statewide in 1919, a state representative filed a bill for the city to secede. Today, it's more populated than Wyoming.
[States_Sidebar] MedioImages/Corbis
Puerto Rico
Population: 3.8 million

Puerto Rico currently handles its own internal affairs, while the U.S. government controls areas like foreign relations and interstate trade. It's similar in size to Connecticut and has more citizens than about half the 50 states.
[States_Sidebar] Comstock/Getty Images;
Long Island
Population: 2.9 million

If it became a state, as some local legislators proposed last year, Long Island would have the highest median household income of any state in the country. Its economy is roughly the size of Kuwait's.
[States_Sidebar] Alamy
Albania
Population: 3.6 million

It may not be a practical idea, given the fact that it's in Europe. But in the early 1990s, some pro-American Albanians pushed for a referendum to declare their country the 51st state.
[States_Sidebar] Getty Images;
Washington, D.C.
Population: 592,000

In 1982 residents voted to make the District of Columbia a state, but Congress denied the bid. Suggested names included Columbia, New Columbia and Hobson. Several groups continue the quest for statehood today.

Seceding from the nation is illegal and, practically speaking, impossible. But seceding from a state to form a new state is allowed by the U.S. Constitution—and the specifications are straightforward. Article IV Section 3 says a proposal first needs to get the approval of the existing state legislature. Dozens of plans have been debated in statehouses over the years, and in a handful of cases, legislatures have passed measures to split their states. In 1819, for example, the Massachusetts legislature voted to release its northern district—unconnected to the rest of the state—to become the new state of Maine.

Similarly, in 1859, California voted in favor of splitting the golden state in two. The San Francisco area was then the fastest-growing place in the world, and the agrarian landowners of southern California pressed hard for the split, fearing domination by north. (In 1860, the census count for San Francisco was 56,802, while the cities of Los Angeles and San Diego combined had just over 5,100 residents.) This plan, which originated with Andres Pico, a prosperous landowner in the south, had the full support of residents of both halves—and the California legislature. However, it didn't pass the next hurdle in the process: sign-off from the U.S. Congress. Preoccupied with the likelihood of civil war, Congress wasn't interested in California's plan to divide.

As with most any major political move, the success of a secession plan doesn't hinge on the rule of law; the key factor is public opinion. That's where history can offer valuable instruction.

For starters, timing is everything. The idea of forming a new state in northwest Virginia first surfaced in the 1770s. Alternately named Vandalia and Westsylvania, the idea never got much traction. Virginia didn't want to give up territory, and residents of the Appalachians lacked the necessary political clout to force a change. But in the early days of the Civil War, the whole nation was in play—the perfect opportunity to implement the cleavage strategy that created West Virginia in 1861.

The state of Jefferson tried to launch at perhaps the worst possible moment of the 20th century. This proposal to form a new state from southern Oregon and the upper reaches of California seemed to reach a tipping point in late 1941. Supporters rallied around the cause of better roads, missing no opportunity to lambaste legislators in Salem and Sacramento. A Jefferson "governor" was elected, city councils and chambers of commerce voted support, and a two-day statehood rally kicked off on Nov. 28. Nine days later, the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor.

History also teaches the value of good branding. Many new-state proposers understood this, and named their states after beloved leaders—Lincoln or Jefferson, for example. Adding "south" or "west" to an established name also seems to engender credibility. Adding "north" apparently has a negative effect; there have been repeated attempts to change North Dakota's name to simply "Dakota" (in 1947, 1983, 1989 and 2001).

There also seems to be a penalty for being too creative. Thomas Jefferson's proposed states of Assenisipia, Polypotamia, and Cherronesus likely caused snickering even in the 1780s. Similarly, the 1970s plan to create a state from Maryland's eastern shore (by residents who were unhappy that their tax dollars didn't stay in their home counties) seemed tenable when the proposed name was Chesapeake—but much less so when some advocates suggested "Atlantis."

