Simon_Jester wrote:I am not convinced. The US has become plutocratic through a number of processes; for most of them, the states were willing handmaidens of the plutocracy- state militia called out to suppress strikes, states competing to achieve lowest-common-denominator regulations on corporate activity, state politics becoming just as corrupt as federal if not more so.
Likewise for global imperialism- we began our imperialism as early as the 1890s and the average person in the average state fucking cheered; this has never changed.
I don't think the state ability to secede was ever critical to either of those processes. The most you can argue is that without federalism we'd have a more confederate-style government unable to act as an imperial power upon anyone... but have you paused to consider the price of that? Would we really be better off that way? What about the cost to our standard of living? Or to our freedoms- our individual freedoms, the ones that are far more often infringed by state laws where Republicans wage the culture war, and far less often infringed by the federal government?
Are there not state governments that would do the same, given the chance? Are the states any less corruptible, by virtue of being smaller? Would removing all restraint on them make them more trustworthy than an unrestrained federal government?
In exchange for one anticipated tyrant, you would give us dozens of real ones.
I could damn well point to imprisonments and oppression in 1934 Germany- you're suffering from severe historical myopia if you don't know about what happened early in the Third Reich. Already in 1934, the long knives were coming out, the trade unionists and socialists were being rounded up, the blatant laws of the Gleichschaltung were being passed.
If secession were so vital to the health of democracy, we would expect to have seen suffering and tyranny in the US a lot sooner. It should not take a hundred years for the consequences of the lack of a truly essential liberty to become noticeable to random bystanders.
I have not forgotten that there were people much like you predicting much the same consequences from the New Deal; it didn't happen. If we are suffering a slide to tyranny now, it is not because we have a strong federal government; it is because too many of the American people have fallen into the trap of supporting pro-tyranny politicians. Devolving power from the federal to the state level would not change this much- speaking of the New Deal era, remember Huey Long?
Indeed, why don't we? Why don't we ask some of the blacks who, after getting land and the vote during Reconstruction, were slowly driven off their new land and deprived of suffrage, if they would have liked to have their counties secede from the state governments they were losing control of as Federal troops left?
Because it is the dirty, unpleasant job of government to do the things that everyone would rather have done, but that all too few are honorable or humble enough to undertake themselves for the common good. All the things that cannot be made to happen by people meeting and agreeing one-on-one to do them, but that still must be done if society is not to decay or dissolve into a thousand petty local tyrannies.
I would argue that a big government is in some ways easier to hold accountable than a small one, because it is less likely to random-walk its way into extremism.
Sometimes I wonder if it's worth doing this kind of thing. I'll never convince you of a damned thing, and you'll certainly never convince me of anything. You've obviously put a lot of thought into your beliefs and, it might surprise you to find out, so have I. Ultimately I feel like we'd end up arguing past each other, like two people using different languages.
Whatever, I'll do the irrational thing and try anyway.
The checks of a Constitution like the American one in its original form aren't to protect against tyranny, per se, but against
corruption, used in the classical republican sense of the term. Tyranny is the ultimate outcome of corruption, but the Constitution was designed (for an extremely loose meaning of 'designed') to prevent the American polity from setting foot on that road. It wasn't to protect against tyranny because it was hoped tyranny would be forestalled by entirely preventing hints of corruption.
However, it wasn't perfect because it failed. It began failing
almost immediately. The very first administration saw the collapse of its politics into factions, both with deep interests that would prevent the united pursuit of the common good. Now, it's a testament to the depth and robustness of American society that we have survived so long without totally lapsing into tyranny (although we're much closer than you might think -- remember, tyrants can still do things you like and approve of -- and we have tyrannical organizations within the Executive Branch
today, according to James Madison's definition of tyranny. It is not always used for entirely corrupted purposes, it might even be used for popular purposes that you like, but it's there), but the danger is and always will be there. This kind of thing isn't just an abstract worry, it's a drag on our very civilization. The kind of society that fosters vast, relatively evenly distributed wealth, relatively progressive thinking, and gradual-but-still-present evolution of American society towards something better than its past self, all depend on having an at least moderately well-functioning republic.
And that's something we cannot take for granted as long as corruption is allowed to creep in along every avenue (or boldly throw open the door and sit down at the public table, as is more common these days).
I've spent an absurd amount of time pondering the types of problems that the Founders faced. I've gone back and read a lot of the same literature they would be familiar with, or at least decent summaries. Now, I wouldn't call myself an expert, although they were themselves amateurs, and I wouldn't dare to compare my capacity to theirs, or even to that of most other people alive today, but I feel like I've done enough to have an opinion. The right of state secession is a vital component in checking corruption in a Federal Republic like ours. Without it you're not going to get an instantly corrupt, instantly tyrannical government, but it's one more layer of protection that's been pealed back. Eventually you find yourself with nothing left and then the tyranny is all too real. Hopefully, and I actually do believe this, we won't live to see that happen here, but if we leave these problems to grow un-hindered then the seeds of our sloth will grow up amongst our descendents. I don't want to die knowing I doomed my children or grandchildren to live in an un-free America.
My comments on more radical secession than just state secession are related to a sub-project within my studies, of designing a constitutional system more 'advanced' than that the Founding Generation was able to come up with. It uses most of the same mechanisms they did (Like I said, I'm not as equal to the task as they so I don't think I'm capable of truly innovating anything myself, I just have the benefit of experience with the slow failure of their own experiment), plus a few things I have stolen from political literature more modern than their own time. If you would allow me the digression, imagine a republic better than the one we have. One that is designed with the faults of our present state in mind. I can't say it's perfect, especially since I am, once more, a total amateur, but here it is.
The primary principle supporting the right of secession from the polity is
non-territoriality in state jurisdiction. The state, no matter which level of government we're talking about, doesn't have jurisdiction over land but instead over people. The land itself is brought into the state by the people who own it, rather it being a part of the state's existing jurisdiction and the people being de facto tenants as the situation is at present. That means that something like Ziggy's objection of tyrannical majorities over small seceding territories wouldn't be possible because seceding groups would ONLY bring themselves and their real estate with them. Any people who were not seceding, like tenants or other kinds of semi-permanent residents, would remain a citizen within the state being seceded from, entitled to all the protections it offered.
That's a small part of the improved republic I have been imagining up for a few years now, but it's the relevant portion. I don't want to bore you with the whole thing, un-finished and un-polished as it is
Do you see where I'm coming from? I actually have
considered many of the problems you (and others) are bringing up and either come up with solutions or at least tried. None of my solutions are perfect, but then again, nothing a mere human ever creates can be. Kant had that one to the T. Everything we do is an eternal work in progress. Admitting that is probably the most I really would like to get you to concede, although I imagine you might already agree, even if you still disagree on my more substantial points
Truth be told, getting closer to the original point of this thread, I'm not that huge a Ron Paul supporter. Although I've tried to leave my libertarian leanings behind as much as possible since adopting a more classical republican stance on most matters, the two are really still pretty closely tied together. Google up 'republican liberal' sometime, doing your best to ignore all the clap-trap about left-leaning members of the modern Republican Party. My more immediate preferences for 'solving' our current political problems involve calling for an Article V Convention, rather than hoping for the victory of any one candidate. I've learned far too much in the last couple years to believe anything can be solved by getting the 'right' man in office. Our problems are institutional, not personal or political.