Professional persuaders know that the best way to rally public opinion is to create a villain. This is where a lot of secessionists go wrong. They tend to demonize the very state legislatures they need to get the effort passed. West Kansas, for example, was a 1992 proposal to carve a new state out of the oil and gas country of southwestern Kansas.

The plan was a backlash against a statewide school funding plan that increased taxes in the resource-rich parts of the state. Nine counties, with a total population of about 36,000, voted to secede. "Topeka just wants our money," was a common refrain. But contentious statements by western leaders only made the politicians in Topeka steadfast in their resolve to fight the secession.

Better to find an outside villain. Mid-19th century proposals to make Yucatan and Cuba into states, for example, were predicated on fear that foreign governments might establish a presence too close to the U.S. This turned out to be a prescient prediction, all too well-understood by anyone who lived through the Cuban Missile Crisis a century later.

Once the citizens are on board—and the state legislature has approved—the next step is Congress. Congressional decisions on the admission of new states have often split along party lines. That's why any new state that's serious about joining the Union needs a dancing partner. Neither Alaska nor Hawaii would be on the flag without the other. Back in 1959, Alaska had the conservatives' vote, Hawaii the liberals'. In a classic case of political horse-trading, both sides of the aisle got something they wanted.

It's stunning that modern statehood advocates in Puerto Rico and the District of Columbia don't seem to understand this reality. Both oft-proposed states would likely elect two Democratic senators, an obvious deal killer among Republicans in Congress. What these proto-states need is an arranged marriage of sorts with a conservative accomplice.

Such partners do exist. For example, the state of Lincoln, which would meld eastern Washington and northern Idaho, is culturally and geographically defensible; and it's heavily Republican. Among the more durable statehood ideas, Lincoln's been proposed repeatedly for more than a century—the most recent effort, in 2005, was led by Washington State Sen. Bob Morton.

The Republican elephant in the room in any new-state discussion is Texas. To cajole the independent nation of Texas into joining the Union in 1845, Congress offered a unique perk: Texas can slice itself up into two, three, four or even five distinct states. Constitutional scholars argue that any state has that right—but the significant point here is that Texans believe they have special legal cover to create new states. In the mid-1800s most Texans simply assumed this split would take place in short order. Over the years, the Texas legislature considered dozens of permutations. Today, the one-Texas status quo has inertia, but there are strong vestiges of Texas' desire to self-replicate. Under most scenarios, an additional Texas would add Republicans to the Senate.

Taxation without representation is the most common justification for statehood proposals of the last 100 years. Chicago had added a million new residents in the first two decades of the 20th century, bringing the population to 2.7 million in 1920, but rural lawmakers blocked the constitutionally-required reapportionment, admitting they didn't want to give up power. In 1925, the city council voted to begin a secession movement unless the state was redistricted.

The Illinois legislature capitulated—because secession seemed like a real option. In the 1920s, the American map was still very much in flux. Arizona and New Mexico had been states for barely more than a decade. The Philippines were still American soil. And future vice-president John Nance Garner was agitating to slice up his home state of Texas, hoping to create four new U.S. states.

Fresh water has also motivated many statehood proposals. The proposed state of Shasta was a 1950s attempt by northern Californians to protect their water from thirsty farms and cities to the south. A similar story in Florida in 2008 led to a proposed split of that state. The same year, Georgia tried to redraw its border with Tennessee, hoping to tap into an abundant reservoir that lay a tantalizing 50 yards beyond its current boundary.

Texlahoma, a combination of the Texas and Oklahoma panhandles, was one of several proposed states borne of a desire for better roads in the emerging automobile era. Once people got their Model Ts, the rutted and often impassable dirt roads of rural America were no longer tolerable. But state legislatures were slow to react, and threats of secession seemed like the best way for back-country citizens to make their voices heard. Today, the roads problem is largely solved, but it's not too hard to imagine rural Americans of the 21st century mounting a similar campaign if broadband access fails to reach them.

Perhaps the first order of business in any statehood push is to create a 51-star flag (or, if you have followed the instructions above—a 52-star flag) to decorate meetings, rallies and press events. Because there's no particular rule for arranging the stars, proceed with caution. Puerto Rico likes to display a 51-star flag with the stars in a circular configuration. Frankly, this design doesn't have the necessary gravitas. When creating a U.S. flag, the last thing you want to be is trendy.

It's worth noting that difficult economic times could lead to a very different type of statehood proposal: a merger. Strong corporations sometimes absorb weak ones; perhaps the same formula could work for states in bankruptcy. The constitution actually anticipates mergers, outlining a roadmap to statehood for new states "formed by the Junction of two or more States."

Of course, merging states means some politicians would be giving up power, a scenario that's hard to imagine. For example, in 1887, Congress approved a plan to completely eliminate the then-territory of Idaho, merging its land with Washington and Nevada. Even though the Idaho legislature had no official say in the matter, their apoplectic response persuaded President Grover Cleveland to veto the bill. Nonetheless, a major national upheaval—like a collapse of the banking system—could potentially trigger a merger or other realignment of our state borders.

America's state borders generally don't make a lot of sense—often bolting together disparate regions (e.g., Idaho), and separating populations that should be together (e.g., Kansas City, Kan., and Kansas City, Mo.). As long as the map is imperfect, new statehood proposals will keep coming. And if history is any guide, eventually some who secede will succeed.

Corrections & Amplifications

Residents voted to form the new state of West Virginia in 1861, but it didn't enter the union until 1863. Also, Alaskans were expected to lean toward Democratic candidates, and Hawaiians toward Republicans, when those states were admitted to the U.S. in 1959. In addition, the proposed state of Superior would have included Michigan's Upper Peninsula. This article incorrectly states that West Virginia was created in 1861 and that in 1959 Alaska had the conservatives' vote, Hawaii the liberals'. Also, a map that previously accompanied this article incorrectly showed the Upper Peninsula as a part of Canada.
Last edited by LadyTevar on 2010-09-04 12:41pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Altered States

Post by Cecelia5578 »

I'd be in favour of dividing California into two states, a northern half and a southern half, roughly along the Monterey-SLO county line and heading east. So Cal can have the dumbfuck OC Republicans all to themselves.

Moreover, California is such a huge state, it just intuitively makes sense.
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Re: Altered States

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The Constitution kinda saws you can't do this stuff. Naturally, I expect this stuff to be continued despite this.
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Re: Altered States

Post by Cecelia5578 »

The Constitution says that new states can't be created out of existing ones, or that secessionism is illegal? I'm pretty sure its the latter, not the former.
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Re: Altered States

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Cecelia5578 wrote:The Constitution says that new states can't be created out of existing ones, or that secessionism is illegal? I'm pretty sure its the latter, not the former.
The former. It's quite explicit. Article Four, Section Three, no states out of existing ones.
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Re: Altered States

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SirNitram wrote:
Cecelia5578 wrote:The Constitution says that new states can't be created out of existing ones, or that secessionism is illegal? I'm pretty sure its the latter, not the former.
The former. It's quite explicit. Article Four, Section Three, no states out of existing ones.
New States may be admitted by the Congress into this Union; but no new States shall be formed or erected within the Jurisdiction of any other State; nor any State be formed by the Junction of two or more States, or parts of States, without the Consent of the Legislatures of the States concerned as well as of the Congress.
How is that illegal?
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Re: Altered States

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I'm guessing West Virginia doesn't count?
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Re: Altered States

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TC Pilot wrote:I'm guessing West Virginia doesn't count?
Oh hell no! West Virginia is terribly Unconstitutional. If anyone wanted to make a case for our re-integration, it'd be a plain victory. But the fact is no one with standing(IE, Virginia and it's government) has yet had the slightest desire to do it.
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Re: Altered States

Post by LadyTevar »

Of course we don't count. W're illegal, created by a technically non-existant Government of (Northern) Virginia separate from the Sucessionist Government in Richmond. Abe Lincoln had to step in with a Presidential edict to get Congress to accept the deal.

However, I think that these days inertia and government red tape will make splitting any state damn near impossible.
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Re: Altered States

Post by SirNitram »

Cecelia5578 wrote:
SirNitram wrote:
Cecelia5578 wrote:The Constitution says that new states can't be created out of existing ones, or that secessionism is illegal? I'm pretty sure its the latter, not the former.
The former. It's quite explicit. Article Four, Section Three, no states out of existing ones.
New States may be admitted by the Congress into this Union; but no new States shall be formed or erected within the Jurisdiction of any other State; nor any State be formed by the Junction of two or more States, or parts of States, without the Consent of the Legislatures of the States concerned as well as of the Congress.
How is that illegal?
Check back at the article: None of the states are even consenting. Nor, I expect, would any of their legislatures consent to losing power.
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Re: Altered States

Post by LadyTevar »

Ok... straight from the horse's mouth:
US Constitution wrote:Article 4 - The States
Section 3 - New States


New States may be admitted by the Congress into this Union; but no new States shall be formed or erected within the Jurisdiction of any other State; nor any State be formed by the Junction of two or more States, or parts of States, without the Consent of the Legislatures of the States concerned as well as of the Congress.

The Congress shall have Power to dispose of and make all needful Rules and Regulations respecting the Territory or other Property belonging to the United States; and nothing in this Constitution shall be so construed as to Prejudice any Claims of the United States, or of any particular State.
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Re: Altered States

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LadyTevar wrote:Of course we don't count. W're illegal, created by a technically non-existant Government of (Northern) Virginia separate from the Sucessionist Government in Richmond. Abe Lincoln had to step in with a Presidential edict to get Congress to accept the deal.

However, I think that these days inertia and government red tape will make splitting any state damn near impossible.
I think that one gets chalked up to "fog of war" and "pissing off the enemy". After which, no one wanted to deal with a pack of countries whose inhabitants were viewed largely as trouble and inbred moonshiners.

Some other hinky stuff went on during the Civil War Period that's been allowed to slide as well. At this point everyone (with a few exceptions) considers it a done deal and doesn't want to re-open a potential can of worms.

I do recall that for awhile there was a notion of splitting Michigan into two state - the lower peninsula remaining Michigan and the upper one getting a new name. That actually makes some sense, as the two parts of the state are both geographically and culturally separated. But I guess no one felt strongly enough about it to really push for it, either.
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Re: Altered States

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SirNitram wrote:
Cecelia5578 wrote:
SirNitram wrote:The former. It's quite explicit. Article Four, Section Three, no states out of existing ones.
New States may be admitted by the Congress into this Union; but no new States shall be formed or erected within the Jurisdiction of any other State; nor any State be formed by the Junction of two or more States, or parts of States, without the Consent of the Legislatures of the States concerned as well as of the Congress.
How is that illegal?
Check back at the article: None of the states are even consenting. Nor, I expect, would any of their legislatures consent to losing power.
Um, pretty sure the whole point of a succession movement is to generate enough popular support to gain that consent. I'm not seeing the Constitutional problem anywhere here.
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Re: Altered States

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Cecelia5578 wrote:Moreover, California is such a huge state, it just intuitively makes sense.
Area from Wiki: California 423,970 km2, Western Australia 2,645,615 km2 ...it's not that big.

I believe there were moves to include New Zealand as two more states of Australia at some point during the lead up to Australian Federation.
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Re: Altered States

Post by Alphawolf55 »

They're angry about having to help pay for the NYC MTA? Fuck them. Everyone knows that New Jersey, Connecticut, and the rest of NY specifically Long Island benefit from the MTA, it's only fair they help share some of the cost, especially since some of the wealthier citizens never actually live in the city and instead commute to work each day.
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Re: Altered States

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Saint: I think it's more important to consider population. You're comparing a place with 90.5 people per sq km to a place with less than one person per sq km. Plus Cali is the largest state by population in the country, which gives it the most electoral college votes (relevant for Presidential Elections). Canada and California have almost the same population, and one of these is the second largest country in the world, remember.
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Re: Altered States

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Dont forget the economy. Would not California be the 5th largest economy in the world if it were a country ?
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Re: Altered States

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Sarevok wrote:Dont forget the economy. Would not California be the 5th largest economy in the world if it were a country ?
Technically, yes, but it would be an economy that did 90% of its' trade with the US.
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Re: Altered States

Post by Cecelia5578 »

The_Saint wrote:
Cecelia5578 wrote:Moreover, California is such a huge state, it just intuitively makes sense.
Area from Wiki: California 423,970 km2, Western Australia 2,645,615 km2 ...it's not that big.

I believe there were moves to include New Zealand as two more states of Australia at some point during the lead up to Australian Federation.
As others have pointed out, "huge" in this context means more than sheer size, it also refers to population and the size of the economy.
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Re: Altered States

Post by Cecelia5578 »

I think its all a moot point, because I don't think any succession movement is going to happen anytime soon, because of the sclerotic nature of the American political system. The only way I honestly see it happening would involve a second civil war or a massive natural catastrophe; which is sorta ironic, since Red Imp contributed to this thread, and I greatly enjoyed his The Humanist Inheritance .
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Re: Altered States

Post by Gil Hamilton »

I like talk to states seceding from other states, but what I also like is states trying to get rid of parts of it. My aunt worked for the New York State Senate and often bitched about how many people in Upstate New York formally wanted to throw New York City out of the state or get New Jersey to take it, thus turning the state into a somewhat conservative one. This never goes anywhere, because it would be a conservative one with virtually no economy, as New York City (by itself!) is more than half of the state's economy.
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Re: Altered States

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And I'm sure all those conservatives bitching about NYC and wanting rid of it also bitch about "our tax dollars" going to NYC - but the truth is, if they didn't have the Big Apple they'd be about as well off as West Virginia.
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Re: Altered States

Post by RedImperator »

Broomstick wrote:And I'm sure all those conservatives bitching about NYC and wanting rid of it also bitch about "our tax dollars" going to NYC - but the truth is, if they didn't have the Big Apple they'd be about as well off as West Virginia.
Hilariously, several New York City councilmen have bitterly complained about how much money New York sends to Albany and suggested seceding from the state if the city doesn't start getting more services for its taxes. There was even a case where a state rep from the city was working with a state rep from upstate on the proposal together--the city rep wanted New York City to keep more of its tax revenues, and the upstate rep wanted to turn the rest of the state into a Republican circlejerk.

LOL at Long Island demanding freedom from NYC, though. As if Long Island would be anything but a few beach resorts and 100 miles of potato fields without the city. "Wah, it's unfair that Long Islanders have to pay for the MTA...which...Long Islanders...use to get to work." Wait, I forgot, everyone who takes the LIRR into the city works near Penn Station, so they don't benefit from the MTA.
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Any city gets what it admires, will pay for, and, ultimately, deserves…We want and deserve tin-can architecture in a tinhorn culture. And we will probably be judged not by the monuments we build but by those we have destroyed.--Ada Louise Huxtable, "Farewell to Penn Station", New York Times editorial, 30 October 1963
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Re: Altered States

Post by eion »

One would think a quick datamine of the MetroCard address database would show the percentage of Long Island Residents who utilize the MTA on a regular basis. I would imagine the number to be significant.

All these separate state schemes are sheer fantasy because in almost all cases it's a one-sided revenue distribution argument, and since legal secession requires the consent of the state legislature, they're Highly unlikely to give away the money. I mean, I would love if Northern Virginia split off from the rest of the state and joined with Maryland or became its own independent commonwealth, but that's unlikely to happen given the amount of revenue Fairfax county and the others generate for Richmond.

P.S. And it's Secession, not Succession.

P.P.S. Another thread started by GMB in which he takes no position and is totally uninvolved. Ah, the comfort of routine.
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